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(FILES) This photograph taken in Tarbes, south-western France, on 2 March, 2001, shows a general view of Tarbes' city hall. Several websites of French towns and departments were inaccessible on 31 December, 2024, after a group of hackers claimed responsibility for computer attacks in retaliation for French support for Ukraine.
Pascal Pavani / AFP
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The internet sites of several French cities and at least one department were inaccessible Tuesday after a group of hackers claimed attacks they described as retaliation for French support for Ukraine.
At 1600 GMT (12:00 AM Philippine time), the sites of the cities of Marseille and Tarbes were down, as was the site of the department of Haute-Garonne.
The attacks were claimed on X by a hackers group calling themselves NoName, a collective already known for other attacks and for defending Russian points of view.
On their X account, the hackers claimed to have also attacked the sites of cities such as Nantes, Bordeaux, Poitiers, Pau, Nimes, Nice, Angers, Le Havre, and Montpellier, as well as the department of Les Landes, French Polynesia and New Caledonia, but there were all still operating Tuesday.
The mayor of Nice, Christian Estrosi, confirmed on X that the city's website had been targeted.
Marseille's town hall told AFP that the servers that host the city's websites had been subject to attacks that required them to enact "protection mechanisms that had the consequence of making them inaccessible".
The cities of Pau and Angers, as well as the Landes department, said they had not noticed any incidents.
DDoS attacks, or "distributed denial of service", are frequently used by NoName in a technique that involves saturating sites with a huge number of automatic requests that render them inoperable.
The attacks generally do not involve stealing data.
Benoit Grunemwald, a cybersecurity expert at ESET, said the goal appears to be propaganda by "creating an impression of a climate of digital insecurity."