Hackers give Aarhus rail travellers temporary perk

Travelling by train in Denmark can sometimes include unruly youths, stuffy compartments, whinging children and for a few hours yesterday … pornography

Information screens at Aarhus Central Station that were supposed to display arrival and departures suddenly showed something a little racier yesterday: pornography.

Hackers are suspected in being behind the pornographic prank, according to an apologetic Mette Julbo, the vice president of transport company Midttrafik.

“We could see that something was happening on the screens,” Julbo told Jyllands-Posten newspaper. “It looked like someone was sitting and programming on the screens. Together with some guards, we pulled the plugs on all three screens.”

According to Henrik Johnson, the managing director of Mermaid, the company that supplies content to the screens at Aarhus Central Station, the company had been the victim of a hacker attack.

”We can’t say for sure how it happened, whether someone has gained access to codes or if they just tried to continuously gain entrance,” Johnson said.

Mermaid does know that the hacker gained access through a program from a third-party supplier. The programme was uninstalled after the incident.

The picture of the saucy information screen soon surfaced on Facebook and quickly went viral.

The incident in Aarhus follows in the wake of incident at Gammel Hellerup school in Copenhagen in May when a prankster replaced videos of graduating class with video of a young couple having sex.





  • How internationals can benefit from joining trade unions

    How internationals can benefit from joining trade unions

    Being part of a trade union is a long-established norm for Danes. But many internationals do not join unions – instead enduring workers’ rights violations. Find out how joining a union could benefit you, and how to go about it.

  • Internationals in Denmark rarely join a trade union

    Internationals in Denmark rarely join a trade union

    Internationals are overrepresented in the lowest-paid fields of agriculture, transport, cleaning, hotels and restaurants, and construction – industries that classically lack collective agreements. A new analysis from the Workers’ Union’s Business Council suggests that internationals rarely join trade unions – but if they did, it would generate better industry standards.

  • Novo Nordisk overtakes LEGO as the most desirable future workplace amongst university students

    Novo Nordisk overtakes LEGO as the most desirable future workplace amongst university students

    The numbers are especially striking amongst the 3,477 business and economics students polled, of whom 31 percent elected Novo Nordisk as their favorite, compared with 20 percent last year.