Supreme Court Website Back Online After It Crashed On Thursday

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
the Supreme Court that went offline on Thursday minutes after the top court ruled that there will be no independent probe into the death of
judge BH Loya, has come back online.On social media, people had posted an image claiming to be the screenshot of the Supreme Court website
on which a green leaf that resembled the cannabis leaf was drawn
The image was surrounded by text that seemed to suggest the website was hacked."Hackeado por HighTech Brazil HackTeam (hacked by HighTech
Brazil team)," read the message on the screenshot that was shared by many on Twitter and WhatsApp.Two hours later, a message appeared on the
Supreme Court website: "Site under maintenance".Some web security experts have claimed that the website could have received heavy traffic
just as the Supreme Court ruling on the judge Loya case came
The top court called petitions for an independent probe into judge Loya's death "scandalous" and a "frontal attack on the judiciary".Judge
Loya, 48, was hearing the Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case, in which Amit Shah was an accused, when he died of a heart attack in
Maharashtra's Nagpur, where he was attending a wedding
The judge who replaced him ruled there was not enough evidence against Amit Shah to merit a trial and discharged the BJP chief.Indian
government websites have come under attack from suspected Pakistani hackers in the past as well
In January, suspected Pakistan-based operatives had hacked the website of National Security Guard (NSG) and posted anti-India content and
comments against the Prime Minister.Earlier this year, the government informed the Lok Sabha that over 700 websites linked to the central
and state governments were hacked in the past four years.Experts attributed the frequent hacking of Indian websites to lack of adequate
security measures in the virtual world.