The group or individual calling themselves Anonymous SriLanka will not be anonymous for long as they've made some grave mistakes in posting their exploits.
Here's one that I noticed.
http://pastebin.com/8U0vqmLs
This is : University Colombo - Sri Lanka SSH/RSA Login Key Dump
Mistake no 1 :
Ask anyone who knows network basics and they'll tell you that this is private IP which is not accessible over the internet. Which means these 'hackers' ran this port scan from within the campus network.
And here's biggest mistake of all :
In a traceroute (tracert for windows), the first result is the Local gateway. This means 192.168.159.2 is the local gateway for the 'hackers' PC. The campus network admins can isolate the actual computer network the 'hackers' used with this information and they can easily figure out from there, who these 'hackers' really are.
My guess is this is a bunch of campus students who had just started learning about networks and if the campus authorities decide to take action, they'll be ex-students pretty soon.
Here's one that I noticed.
http://pastebin.com/8U0vqmLs
This is : University Colombo - Sri Lanka SSH/RSA Login Key Dump
Mistake no 1 :
Scanning 10.16.16.2 [100 ports]
Ask anyone who knows network basics and they'll tell you that this is private IP which is not accessible over the internet. Which means these 'hackers' ran this port scan from within the campus network.
And here's biggest mistake of all :
- TRACEROUTE (using port 587/tcp)
- HOP RTT ADDRESS
- 1 0.10 ms 192.168.159.2
- 2 0.35 ms 10.16.16.2
In a traceroute (tracert for windows), the first result is the Local gateway. This means 192.168.159.2 is the local gateway for the 'hackers' PC. The campus network admins can isolate the actual computer network the 'hackers' used with this information and they can easily figure out from there, who these 'hackers' really are.
My guess is this is a bunch of campus students who had just started learning about networks and if the campus authorities decide to take action, they'll be ex-students pretty soon.
.

.

