abonnement Unibet Coolblue
  zaterdag 12 april 2014 @ 15:49:36 #1
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138796747


Anon: Wordt gebruikt als aanduiding van zowel de totale internet-community als voor netizens die zich identificeren met Anonymous.
Anonymous: Ongeorganiseerd hacktivist collectief.
Anonops: Een netwerk/infrastructuur dat door Anonymous gebruikt word om actie te voeren.
Peoples Liberation Front: Cyber millitia. Volgens CommanderX gevormd in 1985 met behulp van LSD. Werkt samen met Anonops als dat zo uitkomt.
http://www.itworld.com/in(...)mmander-x?page=0%2C0
Lulzsec: Leakers. Ze "testen" met veel plezier beveiligingen op internet. Geïnfiltreerd en opgerold door de FBI e.d.
Whatis-theplan.org Discussie-forum. Verander de wereld in 3 stappen. Ligt onder vuur door oldfag-trollen.

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/4chan
4chan is een Engelstalig imageboard/internetforum. 4chan werd op 1 oktober 2003 opgericht door de toen 15-jarige "moot". Gebruikers kunnen volledig anoniem afbeeldingen en reacties plaatsen over alle denkbare onderwerpen. De site is gebaseerd op het Japanse internetforum Futaba Channel en is onderverdeeld in verschillende subfora, 'boards' genaamd. Het meest populaire (en beruchte) is het Random board, genaamd /b/. 4chan gebruikers zijn verantwoordelijk voor het bedenken of populariseren van vele zogeheten internetmemes.
Een bekende meme komt van een Japanse manga.
Als je denkt dat je geweldig bent of iets fantastisch hebt gedaan zeg je “I’m over 9000”
Oprah Winfrey weet het , na een berichtje van 4chan, nu ook:

Iedereen kan via 4chan, maar ook via de ouderwetse IRC-channels, volledig anoniem met elkaar “communiceren”. http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Relay_Chat

4chan /b/ gaat over borsten, cracken/hacken van software en websites, down- en uploaden. De veelal jonge gebruikers van 4chan verveelden zich niet alleen met elkaar, maar hun kattenkwaad bereikte ook de echte wereld. Buren en leraren kregen ongevraagd pizza-bezorgers aan de deur of werden over de telefoon lastig gevallen nadat persoonlijke gegevens via 4chan werden verspreidt. Ook werden websites bestookt met commentaar of extreem veel bezoek. Bezoek dat na verloop van tijd werd geautomatiseerd met behulp van een test-tool voor websites, omgebouwd en omgedoopt tot Low Orbit Ion Cannon.


Binnen de Anon-community ontstond op een dag het hacktivisme. En het heette Anonymous. Anonymous belichaamde een belangrijk Anon-ideaal: Vrij, open, ongecensureerd internet, onbeperkte vrijheid van (het delen van) informatie. En Anonymous vond een vijand. Januari 2008.
Deze interne propaganda-video lekte uit en kwam uit via Gawker. Scientology staat er om bekend om auteurswetgeving te misbruiken om hun methoden uit de openbaarheid te houden. Scientology vroeg Gawker de video te verwijderen. De video bleef opduiken en nadat advocaten van Scientology wereldwijd websites terroriseerden kwam Anonymous met hun oorlogsverklaring.
Anonymous gebruikte het volledige 4chan arsenaal. DDOSsen van scientology-websites, e-mail/fax-bommen, prank-calls. Maar de acties breidden zich uit naar de echte wereld. Main-stream media pikten het op en demonstraties over de hele wereld vonden plaats.


Na maanden werd het wat rustiger tussen Anonymous en Scientology, maar Oparation Chanalogy loopt nog steeds.

De strijd voor een vrij en open internet bleef en richtte zich vooral op film- en platenmaatschappijen in Operation Payback. Anonymous verklaarde zich solidair met WikiLeaks toen Joe Liebermann financiële mogelijkheden van WikiLeaks probeerde af te sluiten, en startte Operation Avenge Assange waarbij ze de websites van Paypal, Mastercard en Visa aanvielen.

Kort daarna kwam de video voor Operation Payback uit.

3 januari 2011 opende Anonymous de aanval op websites van Tunesië, en Anonymous bemoeit zich tot op de dag van vandaag met de revoluties in het Midden Oosten. Niet alleen met DDOS-aanvallen, maar ook met informatie (naar demonstranten en naar het internationale publiek) praktische tips (EHBO, maak zelf een gasmasker) alternatieve communicatiemiddelen.

5 februari 2011: Ene Aaron Barr van HBGary Federal maakte in een interview bekend dat hij de leiders van Anonymous had geïdentificeerd. Een groep hackers hackte de computers van HBGary, zette een boodschap op hun website, wiste een berg data en openbaarde 70.000 e-mails. Uit de e-mails bleek dat het Amerikaanse bedrijfsleven en de overheid alle legale en illegale middelen gebruikt om tegenstanders (mensenrechten organisaties, vakbonden en WikiLeaks) kapot te maken.
http://arstechnica.com/te(...)rr-met-anonymous.ars
Barret Brown stortte zich op de mails en heeft Project PM opgericht om de activiteiten van internetbeveiligingsbedrijven i.s.m. vooral de US overheid in kaart te brengen.
BarrettBrownLOL twitterde op maandag 03-09-2012 om 02:16:10 And all this because man put in motion systems that returned to enslave him #ProjectPM reageer retweet
IRL-Troll familie Westboro Baptist Church dacht ook mee te kunnen liften en daagde Anonymous uit.
Waarna Th3 J3st3r de WBC-websites maandenlang plat legde.

NATO maakt zich zorgen:
quote:
http://www.thinq.co.uk/20(...)persecute-anonymous/
NATO leaders have been warned that WikiLeaks-loving 'hacktivist' collective Anonymous could pose a threat to member states' security, following recent attacks on the US Chamber of Commerce and defence contractor HBGary - and promise to 'persecute' its members.
Anonymous en Occupy Wall Str.:
quote:
From a single hashtag, a protest circled the world

(Reuters) - It all started innocuously enough with a July 13 blog post urging people to #OccupyWallStreet, as though such a thing (Twitter hashtag and all) were possible.


NWS / Anonymous daagt Mexicaans drugskartel uit.

quote:
Gabriella Coleman Assistant Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication

Trained as an anthropologist, Gabriella (Biella) Coleman examines the ethics of online collaboration/institutions as well as the role of the law and digital media in sustaining various forms of political activism. Between 2001-2003 she conducted ethnographic research on computer hackers primarily in San Francisco, the Netherlands, as well as those hackers who work on the largest free software project, Debian. Her first book, "Coding Freedom: The Aesthetics and the Ethics of Hacking" is forthcoming with Princeton University Press and she is currently working on a new book on Anonymous and digital activism. She is the recipient of numerous grants, fellowships, and awards, including ones from the National Science Foundation, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Social Science Research Council and the Institute for Advanced Study.
quote:
Anonymous: From the Lulz to Collective Action

Gabriella Coleman, April 6 2011
quote:
Our Weirdness Is Free

The logic of Anonymous—online army, agent of chaos, and seeker of justice.

by Gabriella Coleman, [01.13.2012]
quote:
Coding Fredom [PDF]

The Aesthetics and the Ethics of Hacking

Gabriella Coleman 2013
quote:
Anonymous And The War Over The Internet

This article is the first in a two-part series tracing the development of the amorphous online community known as Anonymous, pranksters who have become a force in global affairs.

The Huffington Post, Saki Knafo. Posted: 1/30/12 12:20 PM ET | Updated: 2/1/12 07:36 PM ET
TIMELINE: The Evolution Of The 'Anonymous' Internet Hacktivist Group

Vorige delen:
NWS / Internet community begint oorlog tegen Scientology...
NWS / Internet community begint oorlog tegen Scientology #2
NWS / Internet community begint oorlog tegen Scientology #3
NWS / Anonops : Take down mastercard
NWS / Anonops : Take down Politie.nl
NWS / Anonops #3: Soldiers are enlisting.
NWS / Anonops #4: The war goes on
NWS / Anonops #5: Anonymous en de MO-revoluties
NWS / Anonops #6: Anonymous en de MO-revoluties
NWS / Anonops #7: Meer is beter
NWS / Anonops #8: Occupy Wall Str.
NWS / Anonops #9: Get Los(t) Zetas
NWS / Anonops #10: Stop SOPA
NWS / Anonops #11: Stop ACTA
NWS / Anonops #12: Spy on the Spyers
NWS / Anonops #13: Stop CISPA
NWS / Anonops #14: All about control
NWS / Anonops #15: Last or not to Last

[ Bericht 0% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 12-04-2014 16:01:13 ]
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 12 april 2014 @ 15:52:05 #2
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138796793
Voor Edward Snowden en de NSA is een apart topic: NWS / Monitoring NSA in de VS en erbuiten, deel 8
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 12 april 2014 @ 15:54:56 #3
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138796851
quote:
quote:
Freedom fighters or cyber-terrorists?

Internationally famous for cyber-attacks against the Church of Scientology, government agencies of the US, Israel, Tunisia, Uganda, and others; child pornography sites; copyright protection agencies; the Westboro Baptist Church; and corporations such as PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, and Sony, who are the hacktivist collective known as ‘Anonymous’? What do they think? What motivates them?

In November 2012, The Imaginary Book Co. invited Anonymous to share their thoughts. We wanted to try and capture something of the essence of an imaginary non-organisation, to preserve it as a time-capsule for the future. We believe we’re witnessing the birth of something important, although perhaps it’s too early to even say what it is yet: a new form of democracy? Time will tell...

We assured Anonymous we would not edit, collate, correct, censor, comment upon, or judge what we received. That’s for others to do. We would simply print. We didn’t know what we’d get, if anything. This is what we got.

Anarchic, chaotic, sensible, deep, shallow, thoughtful, radical, revolutionary, and funny, this book is the first time Anonymous have written in their own words; plenty has been written about them, most of it inaccurate. And who’s to say this book itself isn’t more disinformation? Does it express the hopes and desires and motivations of the entire collective? Undoubtedly not; just a small sample of the thousands of reasons why anyone would associate themselves. Nevertheless, it’s a snapshot of Anonymous, right here and now, at this moment in time. If you want to know where Anonymous is headed, this is the book for you. When your government starts burning books, this is the one they’ll come for first…

Published to coincide with Anonymous’ worldwide “Million Mask March” on November 5th 2013, this 212 page paperback book, measuring 190mm x 250mm (7.72 x 10.08 inches) is packed with images, slogans and texts that explain, not only what Anonymous think, but how to get involved yourself.

All royalties from this book are being donated to FreeAnons, which provides legal and moral support for activists facing prosecution for involvement, alleged or otherwise, in Anonymous actions.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 14 april 2014 @ 15:43:10 #4
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138868981
YourAnonNews twitterde op maandag 14-04-2014 om 15:28:57 "I just miss - I miss being anonymous." - Barack Obama” -.- reageer retweet
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 16 april 2014 @ 17:50:38 #5
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_138948824
quote:
Barrett Brown's New Book 'Keep Rootin' for Putin' Skewers Mainstream Media Pundits

Next week, Barrett Brown's legal defense fund is publishing the jailed journalist's hilarious new book, Keep Rootin' for Putin: Establishment Pundits and the Twilight of American Competence. Brown's new work takes down talking heads and argues for the revolutionary potential of the Internet. The book couldn't address his case directly, since his prosecutors secured a gag agreement, but implicitly shows why his legal battles are so important.

You remember Barrett Brown, the colourful author who loudly defended the hacktivist collective Anonymous. After the 2007 release of his first book, Flock of Dodos: Behind Modern Creationism, Intelligent Design, and the Easter Bunny, Brown embraced the cutting edge by publishing his deep research into WikiLeaks, Anonymous, and leaked documents from military and corporate “cybersecurity” contractors in the Guardian, Huffington Post, and elsewhere. He did it all with gonzo flair, publicly labeling himself “Cobra Commander” after the cartoon character, addressing fellow activists by video from bubble baths while drinking wine, and the like.

His new book tears apart the error-ridden blather of five influential pundits and calls for their replacement by populist researchers and activists equipped with the Internet. He envisions a sort of cyber-Library of Alexandria, a more lateral space for public discourse based on the historical record rather than on opinion, often reckless or incoherent, paraded as fact and bestowed from above.

But the kind of inanity he blasts in Keep Rootin' for Putin is now aimed at him by the government. He faces more than a century in prison chiefly for sharing a hyperlink, allegedly, to cancelled credit card data from the Stratfor hack, which landed five million of the Austin-based intelligence firm's emails on WikiLeaks. The credit card data didn't come from him; he just pointed fellow researchers to it during the media buzz generated by the hack. His prosecutors shared the same link by putting it in his indictment, right there on Page 1. So it's okay, ethically, for the Department of Justice to share the link, but not for him to do it?

The government's stupidity extends to charging him for allegedly making threats against the FBI agent who raided his and his mother's homes. In addition to Brown's now-infamous YouTube rants against Special Agent Robert Smith, the prosecution cited his disapproving tweet quoting Fox News analyst Bob Beckel saying of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange: “A dead man can't leak stuff...illegally shoot the son of a bitch.” They argue Brown's quoting of Beckel represents a threat against the FBI agent. But Assange is “not the alleged victim” Smith, Brown's lawyers say dryly in their January motion to dismiss the threat charges. “Mr. Beckel, to wit, remains unindicted.”

In that motion, the defense points out Brown's much-cited video quote that he was “going to ruin [Smith's] life and look into his fucking kids” was immediately preceded by the words “I don't say I'm going to kill him.” They point out the First Amendment requires such statements to rise to the level of a “true threat” of “physical harm” to become offenses. The motion lists the prosecution's selections from Brown's videos and Twitter timeline and shows which statements don't threaten bodily harm, which are conditional, and so on. Further, the context in the videos and on Twitter suggested he meant the sort of journalistic investigation/character assassination widely practiced by Anonymous.

Such Department of Justice stupidity is shielded by the sorts of pundits Keep Rootin' for Putin criticizes, because their professional output is noisy bullshit behind which the authorities can conspire unexamined. Brown aims to burn down the pundits' credibility.

First on the book's hit list is Thomas Friedman, unfortunately a bestselling author and twice-weekly columnist for the New York Times. He told readers in 2001 to “keep rootin' for Putin” as the man to reform Russia, in a column that paid attention to Moscow sushi bars but not the wily leader's creepy backstory. Brown points out that in 1999, Putin had been director of the Federal Security Service, the successor of the KGB, while the Kremlin was planning to bomb Moscow and blame it on Chechen terrorists. Agents from the Service were caught planting explosives in the city; other bombings were attributed to Chechens. Putin, elevated to prime minister, used the supposed attacks as a pretext to invade Chechnya, a war so popular it helped propel him to the presidency. Friedman ignored this deadly intrigue, and instead complimented the “California-Kremlin” rolls.

By itself, Friedman's mistake would be a story of a failed prediction and misplaced focus, but it gets worse. In an August 2008 column entitled “What Did We Expect?” Friedman mocked the Clinton and George H. W. Bush administrations for “short-sightedness” in foreign policy choices the columnist said fueled Putin's rise to power—with nary a word about his own, earlier propaganda for the Russian politician. These are day-in, day-out mistakes for Friedman, the book shows, but the New York Times has been feeding them to us for two decades straight.

The Washington Post gives us the same sort of serial nonsense, Brown explains, taking on Richard Cohen and Charles Krauthammer, two pundits for the paper whose columns have hit newsstands nationwide for 30 years. He traces how Cohen in 2007 accused Hillary Clinton of “forever” lying, then a year later blamed those who made the same claim, accusing them of committing a “ferocious mugging of memory.” He proves Krauthammer has been wrong about basically “every military and foreign policy matter on which he's opined from 1999 to 2010.” As Keep Rootin' for Putin piles up evidence, you begin to realize the mainstream media isn't there to inform you, but, whether through design or sheer incompetence, to distract you.

Brown wipes out William Bennett, host of a nationally syndicated talk radio show, anti-intellectual chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities and Secretary of Education under President Reagan, and author of such bestsellers as The Children's Book of Virtues. As drug czar under President George H.W. Bush, Bennett said beheading drug dealers would be morally appropriate (“I used to teach ethics—trust me,” he explained to talk show host Larry King) and blamed addiction on Satan. “Bennett is so full of horse shit,” Brown writes. “He could fertilize every bombed-out coca field from the Yucatan to Bolivia.”

The book's last target is Martin Peretz, editor-in-chief of The New Republic for 37 years. Brown ridicules Peretz's writing style, quoting this example: “The New York Post and Reuters both report not exactly that Bernie Madoff has cancer. But that he's told his fellow inmates that he has cancer, pancreatic cancer, at that. Which means that, if the tale is true, he'll be a goner soon, very soon. Unless there's a medical miracle, as sometimes there is even in such terrible afflictions of the pancreas.” Peretz's logic is no less tortured.

Keep Rootin' for Putin, in contrast, is a quick, fun read. You can knock it out in two or three sittings, and you need not be a news junkie to follow the arguments and get most of the jokes. It's written in a bloggy style, with interludes of Led Zeppelin lyrics and surreal examples. “Let us say that I am a Roman pundit named Barriticus,” Brown writes at one point, “and I am living a few years after the initial food riots have occurred. When I givemy magnificent oration, after first having made love to several high-born young ladies...” There are also plenty of Easter eggs for bookworms, with allusions to such writers as H.G. Wells and Dostoevsky.

The book is certainly not dumbed down. His analysis ranks up there with the best of the brilliantly paranoid political authors. You have to hope the Texas juries in his April and May trials scrutinize his case as closely as he does the pundits. Given that gag agreement, it seems Brown's prosecutors fear his intelligence.

Keep Rootin' for Putinis a manifesto, not just some book version of Media Matters, the liberal fact-checking outfit whose articles you email your right-wing uncle to refute the articles he emails you. Brown argues the Internet is our superpower for removing the pundits. It allows us to catalog and cross-reference their mistakes, making a book such as his easier to produce. He has an admirable way of calling for taking up arms without scolding us. “We have a chance to dismantle the obsolete media structure that has already crippled our nation to some great extent and will cripple it further,” he says, “unless those of us who recognize this problem take some sort of, like, action.”

Cutting through the hubris of the pundits, he points out, will clear the way for our own communications. “The most important fact of the 21st century is that any individual on the planet can now communicate with any other individual on the planet,” he says, explaining that we are no longer beholden to nationalist pundits who, as leech-like intermediaries, filter and firewall information. With global networks, we can conduct our own projects for news, analysis, and action. If you want to communicate with revolutionaries the pundits ignore until it's profitable, as Brown and Anonymous did to support the Arab Spring uprisings, you can. If you want to crowdsource research into leaked emails of the government's shady contractors, as Brown's ProjectPM did, you can.

That is, unless the government shuts you down—as they're trying to shut down Brown. This new power for the people, the Internet, with its ability to forge bonds between activists worldwide and publicly archive forbidden data on sites such as WikiLeaks, terrifies the authorities. He takes it all in stride. “Life is full of possibilities,” he notes, “most of them sarcastic.”

Brown, who pleaded not guilty to every charge, is ready for the courtroom battle. On his team is legal heavyweight Charles Swift, who represented former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Salim Hamdan before the Supreme Court in the most significant case to date dealing with the war on terror, winning Geneva Conventions protections for the prisoners and limits to presidential power. Hamdan was ultimately acquitted of all charges. Attorney Ahmed Ghappour, an expert in national security cases, is also on Brown's team. Free speech advocates Reporters Without Borders, the Committee to Protect Journalists, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation have rallied to his defense.

The prosecution, despite the gag agreement, is already losing on the media front. This month, on House of Cards, a show popular enough to be mentioned on President Obama's Twitter timeline, the hacker character Gavin told the FBI to drop all of Brown's charges. Venues big and small, from this one to the New York Times to WhoWhatWhy, have been questioning the government's case.

Keep Rootin' for Putin has its faults. It could have been buttressed a bit with some statistically-minded analysis of the flows of capital and patronage that put the media institutions and their pundits in power. His asides sometimes get a little distracting, as when he states, “I'm also increasingly irritated by my own writing style.” But for the most part, the style is jazz.

As a generalist, Brown tended to shift focus, which allowed him to draw connections between disparate subjects, but gave the book a bit of a rocky history. He started writing it in 2006, then stopped, then finished it in 2010 before diving into the wild world of Anonymous. The book was originally contracted with Cambridge House Press to be published under the title Hot, Fat, and Clouded: The Amazing and Amusing Failures Of America’s Chattering Class.

If you're at all interested in the media and its failures or the Internet and its potential, you'll find Keep Rootin' for Putin entertaining and, despite the pundits' ridiculousness, inspiring. To get a copy, visit the Free Barrett Brown website and follow @FreeBarrett_on Twitter for announcements. The book will be available for donors to his legal defense fund.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 20 april 2014 @ 20:37:22 #6
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139087412
quote:
Barrett Brown Signs Plea Deal in Case Involving Stratfor Hack

Barrett Brown, whose case became a cause célèbre after he was charged with crimes related to the Stratfor hack, has agreed to a plea deal with prosecutors, according to court filings.

Prosecutors filed a motion this week in a Texas court agreeing to seal the plea agreement, which the court granted (.pdf).

Brown’s attorney, Ahmed Ghappour, won’t discuss the matter, due to a court-ordered gag, but another document filed by the government this week (.pdf) hints at the nature of the deal.

In the document, which supercedes two of Brown’s previous three indictments, the government charges Brown with two crimes: allegedly assisting the person who hacked Stratfor after the fact, and obstructing the execution of a search warrant targeting Brown.

The first charge is a new one and relates to assistance Brown allegedly gave the person who hacked Stratfor “in order to hinder and prevent [his] apprehension, trial and punishment.”

According to the government Brown worked to create confusion about the hacker’s identity “in a manner that diverted attention away from the hacker,” which included communicating with Stratfor after the hack in a way that authorities say drew attention away from the hacker. The hacker is not named, and it’s not clear if it’s convicted Stratfor intruder Jeremy Hammond, or an earlier hacker who’s known to have penetrated the company first.

The obstruction charge relates to an attempt by Brown and his mother to hide a laptop from authorities during a search of her home in March 2012. Brown’s mother was separately charged with obstruction and given six months probation.

The two charges greatly reduce the amount of time he could face at a sentencing hearing, which previously had been estimated at more than 50 years.

