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JERUSALEM A weekend cyberattack campaign targeting Israeli government websites
failed to cause serious disruption, officials said Sunday. The attacks followed
warnings in the name of the group Anonymous that it was launching
a massive hacking assault to protest Israeli policy toward the Palestinians.Yitzhak
Ben Yisrael, of the government's National Cyber Bureau, said hackers had
mostly failed to shut down key sites."So far it is as was
expected, there is hardly any real damage," Ben Yisrael said. "Anonymous
doesn't have the skills to damage the country's vital infrastructure. And
if that was its intention, then it wouldn't have announced the attack
ahead of time. It wants to create noise in the media about
issues that are close to its heart," he said.Posters using the name
of the hacking group Anonymous had warned they would launch a massive
attack on Israeli sites in a strike they called (hash)OpIsrael starting
April 7. Some said they were launching the assault in "solidarity" with
the Palestinians.Israel's Bureau of Statistics was down on Sunday morning
but it was unclear if it was hacked. Media said the sites
of the Defense and Education Ministry as well as banks had come
under attack the night before but they were mostly repelled.An Israeli government
spokesman issued a statement saying sites were operating properly as usual.
It said an Education Ministry site was down temporarily due to a
technical issue unrelated to hacking attem
Feb. 21, 2013: In this photo, a new inmate housing unit
is seen near completion at the Madera County Jail in Madera, Calif.APSACRAMENTO,
Calif. A federal judge on Friday rejected Gov. Jerry Brown's bid
to regain state control of inmates' mental health care after 18 years
of court oversight and billions of dollars spent to improve treatment.U.S.
District Judge Lawrence Karlton in Sacramento ruled that the state failed
to prove that it is providing the level of care required by
the U.S. Constitution for the state's more than 32,000 mentally ill inmates."This
court finds that ongoing constitutional violations remain in this action
and the prospective relief ordered by this court remains necessary to remedy
those violations," the judge said in his 68-page decision.The decision is
a blow to the Democratic governor's attempts to end nearly two decades
of expensive federal lawsuits that influence nearly every aspect of California's
prison system. It also undermines Brown's efforts to lift a separate court
order that otherwise will force the state to reduce its prison population
by nearly 10,000 by year's end.Brown has promised to appeal."The state's
lawyers are reviewing the order and we will send out reaction as
soon as possible," Jeffrey Callison, spokesman for the Department of Corrections
and Rehabilitation, said in an email.The governor's office did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.The judge and the attorneys for both
si
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