UK plans social media ban for under-16s Supreme Court shutters press room amid backlash Pele to Messi: How World Cup finals wrote football's greatest story Press freedom review: From jail cells to cyberspace, threats to journalists multiply The right to know: Comparing access-to-information laws across Asia Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT): How journalists verify information in the digital age Ethiopia expels French journalist after Tigray reporting Kane Williamson retires: The end of an era Javeria Siddique alleges cross-border smear campaign The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 24 | June 12, 2026 Four journalist legal cases, one death threat recorded in May Nahid Rana: Bangladesh's 152km/h fast-bowling force Global Fact-Checking Awards finalists spotlight AI misinformation fight Israel deports French journalist over West Bank reporting concerns World Cup hydration breaks open a new ad revenue stream UK plans social media ban for under-16s Supreme Court shutters press room amid backlash Pele to Messi: How World Cup finals wrote football's greatest story Press freedom review: From jail cells to cyberspace, threats to journalists multiply The right to know: Comparing access-to-information laws across Asia Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT): How journalists verify information in the digital age Ethiopia expels French journalist after Tigray reporting Kane Williamson retires: The end of an era Javeria Siddique alleges cross-border smear campaign The JournalismPakistan Global Media Brief | Edition 24 | June 12, 2026 Four journalist legal cases, one death threat recorded in May Nahid Rana: Bangladesh's 152km/h fast-bowling force Global Fact-Checking Awards finalists spotlight AI misinformation fight Israel deports French journalist over West Bank reporting concerns World Cup hydration breaks open a new ad revenue stream
Logo
Janu
JournalismPakistan Global

Hacker admits attacks on Murdoch, Sony

 JournalismPakistan.com |  Published: 9 April 2013

Join our WhatsApp channel

Hacker admits attacks on Murdoch, Sony
Ryan Ackroyd, a British hacker, has admitted to cyber attacks against high-profile targets including Sony and News International. He was part of the LulzSec group and faces sentencing on May 14.

LONDON: A British computer hacker pleaded guilty on Tuesday to cyber attacks on targets including Sony, Nintendo, Rupert Murdoch's News International and the Arizona State Police.

Ryan Ackroyd's plea meant his planned jury trial did not go ahead and, as a result, the court did not hear any evidence on the motivation behind the attacks he made using the persona of a 16-year-old girl named Kayla as part of hacking group LulzSec.

Dressed in a tracksuit bottom and t-shirt, with a large tattoo on his arm and crew-cut hair, Ackroyd spoke only to identify himself and to enter his plea.

Ackroyd, 26, was arrested in 2011 with three other British young men in connection with an international cyber crime spree by LulzSec, a splinter group of hacking collective Anonymous.

The other three had already pleaded guilty to several charges including cyber attacks on the CIA and Britain's Serious Organized Crime Agency (SOCA).

Anonymous, and LulzSec in particular, made international headlines in late 2010 when they launched what they called the "first cyber war" in retaliation for attempts to shut down the WikiLeaks website.

Ackroyd faced four charges but pleaded guilty to just one. Prosecutors said they would not pursue the other charges.

Ackroyd and his three fellow hackers will be sentenced on May 14, judge Deborah Taylor said.- Reuters

Key Points

  • Ryan Ackroyd pleaded guilty to one charge related to cyber attacks.
  • He was part of LulzSec, a splinter group of Anonymous.
  • His attacks targeted Sony, Nintendo, and Rupert Murdoch's News International.
  • The other charges against him will not be pursued by prosecutors.
  • Sentencing is scheduled for May 14.

Ask AI: Understand this story your way

AI Enabled

Dig deeper, ask anything — get instant context, background, and clarity.

Not sure what to choose? Try one of these.

The AI generates results based on your selected options
Your AI-generated results will appear here after you click the button.

Disclaimer: This feature is powered by AI and is intended to help readers explore and understand news stories more easily. While we strive for accuracy, AI-generated responses may occasionally be incomplete or reflect limitations in the underlying model. This feature does not represent the editorial views of JournalismPakistan. For our full, verified reporting, please refer to the original article.

Read Next

Newsroom
UK plans social media ban for under-16s

UK plans social media ban for under-16s

 June 15, 2026 UK plans to ban under-16s from major social media like TikTok, Instagram, Facebook and X under new online safety rules, officials say, to protect children.


Supreme Court shutters press room amid backlash

Supreme Court shutters press room amid backlash

 June 15, 2026 Pakistan's Supreme Court shuttered its longstanding press room and tightened access for court reporters, drawing criticism from journalists and raising transparency concerns.


Pele to Messi: How World Cup finals wrote football's greatest story

Pele to Messi: How World Cup finals wrote football's greatest story

 June 15, 2026 From Pele to Messi, World Cup finals shaped football's global story, tracing triumphs and heartbreaks and showing how the game became a shared language.


Press freedom review: From jail cells to cyberspace, threats to journalists multiply

Press freedom review: From jail cells to cyberspace, threats to journalists multiply

 June 14, 2026 Press freedom faces mounting challenges worldwide as journalists confront arrests, legal pressure, cyberattacks, online harassment, deportations, and reporting restrictions across multiple countries.


The right to know: Comparing access-to-information laws across Asia

The right to know: Comparing access-to-information laws across Asia

 June 14, 2026 Across Asia, RTI laws range from effective tools for journalism and accountability to paper laws weakened by bureaucracy, broad exemptions and poor enforcement.


Popular Stories