Brown’s earlier indictments were poised to become a First Amendment test case. He was charged with 12 counts centered around a link he posted in a chat room that pointed to a file containing data stolen in 2011 from the intelligence firm Stratfor, or Strategic Forecasting. The data, stolen by Hammond, a member of the loosely affiliated Anonymous collective, included company emails as well as credit card numbers belonging to subscribers of Stratfor’s service.

Brown didn’t steal the data but simply copied a hyperlink from one public chatroom and reposted it to another.

Eleven of his charges accused him of aggravated identity theft for possessing and trafficking in stolen authentication features — which authorities identified as the three- and four-digit card verification value (CVV) printed on the back of the cards.

Last month prosecutors dropped these eleven charges against Brown, after his attorney filed a motion to dismiss on grounds that Brown’s alleged conduct did not violate identity theft statutes as written.

The twelfth charge, for access device fraud, had remained in place. That one accused Brown of illegally possessing the stolen cards — presumably cards that were found on his computer after he downloaded the Stratfor cache himself.

But that charge has disappeared from the superceding document the government filed this week, which replaced the indictment. In its place is the new charge for accessory after the fact.

Brown is scheduled to be re-arraigned, on the charges on the superceding document, on April 29 in Texas.

Brown is also facing charges related to threats he allegedly made against an FBI agent. It’s unclear if the plea agreement will cover that indictment as well. If it does, and the two cases are combined, Brown’s maximum statutory sentence would likely be five years.

Brown has been in custody since he was arrested in 2012 while in the middle of an online chat.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 21 april 2014 @ 13:59:57 #7
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139108465
Cyberguerilla:

quote:
quote:
Big name individual hackers and hacker groups everywhere in the news are getting caught and thrown in jail. Every time I see something like this happen, I won’t lie, I get a little sad. Then I wonder, how are these guys getting caught? If a group like LulzSec, with all the fame and “1337-ness” can get caught, I think my hacker comrades are doing something wrong.

When members of LulzSec started getting captured, it was because proxy and VPN services complied to federal request and handed over the private information of its users. I think this is wrong for a number of reasons—foremost, people should be able to have their own privacy respected. Today’s Null Byte will be demonstrating one of the methods around this: Chaining VPNs.

A VPN allows you to connect to a remote network, and over all ports, encrypt and forward your traffic. This also changes your IP address. Chaining VPNs is a tricky task, though there is a simple and uncommon method I know of. Using multiple VPNs together has the huge perk of being completely anonymous.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 24 april 2014 @ 12:57:22 #8
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139211564
quote:
F.B.I. Informant Is Tied to Cyberattacks Abroad

WASHINGTON — An informant working for the F.B.I. coordinated a 2012 campaign of hundreds of cyberattacks on foreign websites, including some operated by the governments of Iran, Syria, Brazil and Pakistan, according to documents and interviews with people involved in the attacks.

Exploiting a vulnerability in a popular web hosting software, the informant directed at least one hacker to extract vast amounts of data — from bank records to login information — from the government servers of a number of countries and upload it to a server monitored by the F.B.I., according to court statements.

The details of the 2012 episode have, until now, been kept largely a secret in closed sessions of a federal court in New York and heavily redacted documents. While the documents do not indicate whether the F.B.I. directly ordered the attacks, they suggest that the government may have used hackers to gather intelligence overseas even as investigators were trying to dismantle hacking groups like Anonymous and send computer activists away for lengthy prison terms.

The attacks were coordinated by Hector Xavier Monsegur, who used the Internet alias Sabu and became a prominent hacker within Anonymous for a string of attacks on high-profile targets, including PayPal and MasterCard. By early 2012, Mr. Monsegur of New York had been arrested by the F.B.I. and had already spent months working to help the bureau identify other members of Anonymous, according to previously disclosed court papers.

One of them was Jeremy Hammond, then 27, who, like Mr. Monsegur, had joined a splinter hacking group from Anonymous called Antisec. The two men had worked together in December 2011 to sabotage the computer servers of Stratfor Global Intelligence, a private intelligence firm based in Austin, Tex.

Shortly after the Stratfor incident, Mr. Monsegur, 30, began supplying Mr. Hammond with lists of foreign websites that might be vulnerable to sabotage, according to Mr. Hammond, in an interview, and chat logs between the two men. The New York Times petitioned the court last year to have those documents unredacted, and they were submitted to the court last week with some of the redactions removed.

“After Stratfor, it was pretty much out of control in terms of targets we had access to,” Mr. Hammond said during an interview this month at a federal prison in Kentucky, where he is serving a 10-year sentence after pleading guilty to the Stratfor operation and other computer attacks inside the United States. He has not been charged with any crimes in connection with the hacks against foreign countries.

Mr. Hammond would not disclose the specific foreign government websites that he said Mr. Monsegur had asked him to attack, one of the terms of a protective order imposed by the judge. The names of the targeted countries are also redacted from court documents.

But according to an uncensored version of a court statement by Mr. Hammond, leaked online the day of his sentencing in November, the target list was extensive and included more than 2,000 Internet domains. The document said Mr. Monsegur had directed Mr. Hammond to hack government websites in Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Turkey and Brazil and other government sites, like those of the Polish Embassy in Britain and the Ministry of Electricity in Iraq.

An F.B.I. spokeswoman declined to comment, as did lawyers for Mr. Monsegur and Mr. Hammond.

The hacking campaign appears to offer further evidence that the American government has exploited major flaws in Internet security — so-called zero-day vulnerabilities like the recent Heartbleed bug — for intelligence purposes. Recently, the Obama administration decided it would be more forthcoming in revealing the flaws to industry, rather than stockpiling them until the day they are useful for surveillance or cyberattacks. But it carved a broad exception for national security and law enforcement operations.

Mr. Hammond, in the interview, said he and Mr. Monsegur had become aware of a vulnerability in a web-hosting software called Plesk that allowed backdoor access to thousands of websites. Another hacker alerted Mr. Hammond to the flaw, which allowed Mr. Hammond to gain access to computer servers without needing a user name or password.

Over several weeks in early 2012, according to the chat logs, Mr. Monsegur gave Mr. Hammond new foreign sites to penetrate. During a Jan. 23 conversation, Mr. Monsegur told Mr. Hammond he was in search of “new juicy targets,” the chat logs show. Once the websites were penetrated, according to Mr. Hammond, emails and databases were extracted and uploaded to a computer server controlled by Mr. Monsegur.

The sentencing statement also said that Mr. Monsegur directed other hackers to give him extensive amounts of data from Syrian government websites, including banks and ministries of the government of President Bashar al-Assad. “The F.B.I. took advantage of hackers who wanted to help support the Syrian people against the Assad regime, who instead unwittingly provided the U.S. government access to Syrian systems,” the statement said.

The court documents also refer to Mr. Monsegur’s giving targets to a Brazilian hacker. The hacker, who uses the alias Havittaja, has posted online some of his chats with Mr. Monsegur in which he was asked to attack Brazilian government websites.

One expert said that the court documents in the Hammond case were striking because they offered the most evidence to date that the F.B.I. might have been using hackers to feed information to other American intelligence agencies. “It’s not only hypocritical but troubling if indeed the F.B.I. is loaning its sting operations out to other three-letter agencies,” said Gabriella Coleman, a professor at McGill University and author of a forthcoming book about Anonymous.

During the prison interview, Mr. Hammond said that he did not have success hacking a large number of the Plesk websites that Mr. Monsegur had identified, and that his ability to create a so-called back door to a site depended on which operating system it ran on.
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He added that Mr. Monsegur never carried out the hacks himself, but repeatedly asked Mr. Hammond for specific details about the Plesk vulnerability.

“Sabu wasn’t getting his hands dirty,” he said. Federal investigators arrested Mr. Monsegur in mid-2011, and his cooperation with the F.B.I. against members of Anonymous appears to have begun soon after.

In a closed hearing in August 2011, a federal prosecutor told a judge that Mr. Monsegur had been “cooperating with the government proactively” and had “literally worked around the clock with federal agents” to provide information about other hackers, whom he described as “targets of national and international interests.”

“During this time the defendant has been closely monitored by the government,” said the prosecutor, James Pastore, according to a transcript of the hearing. “We have installed software on a computer that tracks his online activity. There is also video surveillance in the defendant’s residence.”

Mr. Monsegur’s sentencing hearing has been repeatedly delayed, leading to speculation that he is still working as a government informant. His current location is unknown.

Exactly what role the F.B.I. played behind the scenes during the 2012 attacks is unclear. Mr. Hammond said he had been in constant contact with Mr. Monsegur through encrypted Internet chats. The two men often communicated using Jabber, a messaging platform popular among hackers. Mr. Monsegur used the alias Leondavidson and Mr. Hammond used Yohoho, according to the court records.

During a conversation on Feb. 15, 2012, Mr. Hammond said he hoped all the stolen information would be put “to good use.”

“Trust me,” Mr. Monsegur said, according to the chat logs. “Everything I do serves a purpose.”

Now, sitting in prison, Mr. Hammond wonders if F.B.I. agents might also have been on the other end of the communications.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 24 april 2014 @ 21:25:29 #9
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139229399
quote:
More context for Jeremy Hammond's allegations against FBI



New York Times - F.B.I. Informant Is Tied to Cyberattacks Abroad - April 23, 2014
nytimes.com/2014/04/24/world/fbi-informant-is-tied-to-cyberattacks-abroad.html

"But according to an uncensored version of a court statement by Mr. Hammond, leaked online the day of his sentencing in November, the target list was extensive and included more than 2,000 Internet domains."

The article refers to a previous paste, http://pastebin.com/xy8aQY9W
In view of NYT's reporting, we would like to add some additional context to this statement, with 3 previously unpublished paragraphs from Jeremy.

- -

On August 22, 2013, on what was supposed to be the eve of the sentencing of Hector Monsegur, aka “Sabu,” a former Anonymous comrade turned FBI informant, I released a short statement about the FBI’s use of Sabu, and by extension, me and my co-defendants, to break into the websites of numerous targets of the government’s choosing – including those belonging to foreign governments. The following day, we learned that Sabu’s sentencing was again postponed. The reasons behind these adjournments are not publicly known. But in any case, Sabu is not the real issue. What is important is how the FBI used him, and how they may still be using other hacktivists to gather intelligence and illegally break into websites without oversight, accountability or reprisal.

In my case, the FBI used Sabu to infiltrate and monitor hundreds of public and private hacker chatrooms where he was able to gain influence within Anonymous by claiming responsibility for hacks carried out by others, bragging to the media with hyperbolic quotes, accusing others of being sellouts and snitches, and encouraging hacks into government and corporate websites. He enabled hackers and facilitated hacks by supplying several servers for storage of hacked emails and databases, cracking encrypted password lists, suggesting specific targets, and offering step-by-step technical advice to people as they were breaking into systems. Impressionable and less experiences hackers, eager to please a visible Anonymous "leader" would send him their half-finished vulnerability findings; Sabu would then pass this information along to skilled hackers to finish the job.

The United States government hypes the hacker threat and celebrates convictions in order to justify the multi-billion dollar cyber security industrial complex, but they are guilty of the same crimes they aggressively prosecute and claim to work to prevent. Manipulating hackers to break into international websites to steal emails and databases is a previously undisclosed aspect of the wide-ranging cyber and surveillance operations being carried out by the NSA and other agencies. The government hopes that my conviction will legitimize the abusive tactics and illegal objectives it sponsors. I took responsibility for my actions, now it is time for the government to answer for its own crimes.

Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 25 april 2014 @ 15:17:03 #10
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139252118
quote:
quote:
Online hacktivist collective Anonymous has announced that it is working on a new tool called Airchat which could allow people to communicate without the need for a phone or an internet connection - using radio waves instead.

Anonymous, the amorphous group best known for attacking high profile targets like Sony and the CIA in recent years, said on the Lulz Labs project's Github page: "Airchat is a free communication tool [that] doesn't need internet infrastructure [or] a cell phone network. Instead it relies on any available radio link or device capable of transmitting audio."

The idea is that people all over the world, including those in rural areas and developing countries, will one day be able to communicate for free without the need for a mobile phone network, phone line or internet access.

While the project is workable at the moment, it is simply a proof of concept at this stage and Anonymous has revealed Airchat in the hope to get more people involved in developing the technology as well as raising funds.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 25 april 2014 @ 23:57:34 #11
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139267785
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 29 april 2014 @ 15:52:18 #12
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139377481
quote:
Barrett Brown lawyer: US tried to 'kill a fly with a sledgehammer'

Ahmed Ghappour speaks out after gag order was lifted and says effect of prosecutorial overreach is 'chilling to free speech'

The lawyer for Barrett Brown, the activist-journalist in jail in Texas on charges related to his involvement with computer hackers, has called for an overhaul in the way technology cases are handled by the criminal justice system to counteract potential abuses and excessive prosecutorial aggression on the part of the US government.

In his first substantive comments since a gagging order on Brown and his legal team was lifted last week, Ahmed Ghappour told the Guardian that in his opinion, the US government had tried to "kill a fly with a sledgehammer”. He accused prosecutors of imposing overly broad charges that had put unnecessary strain on the system, had profound personal implications for Brown who has been in custody for more than 500 days, and sent a chill across public debate.

“There needs to be discussion about how we avoid this kind of prosecutorial overreach in future. Prosecutors need to be more cautious in how they deal with complex cases like these to make sure the charges better reflect the conduct described, otherwise the effect is chilling to free speech,” Ghappour said.

He added: “The government’s original allegations did not fit the evidence, or the conduct, character or reputation of Barrett Brown.”

Last month the US government dropped 11 of the 17 counts it had brought against Brown, who faces three separate indictments. The dismissed allegations all related to a breach of the website of the private intelligence firm Stratfor that was carried out in 2011 by the hacking collective Anonymous.

The main instigator of the hack, Jeremy Hammond, was sentenced to 10 years in prison last November.

Brown was charged, most notoriously, with transferring stolen property, because he had posted a hyperlink on his own personal chat room, Project PM, to a website containing the hacked Stratfor material. Technology commentators warned that such a prosecution posed a threat to free speech on the internet because it raised a barrier to linking across sites on which so much of the culture of the web is based.

A day after Ghappour and the defence team filed a motion to dismiss those charges, the prosecution rolled over without explanation and dropped them.

“The government had no choice to drop the charges because they contained errors that were so wide of the mark they could not be put right by re-indicting him,” Ghappour said.

In a document released after the gagging order was lifted, the precise nature of Brown’s involvement with Anonymous over the Stratfor hack has been revealed. Paradoxically, far from attempting to commit fraud or to profit personally from the computer breach, Brown offered to contact the CEO of Stratfor to ask him whether the company wanted any redactions to be made in the hacked material before it was posted.

The document, which signed by both Brown and US attorney Sarah Saldana as a truthful account of events, quotes from internet chats between the journalist and the Anonymous hacker who carried out the Stratfor breach, named only as “O”. Brown writes to the hacker: “It occurred to me that it might be a good idea to tell Stratfor that you guys will consider making any reasonable redactions to emails that might endanger, say, activists living under dictatorships with whom they might have spoken… If they fail to cooperate, it will be on them if any claims are made about this yield endangering anyone”.

Ghappour told the Guardian that he found it ironic that the government had accused Brown of something so vastly different from what he actually did. “The government charged Brown with criminally transferring credit card information, when in fact what he did was to offer to redact sensitive material.”

The lawyer, a former computer engineer with considerable experience in super-computers, and who now teaches at the University of Texas law school, said hacking cases and other prosecutions involving new technology were so complex that grand juries and attorneys alike were often bamboozled by the evidence. “That makes the potential for abuse by the government much greater, so safeguards have to be better established.”

Brown will appear on court on Tuesday to plead guilty to all the remaining charges against him. The charges include: acting as an accessory after the fact to the Stratfor hack, threatening an FBI agent in a YouTube video, and interfering with a law enforcement officer serving a warrant on him.

The charges carry a maximum punishment of more than eight years, but Brown’s legal team will argue that the sentences should run concurrently and that given the insubstantial damage caused by the YouTube video, he should be released on time served. “Barrett expresses deep regret for what he did in making the threat, which he did impulsively at a time when he felt cornered and was unable to make rational decisions,” Ghappour said.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 29 april 2014 @ 23:10:48 #13
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139397053
quote:
quote:
The previously unreleased transcript of Barrett Brown’s September 4 gag hearing in Dallas, obtained by WhoWhatWhy, shows just how far the government tried to go to shut up a “hacktivist journo” who challenged the status quo.

The lead prosecutor, Candina Heath, told the judge that, during the trial, Brown should be forbidden from publishing criticism of the government. That conversation, revealed in the transcript, was out of earshot of those in the gallery when WhoWhatWhy attended the hearing.

At the time of that hearing, Brown faced more than a century in prison for, allegedly, threatening an FBI agent, sharing a link to credit card data publicized during a hack, and conspiring to hide his laptops. Free speech advocates, such as Reporters Without Borders and the Committee to Protect Journalists, labeled the charges nothing less than retribution for his anti-establishment work.

But prosecutors sought to go further, with a gag order that undoubtedly would have been among the most sweeping restrictions on an American journalist’s free speech—reminiscent of the eighteenth-century Alien and Sedition Acts, which jailed writers and editors for criticizing the authorities.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 2 mei 2014 @ 22:48:53 #14
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139506167
Anonymous, Cambodja, FBI.

quote:
quote:
The National Police were cooperating with the FBI to conduct an investigation on [hacking] when we found out these two suspects hacked the NEC…and other government institutions." - Lieutenant General Chhay Sinarith, Cambodia's Ministry of Interior internal security department ************************************************************************************************* inviting the FBI in to your country to bust Anonymous is a bad idea. anyone reading this should be wondering why the FBI are even in Cambodia, is this US tax payer dollars at work, chasing students engaging in online protest around the world? th prime minister of Cambodia, Hun Sen has kept himself in office more than 27 years, does that sound like a democratic ruler to you? there are a lot of questions here:
Het gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 01:38:25 #15
93076 BaajGuardian
De echte BG, die tof is.
pi_139512357

^Anonymous.


^Flikkerkindertjes die de meme nooit hebben begrepen en geloven dat er een organisatie is :')

-
Verder staat de hele op vol met onjuistheden maar ok.

SPOILER
Om spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
Vraag yvonne maar hoe tof ik ben, die gaf mij er ooit een tagje voor.
pi_139512727
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 01:38 schreef BaajGuardian het volgende:
images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQrLeycrjOqzVNWfVNntroPgk26e8LRYPK77bNzNcOwIjtR2DgNtw
^Flikkerkindertjes die de meme nooit hebben begrepen en geloven dat er een organisatie is
Jij bent juist degene die het niet heeft begrepen. Anon is geen organisatie.
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 02:08:27 #17
93076 BaajGuardian
De echte BG, die tof is.
pi_139512926
quote:
2s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 01:54 schreef Nemephis het volgende:

[..]

Jij bent juist degene die het niet heeft begrepen. Anon is geen organisatie.
Dat zeg ik, anonymous is een fucking internet grap, altijd al geweest. Het begon met dat mensen de vraag stelden of alle anon op chan niet één persoon was, en toen ging dat dus leven. Het werd net zoiets als de fingerboxes, doen alsof iedereen er van wist en je kreeg een gevoel van er bij horen als jij het ook ging doen. EFG had eerst geen gezicht, toen kreeg het het masker van V als gezicht, toen begonnen mensen de grap 'anon' te versterken door 'het dat gezicht te geven. Alleen sommige mongolen namen het 'te' serieus, nadat wat random kutkinderen/newfags gestuurd door oldfag bullshit raid threads voor de lulz wat 'grote dingen' gingen doen met de low orbit progjes, raids waren gewoon domme kutgrappen, er was geen serieus doel bij behalve dan chaos zaaien en kunnen lachen als het op het nieuws kwam. Dat evolueerde en evolueerde tot je dus de white knight ultra imbecielen kreeg die zich gingen organiseren op demonstraties en dergerlijke statements.

Toen werd dus het idee ge-forward dat anon een organisatie was met leiders, dat het wat voorstelde, een leger/hackerscollectief had, elk groepje scriptkiddies noemde zich opeens deel van anon en ging op irc faalgroepgesprekjes houden (die makkelijk gemonitord werden :') ) en zich als activist te gedragen voor het grote goed.

En dat allemaal gebaseerd op dus de illusie dat anon in eerste zin 'één persoon' was en uiteindelijk 'een organisatie'.
Terwijl de werkelijkheid is dat anonymous geen organisatie is, en ook geen leden heeft.
Het is een beetje als alqaeda, het bestaat in weze niet werkelijk maar iedereen roept na een aanslag dat ze er bij horen.

-bron: een van de oudste ancientfags/true oldfags.
Vraag yvonne maar hoe tof ik ben, die gaf mij er ooit een tagje voor.
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 08:52:01 #18
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139514958
Ach gut, een miskende oldfag. "Ik was er bij" "Ik weet het beter" :')

Als je de afgelopen jaren nou wat zinnigs had bijgedragen aan deze thread, maar nee hoor. Meneer ligt een paar jaar te maffen en komt dan zeuren dat het niet goed is.

Loser.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_139518331
Het is lang geleden dat Snowden iets gelekt heeft. Zou hij nog iets achter de hand hebben?
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 12:43:41 #20
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139518391
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 12:40 schreef polderturk het volgende:
Het is lang geleden dat Snowden iets gelekt heeft. Zou hij nog iets achter de hand hebben?
Glenn Greenwals heeft al zijn documenten. Hij komt binnenkort met een boek over documenten die meer aandacht verdienen dan een enkel krantenartikel.

NWS / Monitoring NSA in de VS en erbuiten, deel 8

[ Bericht 9% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 03-05-2014 12:52:41 ]
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 19:29:31 #21
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139528066
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 19:34:10 #22
93076 BaajGuardian
De echte BG, die tof is.
pi_139528236
quote:
7s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 08:52 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Ach gut, een miskende oldfag. "Ik was er bij" "Ik weet het beter" :')

Als je de afgelopen jaren nou wat zinnigs had bijgedragen aan deze thread, maar nee hoor. Meneer ligt een paar jaar te maffen en komt dan zeuren dat het niet goed is.

Loser.
Ik heb genoeg gedaan nog voordat een samenraapsel 12 jarigen dacht dat ze wat deden door maskertjes te dragen. Voordat wikileaks bestond, voordat ATS bestond al. En dat noemt mij een loser :')
Vraag yvonne maar hoe tof ik ben, die gaf mij er ooit een tagje voor.
pi_139528662
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 19:34 schreef BaajGuardian het volgende:

[..]

