Hackers briefly put off by US law 
	
  
  
	 
  
  
	by Chris Lee, © 1995-2002 VNU Business Publications 
	Ltd
  
Thursday, 3rd January 2002 - There was a marked decrease 
  in global website defacements in the period after 11 September, according to 
  security watcher mi2g Intelligence Unit. But hacking has now begun to 
  rise again, with 79 overt attacks reported in the first 24 hours of 2002. 
 DK Matai, chairman and chief executive at mi2g, put the sudden drop in September 
  down to the US Department of Justice linking hacking to terrorism through the 
  Surveillance and Anti-terrorism Bill submitted to Congress on 19 September. 
 He said that the number of sites defaced globally had risen fourfold from 
  7,629 in 2000 to 30,388 in 2001. May alone had produced a staggering 3,853. 
  In September the figure plummeted to just 811. 
 The majority of defacements (63 per cent) occurred on servers running the 
  Microsoft Windows and Microsoft IIS/PWS combination, and 18 per cent were attacks 
  on the Linux with Apache combination. 
 
"Website defacements cannot be dismissed as electronic 
  graffiti,"  explained Matai.  "Most 
  hacking takes place because of incomplete security policy and implementation. 
  
 
"The best way to ward off the threat from hackers 
  is to keep the personnel policy and systems security architecture continuously 
  up to date."