Technology

Hackers from Ukraine have been lifted in the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation by photographs of beautiful girls - FT

The Russian military sent photos to girls on social networks, proving involvement in the fighting. The Armed Forces found out where their base was located near Melitopol and struck artillery accurately. Ukrainian hackers from the Hackyourmom group calculated the location of the Russian military base near the temporarily occupied Melitopol, using fake accounts of attractive girls on social networks.

The founder of the band Nikita Knysh told this in an interview with the British newspaper Financial Times. Cyberfachivtsi deceived the invaders. The military sent photos to girls to prove their involvement in hostilities in Ukraine. Thus, hackers found out where the base is located near Melitopol and transferred the coordinates of the Armed Forces. "The Russians always want to tram and send many g*m in girls to prove that they are warriors," he says.

In a few days, as the founder of the team said, hackers watched on a TV to strike Ukrainian artillery on the basis of Ukrainian artillery. Knysh did not specify the day when it happened. The Hacker Group, he said, has made a number of other successful attacks: the Hackyourmom group still monitors broken cameras, experts have shared with FT a recent image of the Russian Navy in Sevastopol. "It's like a fight for me. You can use Darknet against the enemy.

Now Russian laws don't matter - we have the experience of the first cyberwar," Knysh explained. Former security officer of the Security Service of Ukraine, 30-year-old Nikita Knysh became an active participant in Cyberwar with Russia a few hours after the start of a full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the newspaper writes. Prior to the war, he headed HackControl Cyber ​​Security Company in Kharkiv.

Knysh came to the SBU office in Kharkiv, but was not hired and therefore created his hacking group, to which he invited employees of the company. Currently, it has about 30 people. For the first week, the group worked in the basement of one of Kharkiv's factories, then they moved to a hostel in Vinnytsia region. The Hackyourmom group used the Starlink network to connect to the Internet.

Knysh says that she was given access to satellites after he asked for help the head of the grain company Agrotrade Vsevolod Kozhemyak, one of the richest people in Ukraine. Kozhemyak confirmed the fact of the book. Financial Times noted that not all of the information he voiced was verified. Some Ukrainian officials and his hockers have confirmed the information they have told. Knysh, as evidence, provided photos, videos and magazine files confirming some of his statements.