Ik heb genoeg gedaan nog voordat een samenraapsel 12 jarigen dacht dat ze wat deden door maskertjes te dragen. Voordat wikileaks bestond, voordat ATS bestond al. En dat noemt mij een loser :')
Was jij dat, die het internet bedacht heeft?
  zaterdag 3 mei 2014 @ 19:48:49 #24
93076 BaajGuardian
De echte BG, die tof is.
pi_139528693
quote:
2s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 19:48 schreef Nemephis het volgende:

[..]

Was jij dat, die het internet bedacht heeft?
Jullie kennen mij duidelijk niet, vooral niet wat mijn werk anno 2001-2006 betrof.
Vraag yvonne maar hoe tof ik ben, die gaf mij er ooit een tagje voor.
pi_139528916
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 3 mei 2014 19:48 schreef BaajGuardian het volgende:

[..]

Jullie kennen mij duidelijk niet, vooral niet wat mijn werk anno 2001-2006 betrof.
Nou, spreek niet in raadselen en licht het toe dan svp. Ik ben geen helderziende.
  dinsdag 6 mei 2014 @ 17:12:01 #26
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139624575

quote:
http://0paste.com/5897

Anonymous / @Anarchoanon / #Every5th

MEDIA ALERT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: @anarchoanon anarchoanon@riseup.net
(We operate anonymously to avoid retaliation by police, but we are real
people wiling to work with you to help you tell this story as you see
fit.)

Denver 5/5- Wednesday, May 5th saw the 7th monthly “Every 5th” protest in
the streets of Denver. The loose internet-based activist collective known
as “Anonymous” has been holding these events to call attention to
different issues in the city and the nation. The last event on April 5th
was a protest against police brutality, which was predictably attacked by
the Denver Police Department. This month's protest was to call for an
“end to Denver's war on free speech,” to call attention to the
unconstitutional anti-protest measures often taken by the police
department. The number of marchers fluctuated between 30 and 100
throughout the day. With slogans and banners calling attention to police
brutality and free speech issues, the march went all around downtown,
passed through the Auraria college campus, and visited the 16th st mall.
While the march was on the sidewalk outside Rock Bottom Brewery on 16th
st, a line of riot police charged the march and violently pushed several
people, including elderly women and children, to the ground in addition to
making several unprovoked arrests. After a tense standoff outside Rock
Bottom, the march went back up 16th st to disperse at the capitol
building. As people dispersed to leave the protest, squads of Denver
police stalked people leaving the protest, ambushing groups and
individuals in parking lots and streets, apparently as “revenge” for their
protest against the Denver Police Department. It was very apparent to
eyewitnesses that Denver Police were maliciously targeting protesters in
an attempt to intimidate them into ceasing first amendment-protected
protest activity. The Denver Police continue to claim that their actions
were to keep the public safe, which is very odd when reconciled with the
sounds of innocent bystanders screaming as the police rushed and attacked
people who were standing on the sidewalk. The protest was not hurting
anyone, there was no danger and no acts of destruction. The only danger
present was that crowds of people on the 16th street mall might see that
there are people ready to stand up against the privatized, militarized,
and gentrified direction Denver has been taking of late.

An account by a mother who was violently knocked to the ground by DPD
during the attack on the crowd outside Rock Bottom Brewery:

“I was walking on the sidewalk, playing my drum when the police suddenly
attacked the crowd. A police officer pushed me to the ground, someone
picked me up, and then another police officer picked me up and threw me
into a man standing nearby. The officer then yelled at me to “get off of
him!” after the police themselves threw me into this man. This was my
first protest in Denver, and I never said “fuck the police.” I was
conducting myself in a peaceful and legal manner, and the police really
opened up my eyes in terms of how they deal with protests in this city. I
did not feel safe and in fact felt endangered by the officers' aggressive
behavior. I asked who was in charge, but no officers would tell me who is
in charge. Who is responsible for this? This is not ok.”

The person who provided the above eyewitness account is available for
interviews upon request. We can provide other eyewitnesses as well.

“A group of us was calmly walking away from the protest, heading towards
the Capitol Hill neighborhood. As we passed through a parking lot, a
group of police officers on bicycles suddenly surrounded us, rammed our
friend's bike with their bike, knocking him to the ground. They proceeded
to chase him and arrest him without explaining themselves. Another
individual present was punched in the face although he was never detained
or accused of a crime. This kind of behavior by Denver Police is clearly
a direct retaliation against us exercising our first amendment rights to
publicly denounce the corruption and brutality of this city's police
force. Today, I am ashamed to be a taxpayer in the city of Denver,
because my tax dollars are financing the violent repression of peaceful
dissent.”

Video of police assaulting the crowd outside Rock Bottom Brewery:

A very interesting conversation between Denver Police twitter account and
“Your Anon News” an influential anonymous twitter account with 1.2 million
followers:
pic.twitter.com/KzelGDN08B
pic.twitter.com/h8HBqICijn
pic.twitter.com/lVoZZR6Pcj
pic.twitter.com/9ZcDM1WZgQ
pic.twitter.com/2AHAw8bkxr
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Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 8 mei 2014 @ 17:04:57 #27
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139703932
quote:
Protesters set up camp at net neutrality rally outside FCC headquarters

Occupy-style protest against proposed 'open internet' rules that protesters say will give control of the web to major corporations

Protesters set up camp outside the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) on Wednesday to fight plans they say will create a two-tier internet and hand control of the web to major corporations.

The rally – reminiscent of the Occupy-style rallies that started in 2011 – started outside the FCC’s Washington headquarters at noon with protesters from Fight For the Future, Popular Resistance and others unfurling banners reading “Save the Internet”.

Protesters then announced they intend to camp out outside the FCC until 15 May when the regulator is expected to announce new rules for the internet that will formalise plans for higher speed internet for those able to pay for it. On Wednesday Google, Facebook and Amazon joined around 100 other technology companies in signing a letter to the FCC rejecting "individualised bargaining and discrimination" for internet traffic.

"[The FCC must] take the necessary steps to ensure that the internet remains an open platform for speech and commerce," the letter says.

Public interest groups have become increasingly concerned that the new rules will end “net neutrality” – the concept that all internet traffic should be treated equally on the web. FCC chairman Tom Wheeler has defended his plans for what he calls the “open internet”.

The future of net neutrality has effectively been in limbo since a federal court struck down most of the FCC’s open internet order in January in a case brought by Verizon. The loss paved the way for fast lanes that have the major broadband providers have lobbied hard for, and for which they plan to charge extra to their biggest users.

"We don’t have armies of paid lobbyists at our disposal but we can not let the freedom of the internet be hijacked by giant monopolies,” said Evan Greer of Fight For The Future.

More than a million people have now signed petitions to the FCC calling for them to enshrine net neutrality rules and prevent a tiered system.

A group of 86 organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union, Free Press and Reddit, are asking the FCC to reclassify broadband companies as "telecommunication services", which would give the commission the authority to impose net neutrality rules on them.

Wheeler has said the FCC’s new rules will protect net neutrality.

“The Internet will remain like it is today, an open pathway,” Wheeler wrote in a FCC blogpost in April. “If a broadband provider (ISP) acts in a manner that keeps users from effectively taking advantage of that pathway then it should be a violation of the Open Internet rules.”

Critics charge, however, that cable firms will successfully challenge any new rules to tie their hands unless the FCC’s regulatory control over them is increased and point out cable firms have already effectively created a two-tier system. After the FCC lost to Verizon in January, a tiered system has already started to emerge with Netflix and others striking deals for a faster service with cable firms.

“The internet is as necessary to our society as shelter and water, people should have equal access to it,” said Greer. “We have seen an unbelievable amount of support from people since these new rules emerged. It may seem technical but it affects everyone’s life and people are not going to just stand by and let this happen.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 8 mei 2014 @ 18:45:57 #28
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139706768
quote:
quote:
It seems like the FBI is not quite finished with one of its most valuable assets, Hector Monsegur (aka Sabu) the former Anonymous and LulzSec member who had his sentencing postponed for a seventh time on Wednesday.

Monsegur was due before Judge Loretta Preska in New York on Thursday but he has once again had his sentencing postponed, according to sources speaking to the Daily Beast website.

No new date has been set for Monsegur's next court appearance yet, giving us no indication of whether or not the FBI want to keep using Monsegur for a long or short period of time. His sentecning was last adjourned on 8 May.

Monsegur will face punishment for crimes associated with the 50 Days of Lulz campaign he and his fellow hackers carried out which saw them attack companiess such as Sony and EA as well as law enforcement agencies including the CIA and SOCA.

The former Anonymous hacker has already pleaded guilty to 12 criminal charges, including multiple counts of conspiracy to engage in computer hacking, computer hacking in furtherance of fraud, conspiracy to commit access device fraud, conspiracy to commit bank fraud and aggravated identity theft.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 13 mei 2014 @ 22:24:09 #29
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139926020
quote:
Autistic Hacker Helped FBI Nail Anonymous Boss

Criminal charge was dropped after man, 26, cooperated with the feds
quote:
MAY 13--In an effort to identify leaders of Anonymous, the FBI arrested an autistic New York man and then used him as a cooperating witness to help snare a notorious fellow hacker who was subsequently indicted for his central role in a series of high-profile online attacks, The Smoking Gun has learned.

In return for the hacker’s cooperation--and in light of his autism--Department of Justice officials initially agreed to defer prosecution on a criminal complaint charging the man with hacking Gawker Media, an illegal incursion that yielded registration information for more than a million individuals who signed up with the popular blog network.

Federal prosecutors eventually dropped the hacking charge altogether, according to court records that were kept under seal long after the hacker’s arrest by a team of FBI agents. Investigators were concerned that if the man’s cooperation became public, he would be harassed by hackers then being targeted by the FBI. Additionally, disclosure of his cooperation, prosecutors contended, “would jeopardize substantial ongoing investigations into the defendant’s former co-conspirators, many of whom are suspected of carrying out substantial computer hacks against several businesses.”

So, to “help ensure the defendant’s safety,” Thomas “Eekdacat” Madden became, for a time, “John Doe.”

The 26-year-old Madden, whose cooperation has not been previously disclosed, lives with his parents in Troy, a city 10 minutes outside Albany. An only child, Madden graduated in December 2010 from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where he completed a double major in computer science and mathematics, according to school records.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 13 mei 2014 @ 22:31:37 #30
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139926618
quote:
Report claims Anonymous will protest Glenn Greenwald for ties to PayPal billionaire

The Internet hacktivist group Anonymous is calling for protests against author and civil liberties advocate Glenn Greenwald because of his relationship with eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.

In a release posted to Pastebin, the secretive activist group is calling for members to attend and disrupt scheduled book signings where Greenwald will be promoting his new book, No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State.

The point of contention between Greenwald and the group stems from his relationship with First Look founder and eBay billionaire Pierre Omidyar.

eBay purchased PayPal in 2002.

Representing the “PayPal 14,” — a group charged under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act after they attempted to disrupt PayPal’s operations in retaliation for PayPal’s refusal to process donations to WikiLeaks — Anonymous stated that the 14 are “struggling to raise more than $80,000 in court-ordered restitution” that must be paid to eBay/PayPal.

Anonymous claims that, while the 14 face jail and fines, Greenwald and Omidyar have been cashing in on the “digital information war.”

“Greenwald and Pierre occasionally express tepid ‘support’ for the PayPal14. But where’s the $80,000? That’s lunch money to Greenwald or Pierre. For the PayPal14, it’s a crushing financial burden,” they wrote. “Pierre, according to Forbes, rakes in $7.8 billion per year while the PayPal14 struggle to stay afloat. Pierre started off First Look, Greenwald’s news media outlet, with $50 million in funding — tens of millions more than $80,000.”

Anonymous is also complaining that Greenwald and Omidyar are watering down the “hacktivist movement” by not publishing all of Edward Snowden’s documents, or heavily redacting them, thereby keeping “aggressive, non-celebrity journalists from finding answers and pro-freedom hackers from building better defenses.”

Anonymous members are instructed to attend Greenwald’s book signings to protest, record their activities, hand out fliers, and explain the relationship between the author and his financial benefactor.

The “YourAnonNews” Twitter account expressed support for the campaign on Monday, along with the account representing Occupy Wall Street.

The Twitter account for WikiLeaks also backed the campaign, though they suggested that only PayPal — and not Greenwald — should be targeted.

. #Paypal14 are rightly fuming about Paypal boss @Pierre Omidyar (though the proxy attack on @GGreenwald is harsh) http://t.co/r4EauU1wTd

— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) May 12, 2014


Omidyar has previously called for leniency for the PayPal 14, saying they should have been cited for a misdemeanor instead of facing felony charges.

Raw Story has requested a statement from Glenn Greenwald.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 15 mei 2014 @ 16:55:03 #31
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_139988058
quote:
Anonymous projected sign: ‘United Stasi of America Don’t Spy on Us’



Hacktivist group Anonymous projected another message on the USA embassy in Berlin on Thursday night before heading away in an unidentified van. Disguised in capes and Guy Fawkes masks, the Anonymous members used a generator and a projector to display the message: ‘United Stasi of America Don’t Spy on Us.’ This is the third time the group has projected their protest against the US.

The action comes one week after Edward Snowden’s latest document ‘black budget’ was published in the Washington Post, outlining how the NSA use encryption codes, similiar to those used in banking systems, to trade data on medical records, web searches, Internet chats, and phone calls of citizens around the world.

The Guardian, who Snowden released NSA secret files to, published an article on Friday morning stating how the NSA uses internet traffic to access communications around the world and how to avoid getting spied on.

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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 16 mei 2014 @ 18:43:43 #32
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140028326
quote:
State Watchdog threatens to block Twitter under new blogger bill

A senior official from Russian control agency Roskomnadzor says new restrictions would apply to all bloggers who write in Russian, even if they live abroad, adding that whole platforms can be blocked inside the country for refusal to cooperate.

The new law defines ‘popular bloggers’ as those having 3,000 or more visitors per day and demands that such people were registered under their real names and follow some basic rules similar to those mentioned in the Law on Mass Media – verify their reports and abstain from posting slander or anything that can be described as ethnic, religious or social hatred. The law must come into force on August 1 this year.

However, the law has no provisions connected with the global and trans-border nature of blogs and the internet as a whole. The document is not saying directly if it applies to cases in which both the authors of blogs and the blog platforms are based outside Russia.

Deputy head of Roskomnadzor Maksim Ksendzov said that this would not matter.

“The law is not tied to the territorial registration or passport data. If someone writes in Russian or any other language used by the peoples of the Russian Federation, if he or she is seeking to attract the Russian audience’s attention and if they use Russian sites for this, such people will have to observe the law,” the official said in an interview with popular daily Izvestia.

Ksendzov added that as the law offers no means to influence the foreign-based bloggers the Russian agency would most likely have to block the whole blog platform or social network in Russia, but only after they refuse to take down the illegal content. Roskomnadzor already practices such scheme as part of the enforcement of the federal law that bans the dissemination of terrorist and extremist information and also the federal law on protection of children.

The official said that major companies like Twitter and Facebook were still reluctant to cooperate, unlike Google that had been removing offensive and illegal videos from its YouTube portal for some time already.At the same time, the way Twitter was encoding its traffic would lead to complete blocking of the microblogging service on the Russian territory even after Roskomnadzor blocks only one tweet, he noted.

Ksendzov suggested in the interview Twitter’s objectives in Russia were not only commercial, but also political and this was the reason of the uncooperativeness.

“Twitter is a global tool for distribution of political information. When they interact with us they use the audience as a means for reaching their goals. At the same time the value users and their interests for the company is extremely low,” the head of the Russian watchdog said.

“By gradually refusing to comply with our demands they are deliberately creating the conditions in which the blocking of this resource on our country’s territory becomes practically inevitable,” Ksendzov complained.

Following the release of the interview senator Ruslan Gattarov also blasted Twitter’s uncooperativeness at a Friday session of the Upper House’s commission for development of information society.

“The ugliest situation of all is that we have with Twitter. This company is not observing the Russian laws and only slightly reacts to the Roskomnadzor demands,” Gattarov said.

At the same time, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, known for his fondness with technology and gadgets, has played down the situation in his Facebook account.

“As an active user of social networks, I hold that the Russian laws must be observed by everyone – the networks and the users alike. But certain civil servants, responsible for the development of the industry must sometimes turn their brains on and give no interviews that announce the shutdown of social networks,” Medvedev wrote.

Vladimir Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov has said that the authorities in the Kremlin were convinced that all foreign companies must observe all laws in force on the Russian territory. “The law exists to be observed,” Peskov told Interfax.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 16 mei 2014 @ 22:25:30 #33
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140036650
quote:
quote:
Anonymous, the online hacktivist collective, is calling on people to read and disseminate a pirated copy of Glenn Greenwald's new book about Edward Snowden, in protest at his links to eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.

The campaign is a bid to raise awareness about the plight of the PayPal 14, a group of Anonymous members who were convicted of taking part in a cyber-attack against PayPal in 2010.

The campaign is trying to help raise the $80,000 (£51,170) the group has been court ordered to pay PayPal in compensation for the damage it caused during the attack.

At the time of publication, the the GoFundMe page has raised $6,514 of the total.

The campaign, which was announced by Anonymous on Monday, called on supporters to physically protest at events Greenwald was taking part in this week to promote his book called No Place to Hide, which details his publication of a trove of top secret documents stolen by Edward Snowden and relating to governmental spying at the NSA and GCHQ.

Billionaire backer

In the press release published by Anonymous, the group said:

"As Greenwald gets a book tour, the PayPal14 get sentencing hearings. He is traveling the world to promote his book about Snowden's NSA leaks, and the 14 are struggling to raise more than $80,000 in court-ordered restitution for eBay/PayPal, companies ultimately overseen by Greenwald's billionaire backer, Pierre Omidyar."

Greenwald announced earlier this year that he would be working as one of the editors of a new website called The Intercept, which is owned by First Look Media - a company belonging to Omidyar.

PayPal is a wholly-owned subsidiary of eBay, which is why Omidyar is being targeted.

The Anonymous campaign calls on people to help promote the fundraising drive, to engage Greenwald and Omidyar on Twitter by using the hashtag #PayPal14 and to physically protest at Greenwald's book signing.

Pirated copy

While not a part of the original press release, many of the prominent Anonymous Twitter accounts - including @YourAnonNews which has more than 1.2 million followers - have been promoting links to a pirated electronic copy of Greenwald's book.

Greenwald kicked off his book tour on Tuesday in New York before travelling to Washington and Boston. While a member of Anonymous has claimed to IBTimes UK that there we people their in Anonymous' name, at least at some of the events, it doesn't seem as if they had much impact on the signings themselves.

Greenwald has yet to respond publicly to the campaign and both he and Omidyar have not responded to requests for comment from IBTimes UK.

Wikileaks, which was the reason the attack on PayPal happened in the first place, has pledged its support to the fundraising drive and protest campaign against Omyidar, but said the "proxy attack" on Greenwald was "harsh".
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 17 mei 2014 @ 15:13:20 #34
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140054111
quote:
quote:
It appears likely that Edward Snowden was involved with CryptoParty. Cryptome has uncovered a public key for cincinnatus@lavabit.com, which is the same alias he used to contact Glenn Greenwald — and it’s associated with the organizing of an event in Honolulu, Hawaii in December 2012, where the now-famous NSA whistleblower was then living. Here’s the original page via Wayback Machine. Although I’m awaiting official confirmation from his lawyers, the odds are very high that it was him. CryptoParty is a global movement that was spawned nearly two years ago from an idea by Asher Wolf, an Australian activist.
quote:
There’s also the video that Snowden created which I discovered in July last year, and has since been confirmed by Greenwald; a tutorial on GPG encryption for journalists, which was credited to “Anonymous 2013″ and posted by the Vimeo user anon108. Although setting up PGP proved too difficult for Greenwald, behind the voice-changing effect is someone who sounds extremely knowledgable about the mechanisms of digital security. Combined with the EFF and Tor Project stickers pictured on his laptop, the Anonymous and CryptoParty connections show a man attuned to the struggle for our rights on the internet; one with his eye on those communities.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 15:49:51 #35
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140132048
Waarom doneert Gabriella Coleman aan de #Paypal14

quote:
PayPal14

In December 2010 when Wikileaks was stirring the pot of controversy with its hard hitting leaks, cowardly companies like PayPal and Visa caved into hidden but significant political pressure and blocked Wikileaks. This act of blatant censorship infuriated many citizens who expressed their dismay on every available online channel. Anonymous was well poised to harness the fury ball of anger and did so by coordinating one the largest DDoS campaigns the Internet has yet witnessed, variously called Operation Avenge Assange or Operation Payback.

Media attention was frenzied, catapulting this collective of collectives out of relative obscurity and into the international spotlight. In the New York Times, one of the Internet’s original patron saints—John Perry Barlow— prophetically cast the Anonymous campaign as “the shot heard round the world—this is Lexington.” In quoting Emerson’s poem “Concord Hymn,” Barlow hearkens to the first gunshot fired in the American Revolutionary war at the Battle of Lexington, which marked the outbreak of armed combat between the Colonies and the Kingdom of Great Britain. The information war, well under way, had seen a decisive battle.Months later, a slew of ordinary participants were arrested for their contributions.

For many who supported the protest, this once spectacular and exciting collective outcry has likely faded from memory. But for those facing the charges, it never went away. They have endured three years of expensive, time consuming and stressful battles against a mighty and well resourced US DoJ. Thanks to excellent legal support, they have accepted a plea bargain and the fine they are collectively facing is now a lot less than what it could have been: $86,000.

The DDoS is understandably a controversial political among geeks, hackers, and citizens. It has its limits and strengths and I myself am far from being a staunch fan. Whatever you may think of the DDoS (and I recommend looking out for this book on the DDoS by Molly Sauter), the Pay Pal 14 were driven by conviction. They have explained it with candor on their fundraising website: “They were not spreading malware, hacking servers, or even damaging the systems themselves. . . These people were making a statement and publicly exposing PayPal in front of their shareholders and the world on behalf of those of us who value freedom of information.” Their intervention also came at the right time helping to keep the issue of corporate censorship under the public limelight for a few precious weeks.

