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Another Australian organisation has allegedly suffered a cyber incident at the hands of the RipperSec hacking group, which targeted the website of a car part website.
Unique Cars and Parts is an Australian site that provides users with the ability to find specific parts for unique and rare vehicles, parts that would otherwise be difficult to find.
Earlier this week, RipperSec announced on its Telegram that it had targeted the website, but it did not provide any specifics as to what the incident entailed.
Cyber Daily has observed the website appears fully operational at the time of writing.
RipperSec claimed the incident as part of Operation Freedom, in which, it said, it is targeting organisations as part of a “stand for justice and [a] fight for freedom”.
The group said its justification for targeting Australian organisations is because the nation supports Israel and gives them money and weapons. The Greens political party last year demanded that the government halt exports of weapons to Israel, something the government denied doing, calling the statement misinformation.
As previously reported, RipperSec also claimed an attack on the website of the University of NSW School of Physics. Once again, the group did not give specifics, and Cyber Daily observed that the website was up and running.
The latest incidents follow a number of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against Australian organisations by a number of threat groups that appear to have joined forces.
Late last year, Cyber Daily observed a number of websites defaced by the DXPLOIT threat group. In their defacement message, the group named a number of other threat actors in hashtags, including NoName057(16), RipperSec, Anonymous Guys, and Al Ahad.
In December, Anonymous Guys announced it was forming a new hacktivist alliance with Al Ahad and DXPLOIT.
According to FalconFeeds.io, the groups have increased their activity on organisations from a number of countries, including Australia.
Additionally, in November, FalconFeeds.io also noted that DXPLOIT was “collaborating” with RipperSec to form “OpsAustralia” to launch attacks on Australian organisations.