Gay furry hackers messages

Gay furry hackers are targeting US states for passing anti-trans legislation

SiegedSec, a self-described group of gay furry hackers, took its skills to state governments in late June, breaching agencies across five states and releasing a wealth of data.

The states targeted on June 27 were Texas, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and South Carolina. Though the other states' targeting was not specifically explained, a 180 gigabyte leak from the previous week on the government in Fort Worth, Texas, was apparently over the state's move to ban gender-affirming care.

"Furries" are a small group of people interested in or identifying with anthropomorphic or animated animals.

"Texas happens to be one of the largest states banning gender affirming care, and for that, we acquire made Texas our objective. Fuck the government," a message posted on the SiegedSec Telegram chat said. "We easily hijacked their administrator account~ :D The files leaked include: Labor orders, employee lists, invoices, police reports, emails between employees/contractors, internal documents, camera footage, and lots, lots, lots more~!"

So far in 2023, Texas legislators hold introduced 65 anti-trans bil

“Gay Furry Hackers” Feud With Heritage Foundation Exec

SiegedSec, a collective of self-proclaimed “gay furry hackers” that targeted the conservative Heritage Foundation to disagree Project 2025, has posted chat logs between one of its hackers and a Heritage executive, Mike Howell. In a conversation over the messaging app Signal, Howell said the Heritage Foundation was “in the process of recognizing and outting [sic] members of your group” and productive with the FBI.

“Closeted Furries will be presented to the world for the degenerate perverts they are,” Howell told one of SiegedSec’s leaders, who goes by the grasp “vio.” “Your means are miniscule compared to mine. You now can either change yourself in or you can cooperate.”

Howell, who confirmed the chat logs were accurate to the Daily Dot, is the executive director for the Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Undertaking and a former Trump administration official. SiegedSec also provided screenshots of the discussion to The Intercept.

Howell started the conversation with questions about why SiegedSec targeted the Heritage Foundation. “What is that you are seeking or threatening?” he asked vio.

“We want to create a mess

Why gay furry hackers are leaking mention government documents

Earlier this month, SiegedSec, the group of self-described “gay and gender non-conforming furry hackers” claimed responsibility for cyber attacks on five state governments in Nebraska, South Dakota, Texas, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina, leaking documents that enclose police files and contact details for court officials. 

The hacks – announced in a Telegram channel – are the latest in a string of hacks that began last year, all of which are aimed at states banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth. “Our motive was to ensure government agencies saw our hacks, and motivate and motivate others to protest,” they tell Dazed.

In one post, headlined “be gay [and] do crime,” SiegedSec announced that more damage would be done and that they were planning more attacks “carefully”. The group also mockingly described defacing hacked government websites with special messages, or “gifts”, and vowed “to grant Texas another tribute soon”. 

While many of the leaked documents were publicly present or did not contain sensitive data, the private numbers now made universal consists of the names and contact details of several hu

“Gay Furry Hackers” Claim Credit for Hacking Heritage Foundation Files Over Project 2025

SiegedSec, a collective of self-proclaimed “gay furry hackers,” has claimed credit for breaching online databases of the Heritage Foundation, the conservative consider tank that spearheaded the right-wing Project 2025 playbook. SiegedSec released a cache of Heritage Foundation material as part of a string of hacks aimed at organizations that oppose transgender rights, although Heritage disputed that its own systems were breached.

In a post to Telegram announcing the hack, SiegedSec called Project 2025 “an authoritarian Christian nationalist arrange to reform the United States government.” The attack was part of the group’s #OpTransRights campaign, which recently targeted right-wing media outlet Real America’s Voice, the Hillsong megachurch, and a Minnesota pastor.

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