The time has come for those of us who believe in the right to dissent online to help them raise the funds so the can resume their interrupted lives.The government banks on the fact that activist movements, especially those running on spontaneity, often dissipate, fracture, and vanish. They bank on the fact that putting activists through an expensive legal wringer will cower many others into silent submission. We can prove them wrong. Lending support sends a strong message back: under adversity, the movement can preserve and take care of their own.

Yesterday I pledged $350 and if matched in 36 hours, I promised to double the amount. I was thrilled to see it took less than five hours for that to happen. I hope you consider donating what you can and spreading the word.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 17:48:27 #36
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140136189
quote:
quote:
As I described in a previous column, the copyright monopoly cannot be enforced without mass surveillance. There is no way to tell a private conversation in a digital environment from a monopolized audio file being transferred, not without actually looking at what’s being transferred. At that point, the secrecy of correspondence has been broken and mass surveillance introduced.

The copyright industry has been continuously and relentlessly pushing for more mass surveillance, including surveillance of citizens who aren’t under any suspicion (“mass surveillance”) for this reason. They defended the now-illegal Data Retention Directive, which logs everybody’s communications and location all the time (specifically including yours), as well as similar initiatives.

Most notably, the copyright industry is known for using child porn as an argument for introducing mass surveillance, so that the mass surveillance can be expanded in the next step to targeting people who share knowledge and culture in violation of that industry’s distribution monopolies. This is a case study in taking corporate cynicism to the next level.

This mass surveillance is also what feeds the NSA, the GCHQ, and its other European counterparts (like the Swedish FRA). It is continuously argued, along the precise same lines, that so-called “metadata” – whom you’re calling, from where, for how long – is not sensitive and therefore not protected by privacy safeguards. This was the argument that the European Court of Justice struck down with the force of a sledgehammer, followed by about two metric tons of bricks: it’s more than a little private if you’re talking to a sex service for 19 minutes at 2am, or if you’re making a call to the suicide hotline from the top of a bridge. This is the kind of data that the spy services wanted to have logged, eagerly cheered on by the copyright industry.

This has a direct connection to free speech as such.

In Germany, the effect of this logging and violation of people’s privacy has been studied extensively. According to a study conducted by polling institute Forsa before the data retention was in place, over half of German citizens would refrain from placing communications that could be used against them in the future – drug helplines, psychologists, even marriage counseling. A significant portion of Germans had already refrained from taking such contacts for that reason.
De column gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 19 mei 2014 @ 18:33:04 #37
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140137647
quote:
quote:
How did security firm Mandiant put names to two previously unknown Chinese hackers who, it says, steal American corporate secrets for the Chinese government? With a little inadvertent help from Anonymous.

Mandiant's 74-page report covers a particular hacking group referred to as "APT1" and contends that the group works for or under the direction of the Chinese government as part of the military's secretive "Unit 61398." The report ties a huge string of hacks over the last few years to Unit 61398 and goes on to show the building where the hacks might be hatched. The report is stuffed with detail uncommon in these types of stories, and even includes a translated Chinese document showing a local telecom company agreeing to Unit 61398's request for additional fiber optic connections in the name of state security.

The Mandiant researchers then tried to go one step further, putting at least a few real names to the coders involved. (BusinessWeek recently did something similar, with fascinating results.) Mandiant began with a malware coder who goes by the name "UglyGorilla"—a name which is left repeatedly in code tied to the APT1 group.

Back in 2007, for instance, Mandiant says that UglyGorilla "authored the first known sample of the MANITSME family of malware and, like any good artist, left his clearly identifiable signature in the code: 'v1.0 No Doubt to Hack You, Writed by UglyGorilla, 06/29/2007'[sic]." But despite all the uses of the name "UglyGorilla" buried in code samples, leads to the person's actual identity were hard to come by—until Anonymous hacked security firm HBGary Federal in early 2011.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 20 mei 2014 @ 17:03:05 #38
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140172177
quote:
#OpPayBack: Anonymous Takes Down US Army, Air Force, Marines and Navy websites

Earlier today, the online hacktivist group Anonymous conducted a massive Denial-of-service attack (DDoS) on defense related websites of the United States.

Attack was conducted under the banner of Operation PayBack. As a result, nineteen high profile websites belonging to US Army, US Marines, US Air Force and US Navy were taken down.

The news of successful DDoS attack was announced by Anonymous via their Twitter handle @Anon_Centre. While the list of all targeted websites is available here.

tangodown-anonymous-takes-down-us-army-air-force-navy-and-marines-websites-for-oppayback-2

The army.mil domain was down for hours as seen in the below given screenshot:



It is unclear if Anonymous will keep on attacking these domains or there are some other targets in the list. Stay in touch as we will keep you posted with more on this attack.

At the time of publishing this article, all targeted websites were restored and working online.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 20 mei 2014 @ 19:37:09 #39
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140177538
Weev stuurt de rekening.

quote:
An open letter to members of the New Jersey District Court, FBI, and DOJ, consisting of an invoice.

To the Honorable Susan D. Wigenton, US Attorney Paul J. Fishman, Assistant US Attorney Zach Intrater, and FBI Special Agent Christian Schorle,

"Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, or to take arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing end them?" -Shakespeare

It has long been one of the fundamental pillars of our system of law that when one commits a crime against another, they are made to give restitution to their victims.

I have, over the course of 3 years, been made the victim of a criminal conspiracy by those in the federal government. This was a conspiracy of sedition and treason, perpetrated with violence by a limited number of federal agents to deprive me of my constitutional rights to a fair trial and unlawfully put me in prison. This is not a hallucination on my part. These claims were in fact verified by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals when they vacated the false judgement against me imposed by the court of Judge Susan D. Wigenton. Perhaps you haven't read the opinion of the appeals court exposing all of you as liars and seditionists yet. If so, here you go: https://www.eff.org/files/2014/04/11/weev.pdf

On January 18th, 2011 I was kidnapped at gunpoint by the US Marshals from Fayetteville, Arkansas, the town where I was born, based off a criminal complaint based on complete falsehoods written by FBI Special Agent Christian Schorle. The complaint alleged I had broken into AT&T's servers (I hadn't, as confirmed by the appeals court which verified no evidence was presented that any of my accesses bypassed security restrictions) and that New Jersey was the jurisdiction because AT&T was headquartered there. In actuality, AT&T was headquartered at the time in Houston, Texas. This sort of blatant falsehood is verifiable by a simple Google search.

Thus I was taken from Arkansas, the nicest place I ever lived, and brought to Newark, New Jersey, a place worse than any of the many third world countries I have visited. I was held under bail conditions where the government refused to allow me to work in my industry, told me where I could live (I was not allowed to return to my birthplace of Arkansas where I lived at no expense, and instead forced to pay rent in New Jersey), and was subject to the indignity and expense of regular mandatory travel to the Newark courthouse to urinate in front of a federal employee. I was told where I could travel, and where and how I could sleep. My time and life was completely monopolized by the federal government during this period, again based off false statements from a lying piece of shit in the federal government.

I then spent a swath of the next years struggling to find an attorney because the overworked federal defender I was given told me to plea to false charges because even if I was innocent there was no way I'd win. I then struggled to get this attorney enough resources to fight the case while he was struggling to keep the lights in his office on.

Going to trial two years later, the United States Attorneys and FBI repeatedly perjured themselves in order to wrongfully convict me. FBI Special Agent Phillip Frigm claimed that the manufactured evidence was "secured" by MD5 signatures. This was factually wrong and perjurously asserted as true under oath-- MD5 signatures do not work in the manner he implied. Assistant US Attorney Michael Martinez claimed that I committed a crime because my use of the Internet was "not like going to ESPN and checking my favorite sports team's scores", and Assistant US Attorney Zach Intrater claimed that I had committed a crime because I automated web requests with a script. This, of course, ignores the fact that the vast majority of web requests are programmatic and automated-- total API requests and automated GET per year are approaching the quadrillions. Lie after lie after lie stacked up in open court on behalf of the agents of the government. If there was any integrity left in the justice system there would be special prosecutors appointed to charge you with the perjuries you committed.

Orchestrating this circus was the judge, Susan D. Wigenton, who not only ignored my constitutional right to a trial in a reasonable location but blatantly allowed manufactured evidence and perjury on the part of FBI and DOJ employees in her courtroom. The rights I have enumerated in the Constitution (and, in some cases, even The Declaration) were violated with near completion.

At sentencing, I made the following statement to Judge Wigenton:

"I don’t come here today to ask for forgiveness. I’m here to tell this court, if it has any foresight at all, that it should be thinking about what it can do to make amends to me for the harm and the violence that has been inflicted upon my life."

It is time, now that the fraud and violence committed against me has been exposed by the appeals process, to begin making amends to me for the harm her court has done.

My current market-determined hourly rate is 1 Bitcoin an hour. I was taken from my childhood home at gunpoint on January 18th, 2011, and I was not allowed to freely exercise my liberties as a citizen until April 11th, 2014. That's 1179 days that you used my time that I am now billing you for (I gave you a discount by not including the last day). I am owed 28,296 Bitcoins. I do not accept United States dollars, as it is the preferred currency of criminal organizations such as the FBI, DOJ, ATF, and Federal Reserve and I do not assist criminal racketeering enterprises.

Know that all this wealth will be directed towards a good and charitable cause. I am building a series of memorial groves for the greatest patriots of our generation: Timothy McVeigh, Andrew Stack, and Marvin Heemeyer. You see, In the "Special Housing Unit", which is Bureau of Prisons codespeak for "solitary confinement" and "torture", I had enough time to think about the current state of federal government.

The federal government has declared war on We the People. I am but the latest casualty of the unjust and seditious war being waged against honest Americans and defenders of the Constitution. At Waco the FBI directed the murder of 76 men, women, and children. At Ruby Ridge the FBI murdered both a 14-year-old boy and a woman cradling her infant child. All federal agents are, in fact, murderous thugs and seditious terrorists. Sedition is the charge for crimes which undermine the Constitution with violence. I can assure you that violence was used against me, and the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has already verified that the case against me undermined the Constitution.

28,296 Bitcoins. This is my invoice. It will only come once. As government criminality continues to be exposed on a daily basis, there is an urgent question which our government must answer: by what civil and peaceful means can those of us harmed by government perjury, fraud, and violence be compensated for the losses we have experienced? My Bitcoin address: 1JTeYcsx37XTq5NRgjepAHDqaLHTZUL88a
Now the government's answer, or lack of it, will be permanently preserved in the Bitcoin block chain as a matter of public record. PAY ME MY MONEY, YOU LYING SUBHUMAN GARBAGE. You also should resign from your posts, as you've shown yourselves to be collective disgraces to rule of law and enemies of the United States Constitution. Those of us who actually love this country should take your places.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 22 mei 2014 @ 15:40:45 #40
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140243527
quote:
Anonymous puts Indonesia on notice over West Papua

The global activist network Anonymous has launched a campaign to raise attention on censorship and the killings of indigenous West Papuans in Indonesia's eastern region.

Anonymous, which is known for its activist stunts and disruptions to government and corporate websites, says West Papuans have been silenced for too long by Indonesia's military and government.

Anonymous also says the United Nations should take responsibility for the sham referendum it sanctioned in 1969 which incorporated the former Dutch New Guinea into Indonesia.

Indonesia denies that it censors media coverage of West Papua, and claims it is steadily bringing in development to improve the lives of people there.

However Indonesia's military insists it will continue to respond firmly to separatism.

Anonymous asks for a UN peacekeeping force, the withdrawal of all non-organic Indonesian troops in West Papua, and a free and fair referendum so Papuans can decide their own destiny.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 mei 2014 @ 22:55:07 #41
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140296070
quote:
Surf champ accused of hacking

An alleged Anonymous hacker accused of targeting the Indonesian Government and personal details of thousands of AAPT customers is a surf lifesaver and cancer support fundraiser living in a beachside property in Scarborough.


Adam John Bennett has appeared in Perth Magistrate's Court charged with hacking into the database of telecommunications company AAPT and obtaining sensitive information - including credit card and Medicare details, addresses and phone numbers.

As of this week, the 40-year-old was a fundraising manager for Cancer Support WA. He previously held a position as a company director with Paynes Find Gold Limited. In his spare time, Mr Bennett is an experienced surf lifesaver, prominent within the Scarboro Surf Life Saving Club, and a participant in national lifesaving championships.

Cancer Support WA was yesterday doing its own inquiries into the allegations.

"We are aware that a staff member, Adam Bennett, was charged on Thursday and that he is assisting with a Federal police investigation," it told _The Weekend West _. "We take the matter very seriously and are investigating internally."

Federal authorities will allege Mr Bennett, operating under the online pseudonym of "Lorax", hacked AAPT servers in 2012 and obtained more than 200,000 names and 100,000 email addresses.

He is also accused of compromising Indonesian Government web servers.

A teenage accomplice in NSW is accused of hacking into data belonging to the ACT Government and the Netspeed ISP based in Canberra.

After Government and Australian Communications and Media Authority investigations were launched into the security breaches, law enforcement agencies began a hunt for the two hackers associated with Anonymous.

In the past few days, the Scarborough property was raided and several hard drives were seized, which will take police months to analyse.

Mr Bennett did little to hide his social media profile, with his personal Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook pages open for all to see. The online Anonymous persona Lorax is also one of the most open on the internet, hosting regular online radio broadcasts.

Part of Mr Bennett's bail conditions imposed by a Perth magistrate was that he not use the internet for any other purposes than for banking, employment and legal advice.

Lorax's last post on a Facebook page, entered last week, read: "Goodbye and thanks for all the fish!"

After the arrests, Tim Morris - the AFP's national manager high tech crime operations - said online attacks could have a big impact on government and business services.

"Hacking activities can affect everyone from small businesses right up to large government organisations," Assistant Commissioner Morris said.

"These acts can cause serious disruption to government and business networks, which in turn can be catastrophic for people who rely on these networks to run their small business or administer their entitlements or personal finances.

"The impairment or disruption of communications to or from computer networks is a criminal act, not harmless fun."

Mr Bennett is due to appear in court next month.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 mei 2014 @ 22:58:29 #42
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140296242
quote:
quote:
On January 23, 2013 Brown was indicted once more on charges related to the raids on his apartment and his mother’s house. The FBI accused Barrett of “knowingly and corruptly conceal[ing] and attempt to conceal records, documents and digital data contained on two laptop computers”. His mother would later receive six months probation and a $1,000 fine for her role in hiding computers for her son.

At this point the lead prosecutor, Assistant United States Attorney Candina S. Heath, began working to convince Judge Sam Lindsay that Barrett Brown was attempting to manipulate the media while in prison. Recently unsealed court documents reveal the prosecution’s fears that Brown’s media connections would paint the government in an unfavorable light. Ms. Heath argued that silencing Brown’s attorney’s, Charles Swift and Ahmed Ghappou, was necessary to protect the jury, and Barrett himself, from being tainted by media portrayal of the case.

The transcript of the proceedings that led to the gag order reveal a fearful government attempting to silence a rising voice in independent media. The prosecution attempted to limit Barrett’s ability to write while in prison based on an article where “He is critical of the witnesses that will be called. He is critical of the government which has the tone, and I mentioned the tone of the article was problematic.” Ms. Heath claimed criticism of the government would affect the FBI agents she wanted to call as witnesses. Judge Lindsay did not buy the claim however. “I think at this point what you are saying, Ms. Heath, is too broad. I think it is overly broad, and I really do not think if I put something like that in the order that it would pass constitutional muster.”

Eventually the court would decide on a gag that forbid Brown or his attorneys from speaking to the media, but did allow Brown to write articles unrelated to the case and for the Free Barrett Brown organization to continue making statements regarding fundraising.

Another telling part of the unsealed documents relates to media connections Brown maintained. Ms. Heath told the court that after listening to recorded phone calls made from the county jail between Barrett Brown and Kevin Gallagher she worried more articles would be written about the case. Gallagher is the head of Free Barrett Brown. The prosecution discussed conversations between Brown and Gallagher where the two discuss journalists who may be interested in writing about the case. The documents mention Michael Hastings, Janet Reitman of Rolling Stone (listed as Jenna Wrightman), and Glenn Greenwald.
quote:
While Barrett Brown sits in prison awaiting sentencing on August 18 the implications of his trial are already being felt. What does it mean for journalists and activists who are arrested under false or exaggerated claims? Does having well known friends in the media, or being a journalist alone justify a gag order? Are we likely to see similar orders issued in the future? If one judge can be convinced that maintaining a media presence is tantamount to manipulating public opinion it is likely that others will follow suit.

Kevin Gallagher believes, The message sent by the DOJs gagging technique is clear. It says that in cases involving dissidents and political activists, not only will we listen to and transcribe all of your calls from jail and monitor all letters and communications, but we will drag family, friends and the media into the case, and try to prevent the defendant from defending theirself in the press.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 mei 2014 @ 14:42:39 #43
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140312515
BiellaColeman twitterde op zaterdag 24-05-2014 om 12:28:48 In all my years studying Anonymous this case is the most troubling + puzzling: Hacker, Creeper, Soldier, Spy https://t.co/s5yH9j98xB reageer retweet
quote:
Hacker, creeper, soldier, spy

Chapter One: ‘My family is military’
quote:
MILTON, ONT., APRIL 2014 Guards at the Maplehurst Correctional Complex, a maximum-security jail near Toronto known to inmates as the Milton Hilton, came to rouse their newest prisoner from a concrete bed in the intake holding cells. Pulling back the hoodie covering his face, they found his T-shirt had been yanked up and twisted around his throat as a ligature.

The distraught prisoner was Matt DeHart, a 29-year-old American who had been brought to jail days earlier by a Canada Border Services Agency official and five police officers, who arrested him at the apartment he shares with his parents while fighting for refugee protection here.

Pulled from the cell and taken to hospital, he appeared to suffer no serious physical injury but underwent a mental health assessment. After returning to jail, Matt then dived headfirst from his bunk onto the concrete floor of his cell, requiring another urgent hospital visit. He told doctors he had crashed on purpose because he “had no hope.”

Days later, Matt appeared by video link at a detention review before a tribunal of Canada’s Immigration & Refugee Board (IRB). It took half an hour for jail guards to retrieve him from a one-to-one suicide watch cell and sit him in front of the camera. Matt peered into the lens. He looked dreadful: unshaven and unkempt, his eyes red and swollen, his lids heavy from medication. He squinted and grimaced.

It’s not that I’m not patriotic — I am. I voted for Bush. My family is military, pretty gung ho. But everything has changed.
— Matt DeHart

Gone was his bravado and the wide, almost goofy smile he seemed shy about flashing during many meetings with the National Post over the past eight months, while he was on bail from immigration detention on strict conditions. His father, Paul DeHart, a retired U.S. Air Force major who worked in the powerful National Security Agency, sat grim-faced, watching his son on the video monitor.

“We’re here on a claim of torture,” Paul said, his voice straining as he stated Matt has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. “To visit your son in a maximum-security prison in a suicide smock … more heavily medicated than he’s ever been … For anyone with PTSD to be treated that way, much less your own child … is very disturbing.”
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 25 mei 2014 @ 06:57:18 #44
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140336329
quote:
Government Seeks Seven-Month Sentence for LulzSec Leader ‘Sabu’

As a reward for his extensive cooperation helping prosecutors hunt down his fellow hackers, the government is seeking time served for the long-awaited sentencing of top LulzSec leader Hector Xavier Monsegur, also known as “Sabu.”

After delaying his sentencing for nearly three years, the government has asked a federal court to sentence Monsegur to time served — just seven months — calling him an “extremely valuable and productive cooperator” in a document that details for the first time his extensive cooperation providing “unprecedented access to LulzSec.”

Monsegur, who has long been despised by members of LulzSec for his reported snitching, faced a possible sentence of between 259 and 317 months imprisonment under U.S. sentencing guidelines. But the U.S. Probation Office and prosecutors have asked for a reduced sentence “without regard to the otherwise applicable mandatory minimum sentence in this case” in a motion submitted to the U.S. District Court (.pdf) in the Southern District of New York on Friday.

A top leader of the hacking group LulzSec, Monsegur turned informant after he was secretly approached by authorities in June 2011, providing information that led to the subsequent arrest of other top members of LuzSec and Anonymous, including Jeremy Hammond, aka “Anarchaos”of Chicago, who was sentenced last year for his role in the hack of private intelligence firm, Stratfor.

The court document provides a timeline of events around Monsegur’s cooperation with authorities that many have suspected for years, including his efforts to draw fellow hackers into incriminating conversations.

Calling his cooperation “complex and sophisticated” the document describes, for example, his close involvement with law enforcement agencies in several jurisdictions to investigate Hammond in Chicago, while coordinating with FBI agents in New York, physical surveillance teams deployed in Chicago, and an electronic surveillance unit in Washington, D.C.

Hammond was sentenced last year to ten years in prison.

Monsegur, an unemployed father of two, formed LulzSec in the spring of 2011 with about five other core members, who went on a rampage over the next couple of months, targeting about 250 victims, including media outlets, government agencies and contractors, and private companies during their crime spree. Monsegur led the loosely organized group of hackers from his apartment in a public housing project in New York, working as a key player to analyzed victim web sites for vulnerabilities that could be exploited and providing other technical assistance.

The group, which also operated under the name Internet Feds, hacked a number of high-profile victims including HB Gary — a private intelligence firm that bragged it had identified members of Anonymous — the reality TV show “X-Factor,” PBS, Sony Pictures, Senate.gov, Nintendo, and a Georgia-based affiliate of the FBI’s Infragard organization.

Monsegur, as Sabu, was one of the most outspoken and brazen of the LulzSec crew before falling silent that summer, leaving behind a parting Tweet that quoted the The Usual Suspects film.

When he reappeared in September, many members of the anonymous hacking group suspected that Sabu had been arrested, since fellow hackers had outed him by publishing information about his identity online. Sabu denied at the time that he’d been snagged by the feds. But according to the government’s motion, his demise as leader of LulzSec was swift and painless and within hours after being interviewed by authorities, “he was back online cooperating proactively.”

According to the document, authorities approached Monsegur at his New York home on June 7, 2011 at which point he needed little convincing to cooperate. He quickly admitted guilt to criminal conduct before he was even charged with any crime and even spilled the beans to authorities about past crimes he had committed for which they had no knowledge of his role.

He admitted, for example, to participating in DDoS attacks against PayPal, MasterCard, and Visa, which were targeted after the companies blocked donations to WikiLeaks. Monsegur also admitted to hacking thousands of computers between 1999 and 2004, engaging in various hacktivism activities as well as carding activity — stealing and selling credit card information for financial gain or to pay off his own bills. He also admitting to selling marijuana, illegally possessing an unlicensed firearm, and purchasing stolen electronics and jewelry.

