Monday, 27 April 2015

TRAI puts a million net neutrality response email addresses online, hackers pull down site :::: Download or Check full list of email id's

TRAI puts a million net neutrality response email addresses online, hackers pull down site.Download or Check full list of email id's

New Delhi - Apr 28, 2015 

Over a million people sent in their responses to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) to voice their support for a neutral internet in India.



The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India was allegedly hacked. A group, which calls itself AnonOpsIndia, claimed on Twitter on Monday that it had taken down the trai.gov.in website through a distributed denial of service or DDoS attack.
The alleged hacking occurred hours after the TRAI revealed the email addresses of over one million people who had written to the organization about their views on a consulation paper on net neutrality. This had made all the respondents' email IDs potentially available to spammers. TRAI officials denied any hacking claims and said that the site was down "due to some technical glitches."
What TRAI publishing your email address on its website means is this: if you did you bit for net neutrality by sending an email to TRAI any time in the past month, you're now a sitting duck for all sorts of spam -- Viagra ads, credit cards, loans, Nigerian princes and more. All a spammer has to do is download the PDF on TRAI's website and skim your email address from it.

This is a privacy nightmare. It's a readymade database for email addresses for unscrupulous companies and it's worth a lot of money, because most of these million plus email addresses are genuine and verified.
"I understand that it is the duty of the TRAI to make everything that they have received public since it is a public consultation after all," says Rajya Sabha MP Rajeev Chandrashekhar who says he is taking up the broader issue of citizens' privacy up in the Parliament. "Still, there is an obligation on them to not reveal personal details like my email address or my phone number."

Lawyer Apar Gupta, who has been an active participant in the SaveTheInternet campaign says that publishing email address in clear text potentially leads to risks such as spamming and harassment of people who have participated in this consultation. "Even if these details were to be provided publicly, they shouldn't have been published in a manner where they could be scraped easily by any email marketer," he says.
Kiran Jonnalagadda, the Bangalore-based software engineer and the person who started SaveTheInternet.in had to say in:
Dear TRAI: we love how transparent you're being in this whole net neutrality debate, but seriously, this is a massive breach of citizens' privacy. What are you thinking?

Download or Check full list of email id's

Sr. No. Date 
01. 27th March to 10th April 
02. 11th April 
03. 12th April Part-I 
04. 12th April Part-II 
05. 13th April Part-I 
06. 13th April Part-II 
07. 16th April Part-I 
08. 16th April Part-II 
09. 17th April 
10. 18th April 
11. 19th April 
12. 20th April 
13. 21st April 
14. 22nd April 
15. 23rd April 
16. 24th April


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