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Anonymous takes revenge on Putin’s brutal Ukraine invasion by leaking personal data of 120,000 Russian soldiers

Hacker collective Anonymous announced on [hotlink]Twitter[/hotlink] that it successfully breached and leaked the personal data of 120,000 Russian soldiers.

A man wearing Anonymous mask on the back of his head.

Hacker collective Anonymous announced on Twitter that it successfully breached and leaked the personal data of 120,000 Russian soldiers.

Statement: Personal data of 120,000 Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine was leaked –
https://ddosecrets[.]com/wiki/Russian_soldier_leak
All soldiers participating in the invasion of Ukraine should be subjected to a war crime tribunal.

— Anonymous (@YourAnonNews) April 3, 2022

Statement: Personal data of 120,000 Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine was leaked –
https://ddosecrets[.]com/wiki/Russian_soldier_leak
All soldiers participating in the invasion of Ukraine should be subjected to a war crime tribunal.

“All soldiers participating in the invasion of Ukraine should be subjected to a war crime tribunal,” Anonymous said in the message. 

The leak included personal information like dates of birth, addresses, passport numbers, and unit affiliation.

Anonymous also tweeted that it would take a while for society to forgive Russia for the atrocities in Ukraine spurred by Putin’s invasion.

If what is happening in Ukraine doesn't spark the necessary change the world needs to make, nothing will.
We're all witnessing the evils Russia is doing.
It's going to take a very long time to accept Russia back into the human race after all the crimes it's committed via Putin.

— Anonymous (@YourAnonNews) April 3, 2022

If what is happening in Ukraine doesn't spark the necessary change the world needs to make, nothing will.
We're all witnessing the evils Russia is doing.
It's going to take a very long time to accept Russia back into the human race after all the crimes it's committed via Putin.

While Anonymous announced the leak on Sunday, it occurred in early March and first appeared on Pravda, a Ukrainian news outlet, days after the invasion began. 

The outlet did not disclose the source of the leak but stated the “Center for Defense Strategies acquired this data from reliable sources,” according to Newsweek.

This week, the Russian military has been facing even more scrutiny after concern was raised over alleged human rights abuses in Bucha. Reports suggested civilians were being abused and killed, and some say corpses have been found in yards, streets, and cars.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, Anonymous has been very outspoken about the war.

“The hacking will continue until Russia stops their aggression,” Anonymous said.

Among its efforts to fight back, the collective has claimed it has disabled government, corporate, and news websites, hacked into a top censorship agency, and hacked into Russian TVs

Other recent efforts include hacking into unsecured printers in Russia to spread anti-Kremlin propaganda. 

In an interview with IBT, one of the collective members said they were instructing Russians on how to install open-source software to allow citizens to bypass the country’s censorship, according to Raw Story.

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