“Monsegur admitted his criminal conduct and immediately agreed to cooperate with law enforcement,” the document notes. “That night, Monsegur reviewed his computer files with FBI agents and provided actionable information to law enforcement. The next morning, Monsegur appeared in court on a criminal complaint charging him with credit card fraud and identity theft, and was released on bail, whereupon he immediately continued his cooperation with the Government, as described further below.”

Monsegur entered a guilty plea to the court on August 15, 2011, for an indictment charging him with twelve counts in New York, including nine counts related to computer hacking; one count related to credit card fraud; one count of conspiring to commit bank fraud; and one count of aggravated identity theft. The plea resolved four other cases filed against him in the Eastern and Central Districts of California, the Northern District of Georgia, and the Eastern District of Virginia).

But Monsegur apparently violated the terms of his agreement in 2012. According to the document, in May 2012, his bail was revoked over “unauthorized online postings” he made, and he was arrested on May 25th, before being released on a revised bail December 18, 2012. Monsegur has been free since that time, while cooperating with authorities, and has spent only a total of seven months in prison since 2011.

In court records, Monsegur was generally identified only as CW-1 and was praised extensively (.pdf) for “actively cooperating with the government.” Authorities in fact petitioned the court several times to delay Monsegur’s sentencing during his continued cooperation.

According to authorities, part of Monsegur’s post-arrest cooperation included providing information to help repair hacked systems belonging to PBS and Senate.gov. He also provided authorities with information about hacks involving servers belonging to the Irish political party Fine Gael and the Sony Playstation Network.

But his most extensive assistance led to the arrest of fellow LulzSec members, including Ryan Ackroyd, aka “Kayla” of Doncaster, United Kingdom; Jake Davis, aka “Topiary” of London; Darren Martyn, aka “pwnsauce” of Ireland; Donncha O’Cearrbhail, aka “palladium” of Ireland; Mustafa Al-Bassam, aka “T-Flow” in the UK; as well as Hammond, Ryan Cleary and Matthew Keys, a former Reuters employee accused of inciting members of Anonymous to hack one of his former employers.

Monsegur provided “crucial, detailed information regarding computer intrusions committed by these groups, including how the attacks occurred, which members were involved, and how the computer systems were exploited once breached,” the government reveals.

This assistance “contributed directly to the identification, prosecution and conviction of eight of his major co-conspirators, including Hammond, who at the time of his arrest was the FBI’s number one cybercriminal target in the world. On top of that, Monsegur engaged in additional, substantial proactive cooperation that enabled the FBI to prevent a substantial number of planned cyber attacks,” the government noted.

Working at the direction of law enforcement for three years, sometimes into the late evening and early morning, Monsegur drew his fellow hackers into online chats designed to confirming their identities and whereabouts.

“During some of the online chats, at the direction of law enforcement, Monsegur convinced LulzSec members to provide him digital evidence of the hacking activities they claimed to have previously engaged in, such as logs regarding particular criminal hacks,” the government notes. “When law enforcement later searched the computers of particular LulzSec members, they discovered copies of the same electronic evidence on the individuals’ computers. In this way, the online nicknames of LulzSec members were definitively linked to their true identities, providing powerful proof of their guilt.

“Other times, at the direction of law enforcement, Monsegur asked seemingly innocuous questions designed to elicit information from his co-conspirators that, when coupled with other information obtained during the investigation, could be used to pinpoint their exact locations and identities,” the document reveals.

Ackroyd has been sentenced to 30 months in prison; Davis was sentenced to two years in a juvenile detention facility; Al-Bassam was sentenced to 20 months, which was suspended for two years; Martyn and O’Cearrbhail received probation and a fine; Cleary was sentenced to 32 months in prison; the case of Keys is pending.

Monsegur also helped “disrupt or prevent at least 300 separate computer hacks” that authorities say targeted U.S. Armed Forces, Congress, unidentified U.S. courts, NASA, and a number of private companies.

“Although difficult to quantify, it is likely that Monsegur’s actions prevented at least millions of dollars in loss to these victims,” the government states effusively. “Monsegur also provided information about vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure, including at a water utility for an American city, and a foreign energy company. Law enforcement used the information Monsegur provided to secure the water utility, and the information about the energy company was shared with appropriate government personnel.”

The government notes that because Monsegur’s cooperation was publicly exposed shortly after his arrest, he and his family faced severe threats, causing authorities to relocate him and some of his family members.

“Monsegur repeatedly was approached on the street and threatened or menaced about his cooperation once it became publicly known,” prosecutors note. “Monsegur was also harassed by individuals who incorrectly concluded that he participated in the Government’s prosecution of the operators of the Silk Road website.”

In one case, a reporter had to be removed from the school where the journalist had sought to interview children for whom Monsegur served as guardian.

Monsegur’s sentencing is set for May 27.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 25 mei 2014 @ 07:56:24 #45
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140336496
wikileaks twitterde op zondag 25-05-2014 om 01:58:50 Page 11 of "#Sabu" sentencing doc contains apparent reference to FBI operation against WL http://t.co/9eCiFxStK1 See http://t.co/Ex6qZMkKgf reageer retweet
quote:
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 26 mei 2014 @ 13:51:11 #46
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140384049
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 27 mei 2014 @ 18:15:47 #47
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140435694
Edpilkington twitterde op dinsdag 27-05-2014 om 17:54:53 Judge at "Sabu" hacker informant sentencing "salutes" his "extraordinary cooperation" with FBI - lets him walk with time served reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 27 mei 2014 @ 23:05:48 #48
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140450191
quote:
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 29 mei 2014 @ 23:14:55 #49
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140524067
quote:
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 29 mei 2014 @ 23:16:10 #50
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140524119
quote:
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 30 mei 2014 @ 21:01:12 #51
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140550139
quote:
Join us on June 5th to Reset the Net


The NSA has corrupted the Internet. On June 5, we will Reset the Net. We hope you’ll join us.

June 5 is the one-year anniversary of the first documents leaked by Edward Snowden. While EFF has been fighting NSA surveillance for years, 2013 marked a new chapter in our battle against mass spying. The documents made it clear to everyone why we care so much, and why they should too.

Surveillance affects everyone, in the United States and internationally. Millions of innocent people have had their communications swept up by the NSA’s dragnet surveillance. Thomas Drake, former NSA official and whistleblower described recently retired NSA chief General Keith Alexander’s surveillance philosophy: “He is absolutely obsessed and completely driven to take it all, whenever possible.” This philosophy clearly underpinned his nearly nine year tenure at the NSA. In addition to this collect-it-all strategy, the NSA has used tactics such as deploying malware, trying to weaken encryption, and other sophisticated techniques that make the Internet less secure.

Mass surveillance is toxic for the Internet. The Internet is a powerful force that can promote democracy, innovation, and creativity, but it’s being subverted as a tool for government spying.

That’s why EFF has joined with dozens of other organizations in calling for a day of action to Reset the Net. On June 5th, Reset the Net is asking everyone to help by installing free software tools that are designed to protect your privacy on a computer or a mobile device. Reset the Net is also calling on websites and developers to add surveillance resistant features, like HTTPS and forward secrecy.

Don’t wait for your privacy and freedom. Start taking it back.
http://resetthenet.tumblr.com/
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 31 mei 2014 @ 19:14:47 #52
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140575928
quote:
Japan’s Government Party LDP Sponsored and Cultivated the Right Wing in Underground Anonymous 2channel Board

In Japan, there is a massive discussion board with 230 million page views per day called 2channel. It has played an important role on the Japanese internet for 15 years. It is an anonymous textboard, attracting the most Net traffic in the country.

Since Feb 19 2014, however, a conflict between Hiroyuki Nishimura ( the founder of 2channel and, until recently, its manager ) and his business partner Jim Watkins (an ex-U.S Army commander ) regarding its administration and ownership suddenly became clear. Consequently, Mr Watkins secured the domain name, administrative rights and everything by exploiting his status as a 2channel administrator. He then expelled Nishimura from the site, and now maintains it himself.

Through this internal strife, the existence of a paid service to delete postings of 2channel was uncovered on April 2, by a sudden announcement from Hiroyuki’s business partner, Mr Uchiyama, Hotlink, Inc‘s president .

Mr. Uchiyama’s company, Hotlink, has been tied up with 2channel in an exclusive contract, and offered to monitor and delete negative threads and comments about its customers. And it was detected that among its customers was listed Japan’s ruling government party, the LDP. This information was uncovered by anonymous 2channel users. In fact, this privileged access to delete opinions was not widely known by internet users, and caused considerable alarm.

This service is, though its overall figure is unknown, thought to have administrative access rights to 2channel:

(From a company press release. after the Merger and Acquisition Process, Hotlink is now a member of this ”Net Defamation Basters” team.)

Further, according to Hotlink, the data is supplied exclusively from 2 channel. Since anyone can see 2channel’s posts freely, one question that occurs is ”What kind of data did the ex-administrators sell?” They may have included personal data Hiroyuki collected without the permission or knowledge of users. This suspicion is corroborated by a 2013 scandal where personal information of 40,000 2channel customers was leaked; administrators recorded the user name, address, phone number, post logs, credit card number and security code, all without the users' consent. For what purpose did they collect all this personal data unless it was to sell it?)

Among several shady channels, Hotlink’s customers included Japan’s ruling government party, the LDP, alongside several business giants. And as for official announcements stated below, the LDP used the service offered by Hotlink in the 2013 House of Councillors election.

Then, the contracts and money goes from LDP to Hotlink and then to the Hiroyuki-owned 2channel. Therefore, the sponsor of 2channel is, in reality, Japan’s Government Party LDP. Those disclosures were shocking because, according to its own official announcement, 2channel is a discussion board with no commercial interest. Administration is done by unpaid volunteers, and everybody was told that the highest value of the board was nothing but FREE SPEECH.

Suspicion about this tie-up with Hotlink goes even further; how far did the scope of their services go? One serious issue is whether or not Hiroyuki gave a privileged deal to the Government Party LDP. Hotlink officially boasts they can control and ”extinguish the fire” of harsh criticism in internet communities.

If so, had they abused the data from 2channel administrators in order to stop the spread of information or opinions that the Japanese government disliked on 2 channel? Also, in some 2channel boards, administrators have special access to permit or deny the creation of threads. Those with an agenda on 2channel could have intentionally dismissed the creation of topics, or arbitrarily deleted comments or threads which Japanese Government Party LDP did not want to allow discussion of. So, the LDP sponsored Hiroyuki may have manipulated the opinions of a self-professed "independent discussion board".

This hypothesis is not as absurd as it may have sounded a few years ago. As the Wall Street Journal pointed out, it is widely recognized that Japan has seen a recent increase in Right Wing thought. And this tendency has been stronger on 2channel, where hate speech is particularly prevalent. Also, anti-nuclear activists or politicians (like Naoto Kan, Mizuho Fukushima, Junichiro Koizumi) were fiercely defamed. But now, strangely, the attacks against those figures suddenly ceased since the LDP-linked Hiroyuki lost his administrative rights on 2channel.

This is the 1st page of Google results when you google ” South Korea history ” in Japanese. Most of the results are nationalistic hate speech towards South Korea. They are 2channel and affiliate sites led by Hiroyuki and his business partners. Also, Google’s 1st suggestion when you enter ”South Korea history” is ” South Korea history fabrication”.

Propaganda activity on the internet is not exclusive to Japan. Mr. Edward Snowden taught us that:



(Documents from the article released by Mr Glenn Greenwald)

In my observation, many governments are obsessed with penetrating and controlling internet discussion secretly. Now, 2channel is completely ”occupied” by ex U.S. Army officer Mr. Jim Watkins.

Both 2channel and Social Media may not be the perfect egalitarian forums for discourse that netizens once thought. However, we have to face and understand that fact in order to make rules and institutions on the internet.

[Takanori Eto]

Translated and mirrored from http://echo-news.net/en/l(...)ymous-2channel-board with permission
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 31 mei 2014 @ 22:26:51 #53
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140582974
Falkvinge twitterde op zaterdag 31-05-2014 om 20:34:26 According to Swedish oldmedia, Peter Sunde (@brokep) was just arrested by police, having formally been a fugitive since the TPB pretendtrial reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 1 juni 2014 @ 15:21:44 #54
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140598408
quote:
Anonymous dreigt met cyberaanval op WK-sponsors

Het hackerscollectief Anonymous heeft gedreigd een cyberaanval te willen plegen op de sponsors van het Wereldkampioenschap voetbal in Brazilië. Bedrijven zoals Adidas, Emirates Airlines, Coca-Cola en Budweiser moeten vrezen voor hun websites, zo meldt Reuters.

Het WK voetbal dat op 12 juni in São Paulo van start gaat, kon al op heel wat verzet rekenen. Demonstranten protesteren tegen de Braziliaanse overheid die miljarden dollars aan het sportevenement uitgeeft, terwijl het Zuid-Amerikaanse land aan armoede ten onder gaat.

De actievoerders hebben nu een nieuwe bondgenoot. Anonymous liet aan Reuters weten de belangrijkste sponsors van het WK onder de loep te nemen. 'We zijn nagegaan welke sites het meest kwetsbaar zijn en hebben al een plan opgesteld.' De bewuste bedrijven willen niet reageren op de bedreiging.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 12:21:36 #55
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140627613
Hello crypto-lovers. Letten we even op?

quote:
Bombshell TrueCrypt advisory: Backdoor? Hack? Hoax? None of the above?

A sampling of theories behind Wednesday's notice that TrueCrypt is unsafe to use.
quote:
Wednesday's bombshell advisory declaring TrueCrypt unsafe to use touched off a tsunami of comments on Ars, Twitter, and elsewhere. At times, the armchair pundits sounded like characters in Oliver Stone's 1991 movie JFK, as they speculated wildly—and contradictorily—about what was behind a notice that left so many more questions than answers. Here are some of the more common theories, along with facts that either support or challenge their accuracy.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 13:04:52 #56
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140629205
quote:
TrueCrypt krijgt doorstart

Enkele Zwitserse activisten van de Piratenpartij werken aan een doorstart van de bekende encryptiesoftware TrueCrypt, die deze week offline ging.

De mysterieuze ontwikkelaars van TrueCrypt trokken eerder deze week de stekker uit het project. Ook waarschuwden ze dat het programma onveilig zou zijn. Ze raadden gebruikers aan te migreren naar Bitlocker. Op de originele TrueCrypt-site staat nog slechts TrueCrypt 7.2, waarmee het alleen mogelijk is om versleutelde TrueCrypt-bestanden te decrypten.

Zwitsers Thomas Bruderer en Joseph Doekbrijder, ex-president en ex-vicepresident van de Zwitserse Piratenpartij, zijn nu TrueCrypt.ch gestart als een soort doorstart. De laatste werkende versie, TrueCrypt 7.1a, is door de Zwitsers weer online gebracht, hoewel zij ook waarschuwen voor mogelijke beveiligingsproblemen.


Fork

De Zwitsers willen met hun project meewerken aan een 'fork', een afsplitsing van het originele TrueCrypt. Die zou waarschijnlijk wel een andere naam krijgen. De huidige ontwikkelaars van TrueCrypt zijn onbekend. Dat zou volgens de Zwitsers voor hun fork juist niet moeten gelden.

De Zwitsers wachten voor de fork op de uitkomst van het
Crypto Open Audit-project. Het onderzoek is nog maar gedeeltelijk afgerond.


Oproep voor hulp

De Zwitsers doen ook een oproep voor mensen die willen helpen om beveiligingsrisico's in kaart te brengen. Ook wordt gezocht naar experts die kunnen helpen om juridische problemen op te lossen. Met de hosting in Zwitserland zou de juridische dreiging al minder zijn.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 14:14:35 #57
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140631379
quote:
Reddit, Imgur and Boing Boing launch anti-NSA-surveillance campaign

The Reset the Net campaign aims to encourage direct action, urging visitors to install privacy and encryption tools



Some of the world's largest websites are planning a coordinated day of action on Thursday to oppose mass surveillance online.

The sites, which include Reddit, Imgur and BoingBoing, will be taking part in the campaign, called "Reset the Net", in a number of ways.

Some will showing a splash screen to all users, reminiscent of the one used in the successful protests against SOPA, the US copyright bill which many feared would damage the backbone of the internet. But rather than telling users to write to their electoral representatives, this protest will push more direct action, encouraging visitors to install privacy and encryption tools.

Other sites have committed to improving their own privacy as part of the campaign, by enabling standards such as HTTPS, which prevents attackers from eavesdropping on visitors. Such security standards are common in the world of ecommerce, but rarer for sites which don't think of themselves as holding sensitive information.

"We can take back control of our personal and private data one website, one device, one internet user at a time," said Reddit's General Manager Erik Martin. "We’re proud to stand up for our users’ rights and help Reset the Net."

The campaign is being co-ordinated by Fight for the Future, whose co-founder Tiffiniy Cheng said "Now that we know how mass surveillance works, we know how to stop it. That’s why people all over the world are going to work together to use encryption everywhere and make it too hard for any government to conduct mass surveillance.

"There are moments in history where people and organisations must choose whether to stand on the side of freedom or tyranny. On June 5th, the internet will show which side it’s on.”
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 15:20:26 #58
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140633336
quote:
Agriculture Giant Monsanto Hacked

Monsanto says March breach saw some financial data compromised

Agriculture provider Monsanto has admitted to a breach of its servers, affecting 1300 farmers, with some credit card information leaked.



A letter dated 14 May from the company’s Precision Planting unit to the Office of the Attorney General in Baltimore warned that a number of citizens in the area had been affected by the breach.

Monsanto breached

The breach was detected on 27 March, when Monsanto uncovered unauthorised access to its systems from an outside party, who compromised files on the affected servers with personal information, including customer names, addresses, tax identification numbers, social security numbers and in some cases financial account information.

Some human resources data was stored on the servers too, including tax forms that contained employee names, addresses and social security numbers and some driver’s license numbers.

“We believe this unauthorized access was not an attempt to steal customer information; however, it is possible that files containing personal information may have been accessed and therefore we are making this notification,” said Reuben Shelton, senior counsel for Monsanto, in the letter.

“The incident has been contained and we have partnered with a leading forensics firm to understand and remediate this issue. In addition, we have asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation for assistance.

“We are not aware of any misuse of any information from this incident, but we are notifying all of the affected individuals and providing them with free one-year membership of credit monitoring and identity theft insurance.”

On 24 May, an Anonymous group called Operation Green Rights claimed it had attacked Monsanto and a range of other firms in an effort to shine a light on what it called the “polluting and contaminating” of natural resources.

Later in the month, the group said: “ We have found many confidential documents within an account of a former Monsanto employee.

“Therefore, we are following up by obtaining archives from two other Monsanto subsidiaries and are investigating further.”

It has not yet taken credit for the March breach. An Anonymous group claimed to have hacked Monsanto in 2011.

Protests against Monsanto were held last month too, as demonstrators sought to express their anger over alleged aggressive business practices and their dislike of genetically modified crops.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 juni 2014 @ 22:16:52 #59
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140650293
quote:
#OpWorldCup: Brazil Government websites hacked by DK Brazil Hackteam



An anonymous affiliated hacker group called as "DK Brazil Hackteam & An0nнat" targeting Brazil government and defaced several Brazil Government websites in recent days.

The hack is part of an ongoing operation called "#OpWorldCup" which. The operation is appeared to be a protest against the upcoming 2014 FIFA World Cup that is scheduled to take place in Brazil.

The group has defaced two Brazil government websites www.saobento.ma.gov.br and Brazil's Barro Municipality (barro.ce.gov.br/).

The group has defaced plenty of Brazil Government sites at the end of last month. They hacked the following the websites so far: www.novaluzitania.sp.gov.br/, indaial.sc.gov.br/, igarapedomeio.ma.gov.br/, procon.sp.gov.br.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 juni 2014 @ 20:12:48 #60
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140756995
quote:
Why Anonymous threats should not be ignored

International hacktivist group Anonymous is causing fear within the business and technology community once again, after a supposed Anonymous spokesperson warned that World Cup sponsors are next on the hit list.

In an interview with Reuters, a masked hacker going by the name of Che Commodore revealed that preparations have already begun for a full-scale cyber-attack on sponsors such as Coca Cola, Budweiser, Emirates Airlines and Adidas.

The hacktivist group, which claims to use cyber-attacks as a method to target social injustice, has been known to target high profile networks in the past, generally relying on DDoS attacks as the weapon of choice. Last year Google Malaysia was targeted by hacktivists who spread the message "Google Malaysia STAMPED by PAKISTANI LEETS”. Similarly, the New York Times website was taken offline by an attack leaving readers unable to access content for several hours.

This time the Anonymous is said to be angry at the Brazilian government for their decision to host the World Cup at the expense of millions, despite the poor social standards of many Brazilian citizens. As previous threats from the hacktivist group have proven to be real, corporations and international governments alike must treat this latest threat with the severity it deserves.

What is most worrying is that Anonymous may have already laid the groundwork of its malicious attack and any organization that hasn’t taken the necessary steps to protect against stealth attacks, could be at serious risk. Che Commodore has already sinisterly claimed to be searching for the back doors into the network having “conducted late-night tests to see which of the sites are more vulnerable.”

Such attacks as those previously carried by Anonymous usually rely on Advanced Evasion Techniques (AETs) to exploit vulnerabilities in network gateways and allow Advanced Persistent Threats (APT) to be delivered. Unless measures have been taken to detect these evasion techniques, it is likely an APT could already have penetrated deep into the network of any organisation targeted by Anonymous.

AETs are methods of disguise used to target networks undetected and deliver malicious payloads. Often, AETs take advantage of rarely used protocol properties in unexpected combinations. Using AETs, an attacker can split apart an exploit into pieces and bypass traditional security methods such as a firewall or IPS appliance. Once inside the network, the attacker can then reassemble the code to unleash malware and continue APT attack.

Most IPS and firewalls are not capable of detecting AETs, as while many can pass industry tests with high ratings, those ratings are based on protection against a limited number of threats. Although the exact number of AETs is unknown, it is close to hundreds of millions – many of which are not covered by standard firewalls. As such, the stealth-like presence of AETs means that they can go undetected on a network for weeks, or even months, at a time.

