BOSTON (Reuters) - The public website of the Central Intelligence Agency went down on Wednesday evening as the hacker group Lulz Security said it had launched an attack. Lulz Security has claimed  responsibility for recent attacks on the Senate, Sony Corp, News Corp  and the U.S. Public Broadcasting System television network. The CIA site initially could not be  accessed from New York to San Francisco, and Bangalore to London. Later  in the evening service was sporadic. "We are looking into these reports," a CIA spokeswoman said. 
Lulz Security has defaced websites,  posted personal information about customers and site administrators,  and disclosed the network configurations of some sites. Security analysts have downplayed  the significance of these attacks, saying the hackers are just looking  to show off and get as much attention as possible. "All they're doing is saying 'Look  how good we are,'" Carr said. "These guys are literally in it for  embarrassment, to say 'your security is crap.'" Lulz only made claims that it  attacked www.cia.gov, and there was no evidence on Wednesday evening  that sensitive data in the agency's internal computer network had been compromised. 
Although the group, also known as  Lulz Boat, fashions itself more as pranksters and activists than people  with sinister intent, its members have been accused of breaking the law  and are wanted by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. Lulz broke into a public website of  the Senate over the weekend and released data stolen from the  legislative body's computer servers.
In May, the group posted a fake story on the PBS website saying that rapper Tupac Shakur was still alive and living in New Zealand. Shakur was murdered in 1996.

 
 
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