Greekprank.com Hacker Now
Cybersecurity firm DeltaSec published a 47-page analysis in early 2024. Their key findings:
As of May 2026, the case remains open. The FBI’s Cyber Division officially lists the GreekPrank.com intrusions as case number CY-23-8912 (active but non-priority).
However, three developments suggest closure may never come: greekprank.com hacker
Some cybersecurity analysts argue the hacker never intended harm. Instead, they allegedly left backdoor warnings and encrypted messages inside the site’s code urging the owner to implement HTTPS, hashed passwords, and a reporting system. When the owner ignored these warnings, the hacker published a partial user database (with emails redacted) to prove vulnerability.
Inside the Mind of "greekprank.com": When Vandalism Becomes a Public Service Cybersecurity firm DeltaSec published a 47-page analysis in
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To the casual observer, the URL greekprank.com sounds like a digital repository for harmless jokes—Photoshopped images of politicians or silly flash games. But for a specific subset of the cybersecurity community, and particularly for the administrators of unsecured Greek municipal websites, the "hacker" behind this domain represents something far more annoying, and arguably more vital, than a simple prankster. However, three developments suggest closure may never come:
They are the digital equivalent of a neighborhood watch member who breaks your window to prove your lock is broken.
In late 2022, a user named KappaSigmaGhost posted on a now-deleted subreddit: "I helped build that site. I watched it turn into a sewer. So I burned it down." This aligns with the first major breach—December 17, 2022—when the hacker gained root access to GreekPrank.com’s backend and deleted over 10,000 user accounts.