In a recent study by McAfee, it was uncovered that on average, those who experienced a security breach in the last 12 months reported a cost to their organization of over £600,000, which of course doesn’t taken into account reputational damage As such, those threatened by Anonymous must act fast.

If AETs have been used by the hacktivist group, those targeted by Anonymous may already be compromised. The trap may already be set, with malware lying dormant on organizations' networks, ready to attack. It is therefore important that these brands take serious measures to identify such threats and remove them as soon as possible, before Anonymous has a chance to strike.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 juni 2014 @ 20:15:31 #61
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140757113
quote:
Hackers face life sentences in Britain

To reflect the damage they might cause.

Tough new penalties for computer hackers who jeopardise national security may come into effect in Britain under measures introduced in the Queen's Speech overnight.

The UK Government wants life sentences to be imposed on hackers that sabotage computer networks and cause deadly civil unrest through cutting off food distribution, telecommunications networks or energy supplies, under a new Serious Crime Bill.

The UK government will seek to amend the 1990 Computer Misuse Act "to ensure sentences for attacks on computer systems fully reflect the damage they cause."

Currently, the law provides for a maximum sentence of ten years' imprisonment for those who commit the offence of impairing a computer. A new, aggravated offence of unauthorised access to a computer will be introduced into the Computer Misuse Act by the government, carrying far longer sentences.

A hack that causes deaths, serious illness or injury, or is found to seriously damage Britain's national security will be punished by life in prison under the proposed new law.

Environmental damage, or serious hurt to the economy through hacking could land offenders with a fourteen year stretch in gaol if the government gets its way.

As of today, Britain has suffered no such serious cyber attacks. The UK government's National Security Strategy [PDF] nonetheless puts hacking on par with terrorists incidents, international miltiary crises and major accidents or natural hazards, as the country's highest priority risk.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 6 juni 2014 @ 12:53:07 #62
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140776723
quote:
quote:
In early 2012, members of the hacking collective Anonymous carried out a series of cyber attacks on government and corporate websites in Brazil. They did so under the direction of a hacker who, unbeknownst to them, was wearing another hat: helping the Federal Bureau of Investigation carry out one of its biggest cybercrime investigations to date.

A year after leaked files exposed the National Security Agency's efforts to spy on citizens and companies in Brazil, previously unpublished chat logs obtained by Motherboard reveal that while under the FBI's supervision, Hector Xavier Monsegur, widely known by his online persona, "Sabu," facilitated attacks that affected Brazilian websites.

The operation raises questions about how the FBI uses global internet vulnerabilities during cybercrime investigations, how it works with informants, and how it shares information with other police and intelligence agencies.

After his arrest in mid-2011, Monsegur continued to organize cyber attacks while working for the FBI. According to documents and interviews, Monsegur passed targets and exploits to hackers to disrupt government and corporate servers in Brazil and several other countries.

Details about his work as a federal informant have been kept mostly secret, aired only in closed-door hearings and in redacted documents that include chat logs between Monsegur and other hackers. The chat logs remain under seal due to a protective order upheld in court, but in April, they and other court documents were obtained by journalists at Motherboard and the Daily Dot.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 9 juni 2014 @ 23:21:30 #63
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140897724
quote:
Hundreds sign up to protest outside GCHQ in Cheltenham

Hundreds of people have signed up to protest against Cheltenham-based listening post GCHQ.
The event, organised on social media site Facebook, aims to say “enough is enough” to the organisation following the Edward Snowden leaks.

Running from August 29 to September 1, it is organised by the group Anonymous.
A statement on the page said: “With all the latest leaks coming out about the power of GCHQ, the NSA and Five Eyes it is high time that we showed our faces and said enough is enough.”

A GCHQ spokes person said: "People have a right to protest peacefully within the law.

"All of GCHQ's work is carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate, and that there is rigorous oversight, including from the Secretary of State, the Interception and Intelligence Services Commissioners and the Parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee. All our operational processes rigorously support this position."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 10 juni 2014 @ 16:50:08 #64
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140919482



quote:
#OpHackingCup_

=======================================================================================================================================
:00 - The Motivation_
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:00:00 ::
Hello, citizens of the world; we are Anonymous.

As time for World Cup approaches, we have witnessed a crescent frequency of hacking attacks for the Anonymous ideal. Only for the last week there were two invasions with big repercussion on the media, one that was the leaking of Itamaraty Palace documents - central to the Ministry of External Relations. Among these papers, the most are considerate sigilous.

We'd like to clarify for what reasons cyberactivists act in these ways.

How many billions of dollars from public funds were spent to build and reform the stadiums that will host the Cup, aside other builds that will bring very little or no legacy to the population. What does justify, for example, to build a new stadium at Manaus city, at state of Amazonas? In which ways were executed the fiscalization of how the public money is being used on these builds, principally the ones that need to be finished in matter of urgency due to delays - many times resulted by increase of costs (it's estimated that the cost of the stadiums have increased 163% compared to the initial prevision). It is valid to remember that the promess included the private initiative would take the outgoing of building the stadiums.

We can't accept pacifically any more the violations on people's basic rights practised because of this event. For preparation we can understand: 1. hygienization and elitization of the cities, denominated to it for, above all, the property speculation and for the violence against the local population on scale of streets occupying the big centers;
2. unjustifiable outlay to intensify the security (and the repression) against the manifestations that may happen during the games, allied to draft laws which marginalize and criminalize the manifestants;
3. to guarantee that no one - except for the locals and people with tickets - approach the stadiums on game days, aside the non-authorized vendors won't be allowed to open certain hours before and after the games, even that for this the freedom of come and go be limited, forbidding things like visits to the local people, among other situations.

The on-line actions, just as the protests on the streets, are part of a resistance against this model that has become so evident to ordain and dis ordain of this mega corporation which is FIFA on this country, against the influence of economic power on political decisions and against polarization of the profit counterpointing the basic right of a whole population, and, therefore, are legitimate.
"There is no fairness on following unfair laws", said Aaron Swarz, infamous programmer and fighter for a free internet.

About the cybernetic security on Brazil:
Right after the leaks Edward Snowden revealed - National Security Agency (N.S.A.) ex-functionary, - department which would be monitoring the Brazilian government, which got to a Inquiry Parliamentary Commission (aka C.P.I.) to be opened to investigate the case, which is already closed, with the most obvious conclusion: there is vulnerability in the whole cybernetic governmental system, clearly for lack of investment. The C.D. Cyber (Center of Army's Cybernetic Defense), responsible for Brazilian cybernetic security have had their amount cut for years: about forty nine and half millions of dollars in the year of twenty-twelve, forty millions last year and thirty-one millions in this very year, even after Snowden's leaks.

The eyes of the world will be turned to Brazil: we will show to everyone how fake is and always was this Brazilian government and FIFA.

=======================================================================================================================================
:01 - The Communication_
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:01.00 :: Twitter Account @AnonBRNews

=======================================================================================================================================
:02 - The Targets_
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:02:00 :: The Tweets indicating the targets will start at 2014-06-11T14:00:00Z;

=======================================================================================================================================
We are Anonymous
We are Legion
We do not forgive
We do not forget
Expect us
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 juni 2014 @ 15:22:15 #65
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140992078
quote:
Anonymous Denmark targets Socialist Party (SF) for signing mass surveillance bill

The online hacktivist Anonymous has target Denmark’s political party (Socialistisk Folkeparti, SF in Danish language) for signing and passing mass Internet surveillance bill from the parliament yesterday.

Despite criticism from experts and human right organizations, the Danish parliament approved bill that will allow government to keep track of user’s activity on the Internet. This has been done through an approval of the controversial bill on the Center for Cyber ​​Security.

Anonymous Denmark seems unhappy with the surveillance bill and decided to leak confidential information of officials at Socialistisk Folkeparti, SF party. Anonymous left a brief message on Pastebin along with personal details of 22 officials and database of SF party’s official website.

The leaked data contains names, emails, encrypted passwords, social security numbers, addresses, city and zip codes. While the message states that:
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 juni 2014 @ 15:28:21 #66
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pi_140992262

SPOILER
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 juni 2014 @ 17:06:41 #67
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_140995485
quote:
Anonymous hackers bring down websites just hours before kick-off

HACKERS have targeted a number of World Cup-related websites in a large scale cyber attack ahead of the tournament opener.

Well known group Anonymous, who have brought down the US defence website, Amazon and other large websites in the past, are purposefully disrupting the sites to send a message to the Brazilian government.

The cyber attackers are using a system called DDos, Distributed Denial of Service , which forces websites to crash by sending high levels of traffic.

Hackers at Anonymous Brazil say they want the government to respect the people's needs.

One of those involved, known as Che Commodore, said: "Companies and institutions that work with a government that deny the basic rights of its people in order to promote a private, exclusive and corrupt sports event will be targeted.

"We had a busy last few days and there is more still to come."

The World Cup has become hugely unpopular in the country.

Expensive security measures, brand new stadiums and poor transport options have caused uproar among workers and residents close to World Cup sites.

Brazilians have called for much more organisation and planning from the government in the future.

In reaction, the hackers have targeted government websites and intelligence agencies.

There are said to be 27 websites linked to government activity that have been brought down by Anonymous, one of which is the Matto Grosso state site.

A spokeswoman for the local government said: "Our site was hacked.

"We were able to take it off the air and restore the service within 30 minutes."

Sites belonging to the Sao Paulo police, the Sao Paulo Metro (where workers are striking) and the Brazilian Football Confederation.

The names are included on a long list but some companies and bodies have denied being hacked.

Last month, it is believed Anonymous hackers infiltrated the foreign ministry's email service.

They were able to see dozens of classified documents including a list of foreign leaders planning to attend World Cup matches.

Computer experts are now warning it may be too late with many sites already infected.

William Beer, a cyber security analyst said: "Even though people are starting to realize there are problems, a lot of sites have probably already been attacked and are infected."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 17 juni 2014 @ 13:55:47 #68
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141198537
quote:
Hackers Warn Of Cyber Attacks On Oil Companies In Saudi, UAE, Qatar

The threat has been issued by Anonymous, a politically motivated group of hacktivists, according to Symantec.

A Middle East-based group of hackers has issued a threat warning of cyber attacks against oil, gas and energy companies in the Middle East, security firm Symantec has revealed.

The threat, made by Anonymous, a politically motivated group of hacktivists, states that they are planning to attack before, during, and after June 20, 2014.

This is due to Anonymous disagreeing with the US dollar being used as the currency to buy and sell oil, Symantec said.

According to the security firm, governments that may be attacked include those in Saudi Arabia Kuwait and Qatar.

Some of the possible company targets include Kuwait Oil Company, Petroleum Development Oman, Qatar Petroleum, Saudi Aramco, ADNOC, ENOC and Bahrain Petroleum Company.

While there are limited details regarding the tools that will be used, based on previous observations, Symantec said the attacks will most likely include distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, phishing/spear-phishing emails, intrusion and data-theft attempts, vulnerable software exploration, web application exploits, and website defacement.

“Public announcements by these groups are often used as a means to gain notoriety or media attention and can be of highly volatile credibility,” the company said.

The Middle East’s petrochemical industry has been vulnerable to cyber attacks over the last few years, and Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer, was hit by a major virus infection in August 2012.

Security experts have warned that the region is not well-prepared to deal with cyber crime and is susceptible to attacks.

Symantec said it has detection measures in place regarding the recent threat and also issued the following recommendations:

· Use a layered approach to securing your environment, including enterprise-wide security monitoring.

· Deploy network intrusion detection/prevention systems to monitor network traffic for malicious activity.

· Ensure all operating systems and public facing machines have the latest versions and security patches, and antivirus software and definitions up to date.

· Ensure all web servers are patched, configured to minimise the impact of DoS/DDoS attacks, and hardened against external threats.

· Utilise web application firewalls as a front-line defense against attacks.

· Ensure your IT and IT security staff are prepared and know what they need to do in the event of attack.

· Discuss DoS/DDoS mitigation strategies with your upstream provider and ensure they are aware of this threat.

· Ensure relevant third party vendors are also aware and accessible.

· Utilise DDoS protection services.

· For technologies not monitored/managed by MSS, ensure all signatures are up to date, including endpoint technologies.

· Ensure systems have a running firewall, unnecessary ports are closed/blocked, and unused services are disabled.

· To reduce the impact of latent vulnerabilities, always run non-administrative software as an unprivileged user with minimal access rights.

· Do not follow links or open email attachments provided by unknown or untrusted sources.

· Ensure staff is educated on social engineering and phishing techniques
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 21 juni 2014 @ 07:52:40 #69
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141363018
quote:
Massive security flaws allowed for Stratfor hack, leaked report reveals

The intelligence firm at the center of a notorious cybersecurity breach that affected top government officials failed to institute standard security measures prior to the attack, according to a newly leaked report.

In December 2011, a group of skilled hackers broke into the network of Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (Stratfor), compromising the personal data of some 860,000 customers, including a former U.S. vice president, CIA director, and secretary of state, among others.

The hackers, known collectively as AntiSec, exfiltrated approximately 60,000 credit card numbers and associated data, resulting in a reported $700,000 in fraudulent charges. Roughly 5 million internal emails were obtained by the hackers and later released by the whistleblower organization WikiLeaks as the "Global Intelligence Files."

For Stratfor, a Texas-based geopolitical intelligence and consulting firm, the incident was an international embarrassment that caused roughly $3.78 million in total damages—and all of it could’ve been avoided by meeting common fraud prevention requirements.

Based on confidential internal documents obtained by the Daily Dot and Motherboard, Stratfor employed substandard cybersecurity prior to the infiltration that left thousands of customers vulnerable to potential identity theft. The documents also lend credibility to statements made by Hyrriiya, a relatively unknown hacker who claimed responsibility for the breach.

The Daily Dot–Motherboard investigation is based on a cache of sealed court documents—roughly 3 gigabytes of previously unseen chat logs, warrants, and various government reports—some of which was collected by Hector “Sabu” Monsegur, a hacker-turned-informant. Evidence provided by Monsegur was used to convict eight members of Anonymous, including Jeremy Hammond, who is currently serving the remainder of a 10-year sentence for his role in the attack.

According to the documents, Stratfor engaged Verizon Business/Cybertrust to “conduct a forensic investigation” into the breach on Dec. 30, 2011, and requested that findings be shared with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Verizon's security team inspected the computers at Stratfor's office shortly after the attack, as well as servers later confiscated by federal agents from CoreNAP, an Austin-based data center that hosted Stratfor's customer information.

In a 66-page report filed Feb. 15, 2012, Verizon concludes in painful detail that Stratfor had insufficient control over remote access to vital systems, and that those systems were not protected by a firewall and lacked proper file integrity-monitoring. (Editors’ note: The full report can be viewed below. Only Internet protocol addresses and private customer information have been redacted.)

"In light of a confirmed system breach,” Verizon reports, “it should be noted that several distinct vulnerabilities and network configurations existed that allowed this breach and subsequent data compromise to occur.”

For starters, at the time of the attack, no password management policy existed within Stratfor. Passwords were at times shared between employees, and nothing prevented the same passwords from being used on multiple devices. “Users commonly use the same password to access email as the password to remotely access a system containing sensitive information,” the report states.



According to Verizon, no anti-virus software had been deployed on any of the examined systems, which left Stratfor “wide open to not only the more sophisticated and customized hacker attempts, but also to other viruses.” While a firewall was in place for the office portion of the Stratfor network at the time of the breach, it was not properly configured to retain any useful information.

Moreover, Stratfor would have been immediately notified of attempts to exfiltrate its customer data and internal emails had it implemented a proper file-monitoring solution. Such a security precaution could have prevented Stratfor's customer data from being stolen by AntiSec in the first place.

Another "significant factor" in the breach was the design of Stratfor's e-commerce environment, which facilitated the electronic transfer of payments by its customers. According to the report, this system was accessible, needlessly, from anywhere within the company's network, "as well as the Internet directly."

Verizon also discovered traces of exfiltrated cardholder information from the e-commerce environment within Stratfor's mail server. That indicates that there were latent flaws in the architecture of the company’s network.

“This finding highlights the inherent problems around the lack of network segregation between the corporate Stratfor environment and the payment and e-commerce environment," the report claims.

Verizon concluded that Stratfor's customer payment system, at the time of the attack, met only three out of the 12 fraud prevention requirements maintained by the report, which were taken from Visa’s fraud control and investigations procedures. Eight of those requirements, which were not met, directly contributed to the breach.

“Typically you’ll find a company deficient in one or two key areas,” noted Kevin Cunningham, the president and founder of SailPoint, a leading independent identity and access management provider. “This is an extreme case and a breakdown of a magnitude I’ve never seen before.

“Security is an interesting dynamic between risk and flexibility,” he continued. “You have to define your policy and ensure that controls are in place. In this case, it doesn’t look like they had any policies defined. It’d be like not only leaving your front door unlocked and your windows open, but also your family jewels on the kitchen table.

“It was an accident waiting to happen.”

Along with the names, credit card numbers, and affiliated data for Stratfor's customers, AntiSec hackers obtained card verification values, the three-digit number located on the back of payment cards. It’s against payment card industry data security standards (PCI DSS) for merchants to retain those codes, according to the PCI Security Standards Council. (The report speculates that since Stratfor outsourced its payment processing functions, the organization may not have been directly required to adhere to these payment industry standards.)

PCI DSS also require credit card numbers to be encrypted when digitally stored by merchants. Stratfor’s founder and CEO previously admitted to storing unencrypted data in an official statement. It was this cardholder information that was stolen by AntiSec in December 2011.

Stratfor ultimately settled a class-action lawsuit with its customers over the losses in June 2012 for a reported $1.75 million.

Interestingly, Verizon also found evidence of another breach that accessed cardholder information: “Analysis of the Zimbra mail server provided Verizon Business with evidence that the intruder(s) created the database dump file (which was later exfiltrated from the STRATFOR environment) on November 16, 2011.”

That discovery appears to further validate the claims of Hyrriiya, an Anonymous hacker known for his cyberattacks on Syrian government websites. In a May 2012 letter sent to Hammond’s attorneys, Hyrriiya confessed to hacking Stratfor and providing AntiSec with access.

“This initial hack of Stratfor occurred approximately TWO week BEFORE anyone involved in #antisec (including Sabu and Hammond) had ANY knowledge or involvement in Stratfor,” Hyrriiya wrote. “After reviewing the data I was able to access in Stratfor, I realised that the customer details included all pertinent credit card information for both individuals and a multitude of corporate entities, military institutions and espionage agencies. Upon this realisation, I promptly decided that I wanted this information to be public.”

A previous Daily Dot investigation found that—contrary to the FBI’s official statements—the Stratfor breach was orchestrated by informant Hector Monsegur. Chat logs show Monsegur obtained critical information about Stratfor’s vulnerabilities privately from Hyrriiya, and then arranged for Hammond to meet with Hyrriiya and gain access to Stratfor.

Monsegur was released in late May on time served. Barrett Brown, a journalist who pleaded guilty in April to being an accessory after the fact in the Stratfor hack, is scheduled to be sentenced in August.

Verizon Wireless did not respond to multiple inquiries. Stratfor declined to comment on this article.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 23 juni 2014 @ 22:19:29 #70
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141469951
quote:
quote:
The online hacktivist Anonymous is back in news with another high profile hack. This time Anonymous Brasil has hacked and defaced the official website of famous Brazilian actress Glória Pires.

The 50 years old actress had her website (http://www.gloriapires.com.br/) defaced exactly 5 hours ago with a YouTube documentary video ‘Beyond Citizen Kane; (Muito além do Cidadão KAN) in Brazilian Portuguese.

Pires works for Rede Globo media group, the largest in Brazil and it seems the main target of Anonymous was Rede Globo media group, as Beyond Citizen Kane (Muito além do Cidadão KAN) documentary discusses the Globo group’s influence, power, and political connections.

Tweet confirming the hack was done by Anonymous Brazil:
In March 2014, Anonymous had vowed to attack Brazilian government and companies sponsoring the World Cup in Brazil. As a showcase, Anonymous took official website of Military Police of São Paulo following with the official website of New York’s Board of Elections against world cup.

Let’s see what else coming from Anonymous.

At the time of pubishing this article, Glória Pires’s website was restored and working online.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 23 juni 2014 @ 22:25:20 #71
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141470276
quote:
Gabriella Coleman vs Anonymous Digital

Chat with Biella Coleman and Anonymous Digital July 15th, 3pm EST | 20:00 BST | 7pm GMT

IRC: || Channel #AnonDigital
[ClearNet] irc.cyberguerrilla.org || PORT 6667 || SSL PORT 6697
[TOR] 6dvj6v5imhny3anf.onion || PORT 6667 || SSL PORT 6697
[I2P] 127.0.0.1:6669 || See I2P || PORT 6669

For our security-conscious clients:
The below fingerprints may be used to verify the identity of IRC cyberguerrilla server’s.
[ClearNet] SHA-1: 94:1C:FF:7D:BF:19:C1:AA:04:49:0C:57:38:89:71:B3:1F:71:AC:EF
[TOR] SHA-1: DB:CB:9B:31:9C:E3:32:85:80:4E:AD:59:2D:D4:07:D2:97:0F:3E:B7
[I2P] SHA-1: F8:B3:65:10:01:F4:71:0E:8F:FD:6E:71:55:6E:A4:A3:CF:8F:72:0D
HowTo’s:
IRC Client setup || Connect via I2P || Connect via TOR
IRC Identifying with CERTFP || IRC with OTR Encryption
WebChat:
Via cyberguerrilla.org || WebIris
Via TOR || WebIris
KiwiIRC

Discuss her new book
“Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Story of Anonymous”
http://t.co/tHX0gd4wdH
Also hacking, protests, politics, hacktivists and how Keith Alexander is sure to save the world from DDoS attacks for $600k a month
The NSA will be joining us so it’s a guaranteed good time.
The FBI will be giving away National Security Letters as door prizes.
Out of this chat there will be a radio show made
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 25 juni 2014 @ 21:12:30 #72
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141549601
Hacken voor Dummies:

SimonZerafa twitterde op dinsdag 24-06-2014 om 08:23:17 Wanna know the password for Brasil World Cup security centre WiFi? It's on the whiteboard ;-) -> http://t.co/vONTc6210d [ cc @thegrugq] reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 27 juni 2014 @ 15:11:29 #73
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141617842
Zin in een avondje theater?

quote:
Teh Internet Is Serious Business

A 16-year-old London schoolboy and an 18-year-old recluse in Shetland meet online, pick a fight with the FBI and change the world forever.

