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DATE=2/11/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=CYBERHACKER INVESTIGATION (S) NUMBER=2-259079 BYLINE=NICK SIMEONE DATELINE=WASHINGTON CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: An electronic attack on a computer at the University of California is giving the F-B-I what could be its first break in the nationwide investigation into three days of cyber-attacks this week on such high profile websites as Yahoo, Amazon- dot-com and the Cable News Network, or C-N-N-dot-com. Correspondent Nick Simeone brings us the latest in the hunt for those responsible for the largest attack on the internet in memory. TEXT: The F-B-I is investigating the break-in of a computer at the University of California in Santa Barbara where the campus programmer has determined that at least one of the university's computers was used to attack C-N-N's website, C-N-N-dot-com. The university says an unknown hacker used a research laboratory computer as a conduit to jamming the C-N-N site -- overloading it with information and thereby preventing internet users from accessing it. The University of California - which pioneered the early development of the internet - is now cooperating with the F-B-I in the search for who was responsible. But school officials say they believe someone outside the university community initiated the attack. An attack from just one computer would not by itself be enough to shut down such high profile sites as Yahoo and C-N-N-dot-com, but this could turn out to be the first solid lead investigators have in the case. Prosecutors believe as many as a hundred different computers may have been involved in the attacks that disrupted internet commerce for three days and prevented millions of people from gaining access to popular websites. (SIGNED) NEB/NJS/ENE/JP 11-Feb-2000 17:40 PM EDT (11-Feb-2000 2240 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .