Skip to main content

Hacker selling access to U.S. government websites

If you want access to a government website, you don’t need to be a computer savvy spy. You just need enough cash to pay a hacker to do the technical heavy lifting for you. According to the data security firm Imperva, one such hacker is now selling access to government, military, and education websites around the world — and for relatively little money.

Access to European and U.S. websites is being sold for prices ranging from $55 to $499. Screenshots posted on Imperva’s blog show that access to the website of the U.S. Army costs $499 for control of ” full site admin” and “high level informations.” The National Guard’s site is also $499 and includes “MySQL root access.” The U.S. Department of Defense’s website access is listed at $399 for control of “full site admin, control/root access, high value informations.”

Recommended Videos

“The victims’ vulnerabilities were probably obtained by SQL injection vulnerability automatic scanner and exploited in automatic manner, as the hacker published his methods in a post in some hacker forum,” Imperva said in a blog post.

In addition to website access, the unnamed hacker is also dealing in entire website databases that include names, e-mail addresses, phone numbers and street addresses. The database information can be had for $20 per 1,000 names. A screenshot posted by Imperva reveals that the information from the University of Connecticut is among the databases that are up for sale.

While some are suspecting a scam, at least one security expert thinks that the hacks are genuine. “I’ve seen some of the back-end evidence of his hacks, so it doesn’t seem like he’s making this up,” says former Washington Post reporter Brain Krebs in a blog post.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

In addition to site access, the hacker will also ply his trade on “normal” and “high profile” websites, charging $9.99 for the service and $2 for a report on vulnerabilities.

Aemon Malone
Former Digital Trends Contributor
New Mac Studio release date, price and everything you need to know
Apple Mac Studio with M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips and two Apple Studio Display monitors.

The Apple Mac Studio has always packed a ton of power into a very diminutive block of what feels a lot like solid aluminum. It's designed to look like it's floating in air, and the majority of its ports are in the back and out of the way. There's simply no other desktop machine that takes up so little space and, frankly, looks so great on your desk.

The new model maintains all the best characteristics that makes it one of the best desktops while dramatically increasing the power. The previous generation hadn't yet received the faster GPU and Neural Engine performance, and that's now on tap. It's more expensive than ever, but if you need it, then it looks like it will deliver.
Release date and price
The new Mac Studio was announced on March 5, 2025, and will be available starting on March 12, 2025. That's earlier than many predictions, and very soon after its announcement.

Read more
The new Mac Studio absolutely baffles me in one key way
Apple Mac Studio with M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips and two Apple Studio Display monitors.

Way back when Steve Jobs returned to Apple and saved it from bankruptcy, he implemented his famous product quadrant: Apple should have desktops and laptops for consumers and professionals. These four categories should contain just one of the best Macs each -- no more, no less.

The idea was that you should be able to instantly differentiate each device and know who it’s for and what it does, and it worked incredibly effectively. Yet when I look at the new Mac Studio that Apple unveiled today, I get the feeling that Steve Jobs would be most displeased.

Read more
Google AI Mode will reinvent Search. I’m worried — and you should be, too
Google AI Mode for Search.

Google is pushing forward with more AI into how internet search works. Remember AI Overviews, which essentially summarizes the content pulled from websites, and presents it at the top of the Google Search page?

That error-prone feature is now expanding to the US market, powered by the new Gemini 2.0 AI models. It no longer requires a Google account sign-in, and has opened to users across all age groups. While that is a risky move in itself, Google is giving a similar blanket treatment to the whole Search page with a new AI Mode.

Read more