Tim Price gets behind the code with the original Anonymous members and creates an anarchic retelling of the birth of hacktivism. A fictional account of the true story of Anonymous and LulzSec, the collective swarm who took on the most powerful capitalist forces from their bedrooms.

Tim Price, author of Protest Song about the Occupy movement and National Theatre of Wales’ The Radicalisation of Bradley Manning continues his interrogation of contemporary revolutions.

Tim Price’s theatre credits include: Protest Song at The Shed at the National Theatre, I’m With The Band directed by Hamish Pirie at the Traverse, Praxis Makes Perfect (with Neon Neon, at National Theatre Wales), Demos at the Traverse, The Radicalisation of Bradley Manning for National Theatre Wales, For Once for Pentabus and Hampstead Theatre, tour), Salt Root and Roe, as part of the Donmar Warehouse’s Trafalgar Studio season, which was nominated for an Olivier Award and Will and George. Tim is one of the founders of Cardiff’s leading fringe new writing company Dirty Protest. Launched in 2007, the company has worked with over one hundred Welsh writers, staging new sell-out plays in alternative venues, from pubs and clubs, to kebab shops, hairdressers and a forest. The company took over the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs last summer, as part of Surprise Theatre in the Open Court festival.

Hamish Pirie is Associate Director at the Royal Court and this will be the first time he has directed here. He has worked with Tim Price on three of his shows, directing I’m With The Band and Demos at the Traverse, Edinburgh (where he was previously Associate Director) and Salt Root and Roe for the Donmar Warehouse’s Trafalgar Studio season. His credits at the Traverse include Quiz Show by Rob Drummond, Love With A Capital ‘L’ by Tony Cox, 3 Seconds by Lesley Hart, Most Favoured by David Ireland, Bravo Figaro by Mark Thomas, The Last Bloom by Amba Chevannes and 50 Plays for Edinburgh.

Age guidance 14+

Multi-Buy Offer – Save over 20% with tickets at just £25.
To use the multi-buy deal purchase three or more Jerwood Theatre Downstairs productions (The Nether, Teh Internet Is Serious Business, Hope or How To Hold Your Breath). Only valid on full price, top-price tickets. Must be booked by 31 July 2014.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 28 juni 2014 @ 15:47:29 #74
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141646777
quote:
Anonymous Hacktivists Prepare For Strike Against ISIS 'Supporters'

The hacktivist group Anonymous is planning to launch a series of digital attacks against nations it accuses of funding or arming the radical Islamic terror group ISIS.

Sources within Anonymous told me the campaign will be called Operation NO2ISIS and will target three states suspected of offering support to the Islamic State of Syria and al-Sham (ISIS). Government websites will be blasted with DDoS attacks with Anonymous planning to “unleash the entire legion” upon its enemies.

One of the targets will be Saudi Arabia, a Sunni Muslim nation that has long been suspected of supporting ISIS and other hardline terror groups. However, the Saudi government has dismissed Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki’s claims that it arms and funds ISIS, describing the “false allegations” as a “malicious falsehood”. The Saudis are thought to be terrified of blowback from the wars in Iraq and Syria, so have taken steps to ban private individuals from donating cash to ISIS militants.

The hacktivists of Anonymous do not believe Saudi Arabia, which is known as the homeplace of Osama Bin Laden and is a long-standing supporter of terrorism. A number of other countries have also been warned to prepare for attacks, which are expected to begin next week. Donors in Kuwait and a number of other Middle Eastern nations are thought to have funded ISIS in the past, making them fair game for Anonymous.

“We plan on sending a straightforward message to Turkey, Saudi Arabia Qatar and all other countries that evidently supply ISIS for their own gain,” the source said. “In the next few days we will begin defacing the government websites of these countries so that they understand this message clearly.

“We are unable to target ISIS because they predominately fight on the ground. But we can go after the people or states who fund them.”

Although ISIS is known to be a savvy user of social media, it has not yet flexed its digital muscles like the Syrian Electronic Army, which famously hacked a number of targets including The New York Times and Forbes itself.

This may be set to change, as Anonymous has already started to lock horns with hackers claiming to be associated with ISIS.

Last week, a Twitter TWTR -1.23% account called @theanonmessage was taken over by ISIS supporters and dozens of graphic images of violence were posted to its timeline. The activist who operates the account admitted that Anonymous were shocked at the attack, which appeared to mimic the tactics already employed by the Syrian Electronic Army itself.

“To be honest, we were taken off guard,” he said. “We didn’t expect a bunch of ragtags to any damage. The ISIS hacking techniques were very similar to hacks done by the Syrian Electronic Army, so that’s pretty interesting.”

As with any cyberattack, it’s difficult to know exactly how much damage will be caused. Anonymous itself once petitioned the White House to make DDoS attacks a form of legitimate protest, which suggests its supporters feel the digital attacks are more useful as a publicity tool than as an actual weapon of war.

This assessment is backed up by security experts. Commenting on a recent threat to attack sponsors of the World Cup, the security firm Symantec SYMC +1.02% summed up the nature of the threat posed by Anonymous like this: “Public announcements by these groups are often used as a means to gain notoriety or media attention and can be of highly volatile credibility. These attacks are typically low scale consisting of DDoS activity against publicly accessible webservers, website defacement efforts, or data exploitation. Symantec does take these threats seriously and has detection in place.”

Perhaps the most dangerous effect of any Anonymous campaign will be the inevitable reprisal. So far, ISIS supporters have largely shunned online attacks, but this could easily change. If the Anonymous claims of a link up between the Syrian Electronic Army and ISIS are to be believed, the damage they could wreak on Western targets could be much more than simply symbolic. Let’s not forget that one false tweet from an AP account wiped more than $90billion from the US stock market. Provoke ISIS’ digital supporters and they will strike back, possibly bringing the fight to America without a single shot being fired.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 29 juni 2014 @ 19:00:06 #75
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141689863
quote:
quote:
Sitting inside a medium-security federal prison in Kentucky, Jeremy Hammond looks defiant and frustrated.

“[The FBI] could've stopped me,” he told the Daily Dot last month at the Federal Correctional Institution, Manchester. “They could've. They knew about it. They could’ve stopped dozens of sites I was breaking into.”

Hammond is currently serving the remainder of a 10-year prison sentence in part for his role in one of the most high-profile cyberattacks of the early 21st century. His 2011 breach of Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (Stratfor) left tens of thousands of Americans vulnerable to identity theft and irrevocably damaged the Texas-based intelligence firm's global reputation. He was also indicted for his role in the June 2011 hack of an Arizona state law enforcement agency's computer servers.

There's no question of his guilt: Hammond, 29, admittedly hacked into Stratfor’s network and exfiltrated an estimated 60,000 credit card numbers and associated data and millions of emails, information that was later shared with the whistleblower organization WikiLeaks and the hacker collective Anonymous.

Sealed court documents obtained by the Daily Dot and Motherboard, however, reveal that the attack was instigated and orchestrated not by Hammond, but by an informant, with the full knowledge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

In addition to directly facilitating the breach, the FBI left Stratfor and its customers—which included defense contractors, police chiefs, and National Security Agency employees—vulnerable to future attacks and fraud, and it requested knowledge of the data theft to be withheld from affected customers. This decision would ultimately allow for millions of dollars in damages.

The documents also confirm the integral role of a shadowy hacker, operating under the handle “Hyrriiya,” who provided key access for the now-infamous attack.

The FBI’s official version of the Stratfor hack, as reported by the New York Times, is that the bureau was made aware of the breach on Dec. 6, 2011, after hackers were already “knee-deep” in confidential files. The FBI claims Hammond informed hacker-turned-informant Hector Xavier Monsegur—also known by the online alias Sabu—of the vulnerability at Stratfor. In turn, the FBI immediately notified the intelligence company, though at that point it was already “too late.”

During his trial, Hammond claimed that the roles were actually reversed: It was Monsegur—released last week on time served—who first introduced him to an anonymous hacker, now known as Hyrriiya, who “supplied download links to the full credit card database as well as the initial vulnerability access point to Stratfor’s systems."

I had never even heard of Stratfor until Sabu brought it to my attention, Hammond said.

His statement echoed a May 2012 letter ostensibly written by Hyrriiya and provided to Hammonds legal defense team. I am stating and admitting, AS FACT, that I was the person who hacked Stratfor, wrote Hyrriiya, a skilled hacker, who's known primarily for his involvement in hacks of Syrian government websites for Anonymous, two months after Hammond was charged.

Previously, however, no public records have substantiated Hammonds and Hyrriiyas claims.

New information, obtained by the Daily Dot and Motherboard in April, not only affirms Hammond's version of events, but also longstanding accusations that federal investigators allowed an informant to repeatedly break computer-crime laws while in pursuit of Hammond and other Anonymous figures. Further, contrary to its prior statements, the FBI, through its surveillance of Monsegur, was aware of a security breach in the network of the private intelligence company well before it was too late.

The evidence on which the Daily Dot-Motherboard investigation is based was collected by Monsegur and his FBI monitors during his time as an informant from June 2011 to March 2012. The cache of court documents includes thousands of previously unseen chat logs, surveillance photos, and government documents, all currently sealed under a protective order upheld by a federal judge in the Southern District of New York.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 1 juli 2014 @ 14:33:03 #76
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141764394
Wie is hier hardleers?

quote:
quote:
ProtonMail was supposed to be an easy email encryption tool that would finally give us an answer to Internet surveillance around the world.

Instead, PayPal has frozen over $275,000 in donations to the project because, a PayPal representative told the company, the American payment service is not sure if ProtonMail is legal.

Of course, it is absolutely legal to encrypt email. The freeze remains in place.

Most incredible of all, the PayPal representative was unsure if ProtonMail has the necessary government approval to encrypt emails, as though anyone who encrypts needs a license to do so.

ProtonMail doesn’t need government approval, by the way, but it has it anyway. The encryption used by ProtonMail has been unquestionably legal since the 1990s. If that’s not enough, the Constitution’s First Amendment protects encryption code and its Fourth Amendment guarantees against unreasonable searches, exactly what encryption protects against.

“At this time, it is not possible for ProtonMail to receive or send funds through PayPal,” ProtonMail co-founder Andy Yen announced this morning. “No attempt was made by PayPal to contact us before freezing our account, and no notice was given.”
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 1 juli 2014 @ 21:50:22 #77
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141787023
quote:
Anonymous vows to unleash its 'wrath' on U.S. lawmakers over cybersecurity bill

A threat by the hacktivist group Anonymous over a new cybersecurity bill scheduled for committee markup next month is being taken seriously by the Washington D.C. capitol police.

The Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act of 2014 (CISA), authored by Senators Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), is being labelled by many constitutional groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), as the third installment of a much-despised piece of Internet legislation widely known as CISPA.

CISPA, or the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, was a hugely unpopular bill that has twice been dropped by the U.S. Senate. As a law, it would have permitted the U.S. government to share sensitive information with companies about the online habits of U.S. citizens, specifically, when deemed necessary to protect against rather ambiguously defined “cyber threats.”

Opponents of CISPA, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and Fight for the Future, successfully derailed CISPA by painting it as a danger to American civil liberties. The bill, critics said, would have allowed the federal government too broad authority when it came to tracking users’ online activities.

Like its predecessor, CISA also allows the federal government to share information perceived as “cyber threats” with private companies. The recipients would also have considerable latitude when it comes to sharing the information with law enforcement agencies. Companies would enjoy extensive liability protection for information they share with the government as well, which means customers who feel their rights have been violated may have little or no legal recourse.

“It has come to our attention that Congress is planning to pass a bill that will jeopardize privacy and personal security across all forms of media,” Anonymous’ message against CISA supporters began. “We would like to inform you that despite our direct and crippling attacks on former cybersecurity bills like SOPA, PIPA, and CISPA, there is yet a new threat.”


What likely caught the attention of law enforcement wasn’t the theatrics typical of Anonymous videos, but a threat expressed later in the message: “Our legion's wrath will fall on each senator, representative, corporation, and official who voices support for this bill… If you value the sanctity of your loved ones as well as your own, it will be best for you to back down and drop this bill where it belongs.”

Capitol police, charged with the protection of U.S. senators and congressmen, became aware of Anonymous’ response to the bill on Monday, but said their policy is not to comment on any security protocols or investigations that may be taking place in response to threats.

Sens. Feinstein and Chambliss could not be immediately reached for comment.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 5 juli 2014 @ 18:03:44 #78
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_141935571
quote:
Operation Syria Aid: #SaveAtarebHospital

Greetings citizens, we are Anonymous.

We bring you this message as a matter of life or death for over half a million people.
A vital hospital in a war zone will be shut down in less than 3 weeks.
We need to buy the hospital enough time until a large sponsor can pick it up.

As you may be aware the turmoil in the Middle East has significantly increased in the last few years. In Syria, over 100,000 people have been killed in the revolution that has engulfed the nation. The great majority of these deaths are civilian casualties caught in the middle of the fighting. Many have been deliberately slaughtered by rogue rebels, terrorists, or by the Assad regime's air raid campaigns on civilian populations as a form of collective punishment. Despite the many ways to die in Syria the most common is a direct result of the lack of medical attention and hospitals in many areas. What would be commonly a minor injury can very rapidly turn lethal.

To many outside the region the situation appears hopeless and it is hard to find an effective way to help but one hospital has stood out. According to the UK charity 'Hand in Hand for Syria', "the hospital is located just 30 km from Aleppo, one of the hardest-hit areas of Syria." "The hospital became famous when it was featured in the BBC Panorama programme Saving Syria’s Children in September 2013, linked here: ( ),after the hospital received casualties from a thermal-bomb attack on a local school where many innocent children, teachers, parents were severely hurt. Had the hospital not been there, dozens of school children would have perished from their wounds and infections from minor injuries as they do in other areas across Syria without hospitals.

We can't promise you that we can save everybody or provide aid to everyone throughout Syria. What we can tell you is that in the Aleppo area, Atareb hospital and all of it's heroic staff are trying their best to help as many people as they can. Day and night this hospital stands as a beacon of hope for over 500,000 people. According to the UK charity 'Hand in Hand for Syria',"When we first opened the hospital in May 2013, it was just a small A&E unit. We’ve grown it very successfully since then, and it now offers 68 beds and a wide range of services – from maternity and neo-natal facilities to many outpatient departments, three excellent operating theatres and a laboratory. It cares not only for those injured in the conflict but also non-conflict-related conditions such as cancer, heart disease, asthma and diabetes. It even has a dialysis unit. It provides FREE healthcare to anyone, regardless or political or faith affiliation."


From 'Hand in Hand for Syria':

Why is it closing?
The hospital’s funding comes from a European donor which supports global emergency response. This funding reaches Hand in Hand for Syria via an INGO partner. Although that funding is still very much in place, after one year our agreement with our INGO partner has come to an end – and the funding has to come through a partner.

Can’t we find another partner?
Despite the tireless efforts of our trustees and medical team, we have not been able to secure a replacement partner for Atareb Hospital. Because of the very particular situation in Syria, there are difficulties and risks for INGOs when it comes to delivering services there — difficulties which we, as a smaller, independent aid agency, face to a far lesser extent, but which we understand and respect. Only the last-minute intervention of a new partner can save Atareb Hospital now, and we welcome all enquiries from any INGO who may wish to become a partner in the project.

What will the impact of closure be?
One of the very few remaining kidney dialysis units left in northern Syria will shut. Essential and emergency maternity and neo-natal health services will no longer be available. Three excellent operating theatres will remain empty, instantly ending the 282 life-saving operations carried out there each month. 32,000 injured people a year will have no access to emergency care. 25,000 outpatient clinic appointments will be lost. The laboratory will close. Specialist departments including orthopaedics, ophthalmology, gynaecology, neurology, and many more will also shut. The hospital’s 98 staff will be left with no income, no longer able to support a further 400 family members between them."

In the last month 'Hand in Hand 4 Syria' has managed to recieve enough emergency funds to keep Atareb Hospital open for another 4 weeks. However it is still under threat of closure at the end of July 2014. The fate of over 500,000 people is in our hands; it is up to you and I to insure this hospital does not shut down. If it shuts down we can promise you many people will die from completely preventable deseases and treatable injuries.

What can you do to help?

Information blitzkrieg: Anonymous will release a copy of the information/ tweet blitzkrieg with instructions on Saturday July 5th at 6PM EST, you will help us spread awareness to millions of people.

Meanwhile you do the following:

Tell everyone you know, lobby hard and get everyone talking!
Take part in the #SaveAtarebHospital selfie campaign. http://www.handinhandfors(...)sthash.ktWqstPN.dpuf
Donate to help buy the hospital precious time, with your donations it can remain open while we find a permanant parthner: https://www.justgiving.com/HIHS-Atareb-Hospital/


We are Anonymous.
We are everywhere.
We are legion.
We are those you have left without a home.
We are those you have murdered.
We are voiceless no more.
The world will change. We'll change it.

Corporate Tyrants of the World,
Expect Us!




Join us. Help keep Atareb hospital open until a new partner for the project can be found.
The closing down of Atareb hospital will be a massive loss to the half a million people it serves.

Operation: Save Atareb Hospital
Hashtag: #OpSyriaAid. #SaveAtarebHospital
Location: Aleppo, Syria: https://www.google.com/ma(...)ia&source=newuser-ws
Anonymous Contact: @OpSyriaAid
Hospital Contact: @hands4Syr

#SaveAtarebHospital #OpSyriaAid
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 9 juli 2014 @ 19:09:16 #79
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142104685
quote:
quote:
TORONTO — A fellow prisoner gave Matt DeHart a haircut, his first since his April arrest, in preparation for his refugee hearing scheduled to start Tuesday, during which the former U.S. airman was to officially chronicle his claims — of helping Anonymous hacktivists, his aborted attempt to defect to Russia and his subsequent torture at the hands of U.S. jailers — in his unusual bid for asylum in Canada.

But the buoyancy of his mood snapped.

Instead of appearing before a Toronto refugee tribunal Tuesday he was confined in a suicide watch cell after returning to jail from hospital, where he was treated after another suicide attempt.

“Makes me think something happened to him at the jail,” Mr. DeHart’s father, Paul, told the National Post. “A suicide attempt at this point makes no sense since we were all ready to appear and finally make our refugee appeal.”

He said his son was removed Thursday without notice from an immigration holding wing at Central East Correctional Centre, near Peterborough, Ont., and taken to Toronto East Detention Centre, where he was placed in general population.
quote:
While his story seems incredible, a five-part National Post investigation [link op de site] published in May revealed there is some truth behind some of the claims and many puzzling questions about what took place.
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 12 juli 2014 @ 15:52:57 #80
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142206816
quote:
Norway’s financial sector under massive cyber attack, Anonymous claims ‘responsibility’

Norway’s top financial institutions came under massive cyber attacks on Tuesday. Anonymous Norway appears to be behind this attack.

The attack on Norway’s top financial institutions/banks, such as Danske Bank, Norges Bank, Sparebank and renowned insurance agencies Gjensidige and Storebrand had their services disrupted. Other than banks, a telecom company and three national airlines also came under attack.

In an interview with Dagens Næringsliv business newspaper, Evry’s security team said: “The scale is not the largest we have seen, but it is the first time it has hit so many central players in the finance sector in Norway.” Evry provides IT services to some of the companies affected by the cyber attack.

It appears that hackers used a critical vulnerability in WordPress platform to conduct this attack. However, they weren’t able to hack or takeaway personal information of any user, it added. The investigation shows the source of these attacks was outside Norway, Evry said.

According to one of the biggest Anonymous News Twitter handle, Anonymous Norway claimed responsibility of this attack.

anonymous-ddos-norway-banks [link]

However, in below mentioned tweet you can see Anonymous Norway denying their involvement in this attack.



At the moment it is not clear who was behind these attacks, but one thing is certain that the attack was massive and disrupted many high profile Norwegian websites.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 13 juli 2014 @ 14:27:29 #81
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142240671
YourAnonCentral twitterde op zondag 13-07-2014 om 13:49:30 Hackers from around the world are attacking #Israel sites under the #OpSaveGaza banner. #Anonymous #GazaUnderAttack #Gaza via @Op_Israel reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 17 juli 2014 @ 18:12:46 #82
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142405510
De Stratfor-hack & de War on Drugs.

quote:
quote:
The Mexican police helicopter that flew into Arizona last month and fired shots near U.S. Border Patrol agents was no fluke—such incursions have become so frequent they amount to an internationalized shooting war along our southern border.

It’s not just Mexican police helicopters; Mexican military aircraft entered U.S. territory 49 times from 2010 through 2012. That’s according to a Customs and Border Protection list acquired through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request made by WhoWhatWhy.

Along with other documents obtained independently by WikiLeaks, the recent incidents confirm that the U.S. has been taking a full-bore counterinsurgency approach to the border drug war. The possibility that was happening is something we told you about earlier.

Official statements and media reports about the Arizona incident have not come close to explaining the real significance of such cross-border operations. The facts are now clear: the Pentagon’s push to use counterinsurgency tactics against drug traffickers is giving Mexican armed forces the leeway to operate in the airspace above U.S. territory.

***

Specific Mexican military helicopter incursions and near-incursions are detailed in intelligence reports obtained by WikiLeaks and assessed by WhoWhatWhy. The reports were created by the Border Security Operations Center, an Austin nerve center run by the Texas state police that oversees hundreds of intelligence analysts and manages untold surveillance cameras. The reports came to WikiLeaks after hackers broke into the servers of private intelligence firm Stratfor, which got the documents from its sources.

These revelations about the extent of the cross-border war on drugs are the latest fruit of our investigative partnership with WikiLeaks to carefully assess selected documents from its vast trove. (Take a look at our earlier collaborations with the whistleblower group here and here.)

The Rio Grande Firefight

As the Pentagon faces sequestration funding cuts and a fighting force exhausted from Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. military is relying more and more on foreign armed forces, police and private contractors like Stratfor.

The close cooperation between U.S. and Mexican forces against drug traffickers follows from modern counterinsurgency strategy, which dictates that police should function like soldiers when necessary to deny funds to whichever rebels—or drug cartels—are out of favor.

