User talk:News4everyone

Jamie Pearcey,

the infamous pro cannabis activist / computer hacker that managed to attack a government funded UK drug awareness site "Talk To Frank" in 2006 using a common buffer overflow exploit, once accessed he defaced the homepage with messages promoting the use of cannabis. He continued by placing links within the site to purchase locations of cannabis seeds (Head shops) he then proceeded to adjust an anti cannabis game to include several comments of a comical nature. Examples include the following.

SORE      NAME

Quality   Weed

Jamie     Hacked Your Site

100000    Kilos

An 8th    Happy Cannabis Buyer

cAnNaBis  Is GoOd FoR yOu

H4CK0R    Wont Pass The Joint

Little is known about Jamie Pearcey, including if that is his real name. This name was obtained form a message placed onto the site "This website was hacked by Jamie Pearcey". Would someone be that smart to include their own name when hacking a website?

It is thought that Jamie Pearcey is also responsible for several other website "cracks", including the brute forcing of ftp access to several "criminal" or "ethically questionable" pirate multimedia download sites. It is unclear whether the perpetrator succeeded in many. The following comment was placed on one of the sites hacked by the system administrator. "Yesterday we were alerted to 200 000 butte force ftp attempts. Please note that we have the imp address logged of the person(s) relating to this attack and there IP's will be blacklisted". The IP address was tracked to the same source, a proxy within china.

Someone by the nickname of jampecey operates on a popular online public hacking forum named hackits.de which is believed to be the perpetrator. Hackits.de also offers legal hacking challenges; on these challenges user jampecey is currently 487th place from 20,000. Due to the large number of people by the name of Jamie Pearcey we are unable to provide further information.

Shortly after talk to frank was defaced the website was returned to its original state from a backup that Jamie Peacey had made named index.bak shortly after this the exploit was patched and the online game was removed from the site to prevent the secondary hack, scoreboard JavaScript post and injection.