The staff of the Moses cracked the CCTV cameras of the Zionist regime.
A hacking group called the “staff of Moses” reported the successful hacking of CCTV cameras in occupied Palestine.
This morning (Friday), the hacking group “Asa-e-Musa” published pictures on its Telegram channel announcing that it had hacked CCTV cameras on the streets of occupied Palestine.
The hacker group, which has previously been successful in its cyber-attacks on Israeli institutions, wrote in a message in both Hebrew and English entitled “We see with your eyes”: “We have been for years, at every moment and at every step. We monitored you. This is only part of our monitoring of your activities through access to internal CCTV cameras. “We said we would target you while you could not imagine.”
The cane hacker group had previously released files containing details of hundreds of members of the occupying regime’s army and personal pictures of the regime’s war minister, Bani Gantz, on the Darknet and Telegram. This was not the first time Benny Gantz had been targeted by a cyber attack. The Israeli Internal Security Service (Shabak) has also announced in recent months that the housekeeper of the Israeli Minister of War, Bani Gantz, has provided information to a hacker group.
The Hebrew-language newspaper Haaretz reported on the spy that he had taken pictures of Gantz’s home, including his computer, and sent pictures to a representative of the “Black Shadow” hacking group to prove his seriousness; The group, claimed by the Hebrew-language media, is affiliated with Iran. The report also mentioned that the person had suggested the possibility of installing malware that would allow access to the Gantz computer.
This was not the first time that the Zionist media claimed that Gantz had been targeted and pointed the finger at Iran. Zionist Channel 12 reported in March 2019 that Shinbat chairman Nadaf Argaman had a secret meeting with Gantz, during which he was told that his cell phone had been hacked by people linked to Iran.
At the time, Gantz claimed that there was no security information on his cell phone and that hackers could not use it to extort money from him. Accused of destroying his face.
In recent months, Israeli institutions and companies have been repeatedly targeted by cyber attacks. On November 29, the Jerusalem Post reported that a hacker group called the Black Shadow had attacked the servers of the Zionist Internet company Cyberserve, disabling it and threatening to disclose its information.