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Suspected hacker arrested in Sony computers breach

A suspected member of the clandestine hacking group LulzSec was arrested in Arizona on Thursday on charges of taking part in an extensive computer breach of the Sony Pictures Entertainment film studio, the FBI said.

Suspected hacker arrested in Sony computers breach

A suspected member of the clandestine hacking group LulzSec was arrested in Arizona on Thursday on charges of taking part in an extensive computer breach of the Sony Pictures Entertainment film studio, the FBI said.

A federal grand jury indictment returned this month and unsealed on Thursday charged Cody Kretsinger, 23, with conspiracy and the unauthorized impairment of a protected computer in connection with the attack in May and June.

The nine-page indictment said Kretsinger and co-conspirators obtained confidential information from Sony Pictures's computer systems using an "SQL injection" attack against its website, a technique commonly used by hackers to exploit vulnerabilities and steal information.

Kretsinger, who went by the moniker "recursion," helped post information he and his co-conspirators stole from Sony on LulzSec's website and announced the intrusion via the hacking group''s Twitter account, the indictment said.

The extent of damage caused by the breach of the studio's computer network remains under investigation, the FBI said.

LulzSec, an underground group also known as Lulz Security, at the time published the names, birth dates, addresses, emails, phone numbers and passwords of thousands of people who had entered contests promoted by Sony.

"From a single injection we accessed EVERYTHING," the hacking group said in a statement at the time. "Why do you put such faith in a company that allows itself to become open to these simple attacks."

Hackers previously had accessed personal information on 77 million PlayStation Network and Qriocity accounts, 90 percent of which were users in North America and Europe, in what was then the biggest such security breach in history.

Other high-profile companies targeted by cyber attacks included Lockheed Martin and Google.

Sony officials declined immediate comment on Thursday's arrest.

LulzSec is reputed to be affiliated with the international hackers collective called Anonymous, which has claimed responsibility for cyber attacks on government and private institutions around the world.

Kretsinger, who was to make an initial court appearance before a US magistrate in Phoenix on Thursday, faces a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison if convicted.

The government is requesting that he be removed to Los Angeles, where Sony Pictures's computer system is located and where the case against him has been filed.

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