Hackers Replace Russian TV Schedules During ‘Victory Day’ With Anti-War Messages

Russians tuning in to view the country’s Victory Day parade today were shocked to find anti-war messages after the country’s television listings system was hacked.

The hack affected several major networks, including Channel One, Rossiya-1, and NTV-Plus, the BBC reported.

The name of every program was replaced with a message stating, per the BBC’s translation: “On your hands is the blood of thousands of Ukrainians and their hundreds of murdered children. TV and the authorities are lying. No to war.”

The message was reportedly featured on Russian networks from Sunday night. 

“Tonight, TV viewers saw provocative anti-war messages instead of the program guide and channel descriptions on their TVs,” a tweet from Gazeta.ru read. “MTS, Rostelecom, and NTV-Plus, as well as the Yandex TV program, was attacked by hackers.”

Russia’s Victory Day celebrations are a national holiday and military parade watched by President Vladimir Putin and televised in Russia. The annual event celebrates the Soviet Union’s victory, alongside Allied forces, over Nazi Germany in 1945.

Many speculated that Putin would use the Victory Day celebrations to propagandize or bolster his position around Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, his speech concluded without the expected declaration of mass mobilization or war against Ukraine.

It is unclear who was behind the hack, but the hacker group Anonymous retweeted Scarr’s tweet with the message “Good morning Moscow” within hours of the hack. 

On February 25, Anonymous declared a “cyberwar” against Vladimir Putin’s government in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It has since claimed to have taken down several Russian state websites, such as the State Duma, as well as the website of the Russian-state-controlled international television network RT. In March, the hacktivist group claimed to have leaked over 360,000 files from the Russian federal agency. Read more: https://bit.ly/38ftRSh

You can also read this: Russian Hackers Targeting Diplomatic Entities in Europe, Americas, and Asia

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *