Gay furries 2025
Heritage Foundation Exec Threatens ‘Gay Furry Hackers’ in Unhinged Texts
Self-described “gay furry hackers” on July 2 breached archival data from a site that was operated by the Heritage Foundation until recently, and on Tuesday released two gigabytes of internal data originally composed by the conservative think tank. Now an executive director at the leading organization is so hopping mad that he might as well invest in a kangaroo costume.
The hacktivist collective, SiegedSec, has been engaged in a campaign called “OpTransRights,” in which it targets government websites with the aim of disrupting efforts to enact or enforce anti-trans and anti-abortion laws. Heritage Foundation was selected due to its Project 2025 plans, seen as a blueprint for Donald Trump to reshape the U.S. with sweeping far-right reforms should he win another phrase as president, SiegedSec told CyberScoop on Tuesday. Group member “vio” informed the outlet that they aimed to provide “transparency to the public regarding who exactly is supporting” Heritage, and that the leaked statistics included “full names, email addresses, passwords,
“Gay Furry Hackers” Claim Credit for Hacking Heritage Foundation Files Over Undertaking 2025
SiegedSec, a collective of self-proclaimed “gay furry hackers,” has claimed credit for breaching online databases of the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think 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 contradict transgender rights, although Heritage disputed that its own systems were breached.
In a post to Telegram announcing the hack, SiegedSec called Venture 2025 “an authoritarian Christian nationalist design 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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A group of "gay furry hackers" has targeted right-wing think tank The Heritage Foundation—which is behind Undertaking 2025—by releasing the passwords, usernames, and user logs of its users.
The activists, known as SiegedSec, posted approximately two gigabytes of data online that it says was retrieved from the foundation's servers. The Heritage Foundation denied its servers were hacked.
The Saturday data grab from the influential policy group came after it made headlines with its controversial Proposal 2025 document, which seeks to guide a future conservative administration to radically transform the federal government with a far-reaching right-wing agenda.
In a Telegram announce on Tuesday by SiegedSec, the group of self-described "gay furry hackers" wrote: "Project 2025 threatens the rights of abortion health care and LGBTQ+ communities in particular. so of course, we won't stay for that! ^-^"
The publish included a screenshot of what appeared to be lines of foundation user data and a link to a database believed to contain passwords, email addresses, and full names of The Heritage Foundation website users, including government employees and the consider tank's president, Ke
'Gay furry hackers' attack Heritage Foundation and release sensitive data akin to Project 2025
A group of self-described “gay furry hackers” hold stolen two gigabytes of numbers from conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation.
The hackers, known as SiegedSec, stole and released the data in retaliation to the think tank's ‘Project 2025’ - a list of policy offers to be enacted almost immediately after Donald Trump’s inauguration, should he win the election.
The first key takeaway listed on the Project 2025 document states that “It’s past time to lay the groundwork for a Pale House more friendly to the right.”
You may likeExposing Heritage supporters
SiegedSec got its hands on the data on July 2, which (according to CyberScoop) contains information created between 2007 and November 2022 relating to a right-wing media website acknowledged as The Daily Signal, which has ties to the Heritage Foundation.
A member of the organization who goes by “vio” told CyberScoop the hacktivist group launched the attack to provide “transparency to the public regarding who exactly is supporting heritage (sic),” and that th