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Government Privacy The Internet

Indian Telecom Authority Releases a Million Email IDs, Taken Down By Hackers 21

knwny writes: In a bizarre move that threatens the privacy of over a million internet users in India, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has released the list of email IDs from which it received responses regarding net neutrality. Most of these responses were sent by the general public following a massively popular online campaign to protect Internet neutrality in India. The regulatory body says that it has received large number of comments from the stakeholders on its Consultation paper on "Regulatory Framework for OTT services". So to aid the reading of comments, it has divided them into three blocks — "comments from the service providers," "comments from the service providers' association" and "comments from other stakeholders'"(this includes individuals, organizations, consulting firms etc). In the meantime, the TRAI website remains inaccessible after a DDoS attack by Anonymous India, the hacker collective, apparently in retaliation for the data release.
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Indian Telecom Authority Releases a Million Email IDs, Taken Down By Hackers

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  • Email IDs? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by IamTheRealMike ( 537420 ) on Monday April 27, 2015 @11:48AM (#49560849)

    Back when I was a lad, we knew that an "email address" was like a physical address - useless unless people know it. People even made them publicly available on the web!

    Yes, spammers abused this. But hiding addresses hardly helped. So many addresses have been dumped or dictionary brute forced by now it's hardly a big deal if your email address appears in one more place.

    So colour me unexcited by this terrible misstep.

  • Hackers will hack, whether via email, 0-days, social engineering, or other fresh-off-the-wall ideas.
  • we are just talking about email addresses here, right? Or is it something else I am not familiar with? No, I will not RTFA to find out, who do you take me for?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      This story takes place n India. In India, most people refer to personal identifiers for electronic mail as "email IDs".

      As of this writing, the first Google search result that comes up is India.com's email registration [india.com], whose title proudly proclaims that you can be proud of having an email ID there.

  • Every one of the one million people should send an email, stating their feelings about this bone head move, to the person that made the decision to release the email addresses. That person's email address should be readily available. If not, hopefully, someone will make it so. The clown(s) needs to see what happens when email addresses submitted in confidence are disclosed to the public.

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