Typo fixed

pull/4/head
Alexandre Dulaunoy 2016-03-02 08:31:15 +01:00
parent 7f8efde101
commit 47f98899d6
1 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -38,7 +38,7 @@
},
{
"group": "Putter Panda",
"description": "The CrowdStrike Intelligence team has been tracking this particular unit since 2012, under the codename PUTTER PANDA, and has documented activity dating back to 2007. The report identifies Chen Ping, aka cpyy, and the primary location of Unit 61486. "
"description": "The CrowdStrike Intelligence team has been tracking this particular unit since 2012, under the codename PUTTER PANDA, and has documented activity dating back to 2007. The report identifies Chen Ping, aka cpyy, and the primary location of Unit 61486. ",
"refs": ["http://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/assets/4589853/crowdstrike-intelligence-report-putter-panda.original.pdf"],
"country": "CN",
"synonyms": ["PLA Unit 61486", "APT 2", "Group 36","APT-2","MSUpdater","4HCrew","SULPHUR"]
@ -319,8 +319,8 @@
},
{
"group": "Deadeye Jackal",
"description": "The Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) is a group of computer hackers which first surfaced online in 2011 to support the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Using spamming, website defacement, malware, phishing, and denial of service attacks, it has targeted political opposition groups, western news organizations, human rights groups and websites that are seemingly neutral to the Syrian conflict. It has also hacked government websites in the Middle East and Europe, as well as US defense contractors. As of 2011 the SEA has been "the first Arab country to have a public Internet Army hosted on its national networks to openly launch cyber attacks on its enemies". The precise nature of SEA's relationship with the Syrian government has changed over time and is unclear",
"refs": ["https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrian_Electronic_Army"]
"description": "The Syrian Electronic Army (SEA) is a group of computer hackers which first surfaced online in 2011 to support the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Using spamming, website defacement, malware, phishing, and denial of service attacks, it has targeted political opposition groups, western news organizations, human rights groups and websites that are seemingly neutral to the Syrian conflict. It has also hacked government websites in the Middle East and Europe, as well as US defense contractors. As of 2011 the SEA has been *the first Arab country to have a public Internet Army hosted on its national networks to openly launch cyber attacks on its enemies*. The precise nature of SEA's relationship with the Syrian government has changed over time and is unclear",
"refs": ["https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrian_Electronic_Army"],
"country": "SY",
"synonyms": ["SyrianElectronicArmy", "SEA"]
}