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Lulzsec: UK men plead guilty to hacking charges

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Lulz Security man in hat icon
Image caption,

Lulzsec were known for carrying out attacks for the "lulz", a variation of "lol", meaning "laugh out loud"

Two members of the computer hacking group Lulzsec have pleaded guilty to charges they attacked several high-profile websites.

Ryan Cleary, 19, and Jake Davis, 18, admitted being part of Lulzsec, an offshoot of the Anonymous collective.

They and two others - Ryan Ackroyd, 25, and a 17-year-old boy - deny other similar hacking charges.

Lulzsec claimed responsibility for attacking the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) website.

Mr Cleary, from Essex; Mr Davis, from the Shetland Isles; Mr Ackroyd from South Yorkshire and the unnamed 17-year-old will all face trial in April 2013.

Splinter group

Mr Cleary also faces charges in the US, where he stands accused of breaking into a number of websites, including that of the US X Factor, in order to deface them and steal personal details.

Lulzsec emerged as a splinter group of the Anonymous hacking collective in May 2011.

Their name stood for Lulz Security - where "Lulz" is a play on words of the popular internet phrase "lol", meaning "laugh out loud".

They employed techniques to flood websites with high traffic - known as a DDoS attack - in order to render them unusable.

Lulzsec claimed to have attacked News International, whose website for The Sun was defaced with a false story suggesting that the newspaper's owner Rupert Murdoch had died.

Lulzsec had previously posted a story on American broadcaster PBS's website suggesting that deceased rapper Tupac Shakur was in fact alive.