Someone temporarily hijacked the Ultimate Fighting Championship's website on Sunday, apparently because of the organization's stance on online piracy.
UFC.com on Sunday afternoon was briefly redirecting to another domain that identifies itself as the "Underground Nazi H4ck3rGr0up" site. UFC had things back to normal before 5:52 p.m. ET.
One individual identified himself as "JoshTheGod" on the domain to which UFC.com was redirecting. That person posted on Twitter at 4:51 p.m. ET to take credit for Sunday's incident:
The mischief came on the heels of an opinion piece written by Lawrence Epstein, general counsel for UFC parent company Zuffa. The op-ed published Sunday in Zuffa's hometown newspaper, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, expressed support for proposed legislation such as the Protect IP Act and the Stop Online Piracy Act.
Both bills have been criticized heavily by Internet users and technology companies. To protest PIPA and SOPA, the popular Wikipedia site earlier this week replaced its pages for 24 hours with a note urging readers to speak out against the legislation.
Also this week, law enforcement officials in New Zealand and the United States shuttered the Megaupload site, which the Justice Department describes as a haven for pirated material. Shortly afterward, a cyberattack shut down the Justice Department's site for hours.
Zuffa for years has decried online piracy because the majority of its revenue comes from pay-per-view broadcasts. The company in recent years has become aggressive with lawsuits against parties it accuses of illegally streaming UFC shows on the Internet.
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