Computers used by the 64 Tian Wang website, known for its exposures of  Chinese human rights violations, were hacked on Aug. 27.  The hackers  infiltrated the computers’ registry files and changed data and caused  nearly 14 million registry data errors. Files were corrupted and data  lost and outside access to the site was interrupted. 
  
  A volunteer at the website, Mr. Pu Fei, told the Epoch Times that the  attack was discovered during the morning of Aug. 27 and that all  browsing access to the site was lost in the afternoon. After  investigation by their overseas technicians, they found that a large  number of improper files had been uploaded, resulting in the website’s  being unable to function properly. 
  
  “The attack on the website can be accomplished by remote computers, but  in order to change the registry data and install malware, it is  necessary to personally turn on the computers and then enter the correct  password,” Pu said.
  
  He believes that the incident shows that the cyber attackers must have been professionally trained.
  
  The means of attack are similar to those that tried to hack into the  Falun Gong official website earlier this summer, as the Chinese regime  unwittingly revealed in a television program called The Coming Internet  Storm.
  
  64 Tian Wang is a well-known activist website that reports events on the  mainland and is mostly concerned with human rights issues in China. The  Chinese Communist Party pulled the plug on the organization’s web  access in 2000 but they reopened after relocating their servers to  America. 
  
  Read the original Chinese article.
  
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Hack Attack Shuts Down Site Tracking Chinese Human Rights Violations
Computers used by the 64 Tian Wang website, known for its exposures of Chinese human rights violations, were hacked on Aug. 27.
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