Jun 26, 2011 by Euronews
Rival hackers have also joined in the hunt, releasing information they say could point to the identities of the six-member group.
LulzSec claimed hacks on major entertainment companies, FBI partner organisations, the CIA, the US Senateand a pornography website.
As a parting shot, LulzSec released a grab-bag of documents and login information apparently gleaned from gaming websites and corporate servers.
The largest group of documents – 338 files – appears to be internal documents from AT&T Inc, detailing its build-out of a new wireless broadband network in the US.
An AT&T spokesman could not immediately confirm the authenticity of the documents.
In an unusual strategy for a hacker group, LulzSec has sought publicity and conducted a conversation with the public through its Twitter account.
Observers believe it’s an offshoot of Anonymous, a larger, more loosely organised group that attempts to mobilise hackers for attacks on targets it considers immoral, such as oppressive Middle Eastern governments and opponents of the document-distribution site WikiLeaks.http://theinformativereport.com/2011/06/26/hacker-group-lulz-announces-its-disbanding/
LulzSec, the hacker group that has penetrated a number of high-profile websites over the last two months, has suddenly ceased its activities.