This approach is on display in part of a report published by the Austin center on May 6, 2011. The document is marked “Law Enforcement Sensitive.” This means it was intended for law enforcement eyes only, according to intelligence analyst Kendra Miller. She was a contact point for those seeking access to the reports. [Email-ID 1966867, May 9, 2011]

The document describes a firefight about 30 miles from McAllen, Texas, during which a police chopper from that state provided targeting assistance to the Mexican military as an alleged drug smuggler was killed. It includes this photograph of a Mexican Air Force chopper flying above the Rio Grande:

CaptureThis apparent incursion, or near-incursion, was not included on the Customs and Border Protection list we obtained in response to our Freedom of Information request – indicating that Mexican military operations along the U.S. border are even more numerous than the FOIA document suggests.

It’s not clear if that Mexican chopper flew into U.S. airspace. But there’s no doubt the Americans took part in the gun battle, because the Texas state police helicopter guided the Mexican chopper and ground forces to the suspects, including one who was hiding in the brush.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 22 juli 2014 @ 18:43:59 #83
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142605279
quote:
Lawyers blocked our Black hat demo on de-anonymising Tor

Shelved Black Hat presentation would have explained why you don't have to be the NSA to break Tor

The Tor network promises online privacy by routing users' internet traffic through a number of servers – or layers – while encrypting data.

The surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden is known to have used Tor to maintain his privacy, while the documents he leaked showed that the US National Security Agency (NSA) struggled to uncover identities of those on the network.

However, a presentation promising to detail flaws in the anonymising network has been cancelled, organisers of a major hacker conference have confirmed.

The talk, called "You don't have to be the NSA to break Tor: de-anonymising users on a budget", was due to be delivered by the Carnegie Mellon researchers Alexander Volynkin and Michael McCord, but a notice on the Black Hat conference website said lawyers from the university had stepped in.

The counsel for Carnegie Mellon said that neither the university nor its Software Engineering Institute (SEI), had given approval for public disclosure of the material set to be detailed by Volynkin and McCord, according to the Black Hat organisers.

Their talk was one of the most anticipated sessions at this year’s conference, which starts on 2 August in Las Vegas. They promised to explain how anyone with $3,000 could de-anonymise users of Tor.

Details on the presentation, which have now been removed from the Black Hat site, suggested that a determined hacker could “de-anonymise hundreds of thousands Tor clients and thousands of hidden services within a couple of months”.

Besides individual users, there are numerous criminal websites making use of Tor, including sites offering hitman services and illegal drugs, even though the most prominent example, Silk Road, was shut down in 2013.

Organisers from the Tor Project said they were working with the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) at Carnegie Mellon, which is sponsored by the US Department of Homeland Security, to release information on the problems identified by the researchers.

“We did not ask Black Hat or CERT to cancel the talk. We did (and still do) have questions for the presenter and for CERT about some aspects of the research, but we had no idea the talk would be pulled before the announcement was made,” said Tor Project president Roger Dingledine.

“We never received slides or any description of what would be presented in the talk itself beyond what was available on the Black Hat webpage. Researchers who have told us about bugs in the past have found us pretty helpful in fixing issues, and generally positive to work with.”

Carnegie Mellon had not responded to a request for comment by the Guardian at the time of publication.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 25 juli 2014 @ 20:12:59 #84
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_142728713
quote:
Russia offers 3.9m roubles for 'research to identify users of Tor'

Analysts say tender for research on service that anonymises browsing sends signal to online community amid crackdown on Russian internet

Russia's interior ministry has offered up to 3.9m roubles (£65,000) for research on identifying the users of the anonymous browsing network Tor, raising questions of online freedom amid a broader crackdown on the Russian internet.

The interior ministry's special technology and communications group published a tender earlier this month on the government procurement website offering the sum for "research work, Tor cipher".

Before changes to the tender were published on Friday, numerous news outlets reported that it originally sought "research work on the possibility to obtain technical information about users (user equipment) of the anonymous network Tor".

According to Andrei Soldatov, an expert on surveillance and security services, the interior ministry might be exploring possible ways to restrict Tor. But the fact that the tender was publicly announced meant that those seeking greater government control of the internet had defined their next target and were sending "yet another signal" to the online community, he argued.

"It's not important if the Russian government is able to block Tor or not," Soldatov said. "The importance is that they're sending signals that they are watching this. People will start to be more cautious."

The interior ministry refused to comment on Friday afternoon.

Originally developed by the US Naval Research Laboratory as an "onion routing project", Tor is a network of virtual tunnels that allows users to hide the source and destination of their internet browsing and keeps websites from tracking them. It is often used by whistleblowers and residents of countries where the authorities restrict access to the internet, but has also been known to be used for criminal activity. A famous example was the Tor-based online market Silk Road, which was known as an "eBay for drugs" before the FBI shut it down in 2013.

Although many news outlets reported on the recent tender as a reward for "cracking Tor", internet security experts doubted Tor could be successfully decrypted, let alone for a mere 3.9m roubles.

Of all countries, the fifth largest contingent of Tor users come from Russia, where the network's popularity more than doubled in June, going from about 80,000 directly connecting users to more than 210,000. The growth followed a "bloggers law" – signed by the president, Vladimir Putin, in May – requiring any site with more than 3,000 visitors daily to register with the government. Media experts argued that the legislation would stifle opposition voices and restrict government criticism on the internet.

The move was part of a wider campaign to regulate the internet which saw the authorities block three major opposition news sites as well as the blog of anti-corruption crusader Alexei Navalny in March. Users located in Russia can now only access the news sites through anonymising services such as Tor.

This week, Putin signed a law requiring internet companies to store Russian user data in-country, where intelligence services enjoy sweeping access to electronic information through telecoms companies. Critics worry that websites such as Facebook and Twitter, which the opposition used to organise a string of huge rallies in 2011-2013, would be forced to stop operating in Russia when it comes into effect in 2016.

Unlike the Chinese system of internet censorship, which directly blocks websites such as Google, the Russian one is built on intimidation so that users "themselves become more cautious, and internet companies think up ways to block certain sites," Soldatov said.

But blogger, journalist and web entrepreneur Anton Nosik doubted that the Tor research tender would have any effect, arguing that the interior ministry was not a serious player among the various government agencies surveilling the internet but was now "trying to make a name for itself".

"The only significance [of the tender] is the money being paid and the PR surrounding it, showing that the ministry of interior is seriously working on issues of anonymising technology, so that everybody's talking about it. And everybody is talking about it," Nosik said.

More worrying, Nosik said, was leading communications provider Rostelecom's investment in Deep Packet Inspection technology that would filter web traffic based on its content rather than its source. This would severely reduce users' anonymity on the web, although Tor should be able to somewhat limit DPI capabilities, Nosik said.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 8 augustus 2014 @ 18:09:07 #85
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143206657
Herinnert U zich FinFisher nog?

quote:
Politie gebruikt mogelijk omstreden spionagesoftware

Digitale activisten hebben een Duits-Brits bedrijf gehackt dat geheime spionagesoftware aan overheden en opsporingsautoriteiten verkoopt. De Nederlandse politie lijkt ook tot de klanten te behoren.

Gisteren verscheen op internet een enorme berg aan technische en klanteninformatie van het bedrijf Gamma International. Dat is de maker van FinFisher, een softwareprogramma waarmee computers kunnen worden geïnfecteerd om op afstand bestanden te kopiëren, beeldschermkopieën te maken en toetsaanslagen te registreren. Spionagesoftware dus, die alleen wordt verkocht aan overheden.

De hack is een grote overwinning voor burgerrechtenactivisten. FinFisher werd onder meer door de overheid van Bahrein gebruikt om de computers van dissidenten te bespioneren gedurende de Arabische Lente. Sindsdien liggen het programma en het bedrijf onder vuur. Er wordt onder meer gepleit voor exportregels voor dergelijke software.

Politie mogelijk ook klant
Ook de Nederlandse politie lijkt gebruik te maken van het programma. In de gehackte klantenbestanden werd een versleutelingscode gevonden die toebehoort aan een lid van de Nationale Eenheid, de landelijke politie in Driebergen. De match werd gevonden door de Nederlandse hacker Jurre van Bergen, die zich met andere digitale experts op de geopenbaarde informatie had gestort.

Vervolgens werd duidelijk dat deze klant, waarschijnlijk de Nederlandse politie dus, gebruik maakt van drie van Gamma's softwareprogramma's. De licentie zou lopen van 2012 tot 2015.

In Nederland is het op afstand hacken en overnemen van verdachte computers door de politie niet toegestaan. Er is een nieuwe wet in de maak (Wet Computercriminaliteit III), die daar verandering in moet brengen.

Wob-verzoek
'Het is raar dat de politie die producten nu al in gebruik heeft', zegt Rejo Zenger van digitale burgerrechtenorganisatie Bits of Freedom. 'Bovendien hebben ze dat altijd verzwegen.' Zenger diende in 2012 een Wob-verzoek in om te vragen naar het gebruik van spyware. Toen kreeg hij als antwoord dat er geen documenten over waren gevonden.

Een woordvoerder van het ministerie van Veiligheid en Justitie benadrukt dat het gebruik van spyware onder voorwaarden al is toegestaan. Dan gaat het om de installatie van deze software ter plekke, niet om het van afstand overnemen (en live volgen) van de activiteiten op de computer.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 9 augustus 2014 @ 00:14:09 #86
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143220946
AnonymousGlobo twitterde op vrijdag 08-08-2014 om 21:33:34 FinFinsher leaked: http://q7hglakwm35gxwii.onion/ Take care, information is contagious. #AntiSec reageer retweet
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 augustus 2014 @ 18:37:50 #87
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143453908
quote:
quote:
True to their word, the activists of Anonymous' #OPFerguson have released two hours of raw audio from police and EMS dispatch calls on August 9, the day 18-year-old unarmed Michael Brown was shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.

In the interest of public transparency, we're posting the audio here before we've had a chance to go through all of it. Please consider helping us transcribe it or flagging significant events on the audio timeline for fellow readers in the comments below. We'll be updating and adding background along the way.

Note: This is not an exhaustive record of calls from that day. This particular file covers St. Louis County's dispatch; additional city of Ferguson police calls, which may offer more extensive information, have yet to be released.

Here is additional context provided by Anonymous, much of it confirmed by your contributions in the comments below:
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 augustus 2014 @ 20:10:22 #88
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143456961
quote:
quote:
Hacktivist collective Anonymous had a Twitter account suspended today after they named the wrong police officer in the Michael Brown cop shooting.

Police told NBC that the person who Anonymous had named online is a dispatcher and was not involved in the Ferguson shooting on Saturday.

In a comment today to MailOnline, a Twitter spokesperson said: 'We do not comment on individual accounts, for privacy an security reasons.'

Twitter rules state: 'You may not publish or post other people's private and confidential information, such as credit card numbers, street address or Social Security/National Identity numbers, without their express authorization and permission.'

Anonymous was now tweeting about Ferguson under a secondary account, @TheAnonMessage2.

On Wednesday, the hackers apparently released St Louis police dispatch tapes which reveal further details surrounding the cop shooting death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown.

The computer hackers' collective posted two hours of the 911 calls online.
quote:
The release of the dispatch tapes comes after Anonymous earlier threatened to launch an online attack on police departments over alleged brutality in the killing of the teenager.

Police have cracked down hard on demonstrators in Ferguson, a suburb of St Louis, who took to the streets after the 18-year-old was shot dead.

Despite calls for calm, officers fired tear gas and shot at least one person in a third night of rioting in the area on Tuesday. Police claimed the man shot had pulled a handgun on an officer.

As police tried to put the area on lock-down, messages posted on a newly-established Twitter account called Operation Ferguson, which appeared to be linked to Anonymous, announced: 'We have a deep source, and we have a name we BELIEVE to be the shooter [of Michael Brown]. It does NOT match any of the names being floated.

'We have our best operatives working as hard as they can to verify the leak on the shooter we were passed. PLEASE be patient.

'When we release the name of Mike Brown's killer, it will be in an unequivocal statement released through this Twitter account. No games.'

A little later another message suggested that the operation was proving more difficult than anticipated.

'To my fellow Anons, everyone remain chill,' it read. 'I realize this is an intense Op, and we are all trying our best. Let's fight cops not each other.'

There has been anger from the teenager's parents and their supporters after the Ferguson Police Department decided not to publish the name of the officer who shot their son.

At a rally in Ferguson on Tuesday, his mother, Lesley McSpadden, told the policeman who fired the shots: 'You take your punishment. If you were a man you'd stand up, you'd be a man, you would say you was wrong.'

Police have not disclosed the race of the officer, but witnesses said he was white.

The Ferguson police force has 53 officers, three of whom are black. About two-thirds of Ferguson's population of about 21,000 are black, according to U.S. Census figures.

In a video posted on Sunday night, a self-declared spokesman for Anonymous warned Missouri police 'we are watching you very closely'.

'If you abuse, harass or harm in any way the protesters in Ferguson we will take every web-based asset of your departments and governments offline,' said a disguised voice, speaking over news footage of protests.

'That's not a threat, it is a promise.'

In the video and a press release posted to the Pastebin website, the video says Anonymous will 'attack ever server and computer' belonging to the police departments involved, as well as 'release the personal information on every single member of the Ferguson Police Department, as well as any other jurisdiction that participates in the abuse.'
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 25 augustus 2014 @ 13:16:08 #89
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143810892
quote:
quote:
Among other things here at Linux Format we are also a bit clairvoyant. We decided that it was the right moment to look at 'anonymous' Linux distributions many weeks before mainstream media started discussing PRISM.

Of course, even if nothing like that existed, there would still be many good reasons to protect at least part of what you want or need to do online: the examples go from whistle-blowing to home banking or super-invasive advertising. In all these cases, proper configuration of (at least!) the tools you use for web surfing, email, instant messaging and file sharing is crucial.

Linux 'anonymous' distros are designed to help in just these kinds of situations. As a minimum, these systems are pre-configured to make it easier to surf the web without telling everybody in clear text where, or who, you really are.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 28 augustus 2014 @ 00:22:31 #90
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_143903645
Not Anonymous:
quote:
Hackers Will Leak Syrian Stock Exchange Database Unless Assad Tackles ISIS

A group of hackers took down the website of Syria's only stock exchange this afternoon and are threatening to leak the exchange's database unless president Bashar al-Assad takes military action against the Islamic State.

The group, called Project Viridium, says that over the last several weeks, it has infected several Islamic State operatives' computers and have provided the Assad government with information about their whereabouts.

Earlier today, the group tweeted that it had successfully taken down the Damascus Securities Exchange. At the time of this writing, the exchange's website is still inaccessible, due to what appears to be a fairly common DoS (Denial of Service) attack.

A member of the group confirmed to me on Twitter that the site was taken down with a DoS attack, but said that the group had also gained access to the exchange's servers and databases.

Project Viridium says it's ready to release the exchange's database, which would include financial information and user login credentials, if Assad doesn't take action against the terrorist group.

"We have many members pwned," the hacker told me. "Soon to come, we'll post that."

About a half hour after taking down the stock exchange, Project Viridium published the following statement on DOXBIN, which you can gain access to with the Tor browser (message posted as it was written):

Statement regarding DSE DDoS/Hack:

First, let me introduce my(our)self. We are ProjectViridium (yes like the pokemon). We have fought silently for the last 4-6 years against blackhats and scammers. Only recently did we decide to start targeting Terrorist groups. We have been gathering inteligence on ISIS members for about 2 weeks now. So far we have 15 caged (i.e malware on pc/equiv) and about 40 prospects (not yet pwned, waiting). Our general goal is to make a dint, however big or small in the world of terror.

Why did we target syria exchange?
k, first. anonymous, you didnt ddos it fuck off and go play minecraft. Second, we did this attack in retaliation for Syrian/Assad regime ignoring our reports of ISIS member locations (1 member is exactly 3.4km from a fucking police station). The evidence of ISIS members location in this specific case is gathered without use of ANY malware, hacking or anything of the such. Adding that before someone mentions how assad cant act cause
evidence is from hacking (like he'd give a fuck)

Stay tuned.
-PV
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 31 augustus 2014 @ 19:34:03 #91
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144033399
The_MattGreen twitterde op zondag 31-08-2014 om 07:23:53 #Anonymous has begun #OpIceISIS, a new cyber operation to combat #ISIS digitally as violence continues to spread through Iraq and Syria. reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 2 september 2014 @ 15:53:18 #92
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144102643
quote:
Top South America hackers rattle Peru's Cabinet

LIMA, Peru (AP) — The Peruvian hackers have broken into military, police, and other sensitive government networks in Argentina, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela and Peru, defacing websites and extracting sensitive data to strut their programming prowess and make political points.

Their latest stunt may be their most consequential.

Emails that the LulzSecPeru hackers stole from the Peruvian Council of Ministers' network and dumped online last month fueled accusations that top Cabinet ministers have acted more like industry lobbyists than public servants. They helped precipitate a no-confidence vote last week that the Cabinet barely survived.

The hackers are a compact, homegrown version of the U.S. and U.K-based LulzSec "black hat" hacker collective that grew out of the Anonymous movement, which has variously attacked the Church of Scientology and agitated on behalf of the WikiLeaks online secret-spillers and Occupy Wall Street.

A lot of "hacktivism" out of the United States and western Europe has waned or been driven underground after police pressure and arrests, said Gabriella Coleman, an anthropologist at McGill University, in Montreal, Canada, who has studied the phenomenon.

"The hackers in Latin America, however, never really stopped," Coleman said.

Of them, LulzSecPeru is widely considered the region's most skillful and accomplished hacktivist team, said Camilo Galdos, a Peruvian digital security expert, their signature exploit hijacking the Twitter accounts of Venezuela's president and ruling socialist party during elections last year.

"Happy Hunting!" the LulzSecPeru hackers — they say they are two young men — wrote last month when they dumped online the estimated 3,500 emails of then-Prime Minister Rene Cornejo, dating from February to July.

Cornejo told reporters: "The concern isn't so much for the information to be found there but for the fact that privacy was violated." His successor, Ana Jara, said some of the purloined emails may have concerned matters of "national defense."

But what reporters found instead was evidence of the inside influence of Peru's fishing and oil industry lobbies, putting the country's energy and finance ministers in the hot seat.

In one missive, a fishing industry executive asks the finance minister if the anchoveta season can be extended. She later gets her wish.

The energy minister, in a testy email exchange, impatiently dismisses objections by the environment minister to his coziness with an Australian oil company with offshore concessions. Oil industry technicians — not regulators — are best qualified to deem whether environmental impact studies are necessary for exploratory seismic testing, he says.

The "CornejoLeaks" spectacle, as the press dubbed it, delighted the hackers.

"We're mixed up in everything," one of the duo, who goes by the nickname Cyber-Rat, boasted in an encrypted online chat with The Associated Press into which he had tunneled, hiding his digital tracks. "There is no limit to the hacking."

Cyber-Rat says he's 17 and will quit before becoming an adult to avoid landing in prison. He handles the social networking, cultivates the Anonymous activists who help publicize LulzSecPeru's hacks and admits to "a tendency toward narcissism." His partner goes by Desh501, says he is between 19 and 23 and a university student.

Desh is the technical whiz, and more reserved.

"I'm very private. I don't have hacker friends in person, only virtually," Desh types.

Both say they are autodidacts. Cyber-Rat says he started programming at age 8; Desh at age 6.

Cyber-Rat says their hacking is not really ideologically driven.

"It's a quest for (the) ecstasy of doing something unprecedented," he said, of shaming administrators who claim their networks are bulletproof.

Their actions don't always mesh with that claim, however.

Desh said he is motivated by objections to "1. the abuse of power. 2. the lack of transparency."

Some of their hacks are clearly political. They defaced the website of the Peru-based Antamina copper mine in 2012 after the multinational consortium's slurry pipeline burst, sickening dozens. Rat's idea, said Desh.

And they defaced the Venezuelan ruling party's website again in February in support of anti-government protesters, entering through one of the backdoors they say they secretly leave in networks they penetrate.

Desh said they also retain access to the Chilean Air Force network, from which they removed and dumped online last month sensitive documents on arms purchases. They called it payback for Chile's spying on Peru's air force in a case uncovered in 2009.

The hackers, who have 30,200 Twitter followers, say they neither enrich themselves nor do damage with their exploits.

But many believe LulzSecPeru did do harm in accessing the network of the company that manages Peru's top-level domain. In October 2012, it dumped online a database of thousands of names, phone numbers, email addresses and passwords of affected sites included banks, security companies, Google — every domain ending with ".pe"

Desh said Rat did so without consulting him. "I almost killed him that day."

A company representative and leading Peruvian Internet activist, Erick Iriarte, said the hack occurred well before the upload and customers were notified in time to change their passwords. Desh confirmed that the break-in occurred six weeks before the upload.

Across Latin America, government-run networks are generally regarded by state workers as insecure and untrustworthy. A surprising number of senior officials use private email services instead.

Peruvian authorities call LulzSecPeru "cyber-pirates" and say they could face up to eight years in prison under Peru's new computer crimes statute.

But they first must be caught, and independent security experts say Peru's cyberpolice are badly outmatched. LulzSecPeru's first claim to fame was penetrating the Peruvian cyberpolice network in early 2012. It claims it still has hidden backdoor access.

The unit's commander, Col. Carlos Salvatierra, called such criticism unfounded. He would not discuss details of the LulzSecPeru investigation but said it includes "permanent coordination" with other affected governments and has been ongoing for months.

LulzSec as a moniker fuses 'lulz' — which derives from LOL (laughing out loud) and evokes in part the mischievous bliss of hackers who expose sloppy security ('sec'). And there is little greater 'lulz' for the pair than mocking Roberto Puyo, technology chief for Peru's Council of Ministers and the president of the Lima chapter of the Information Systems Security Association, the country's top cybersecurity group.

Puyo did not respond to attempts to reach him by phone and email seeking an explanation for how his network was violated.

Desh said getting inside took him a month.

He said he then routed a carbon copy of all traffic for nearly a month to an external server, capturing Cornejo's email password in the process. Desh said Cornejo's Gmail account was linked to the ex-premier's official email account and that he accessed a mirror of it on the network.

Rat said the hackers are staying away from the Council of Ministers' network for now. He says it now has "honey pots" — traps set to try to ensnare them.

The two say they are confident they cover their tracks sufficiently. And they said they don't tempt fate, keeping U.S. government networks off their target list because they don't want the FBI pursuing them.

"I don't worry that much, though I don't rule out the option that they will trap me," said Desh.

"Nobody is invincible."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 2 september 2014 @ 23:44:11 #93
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144122228
quote:
GCHQ backlash? Anonymous website hacked following privacy rights protest

Anonymous UK’s website was recently targeted and taken down in the midst of a four-day privacy rights protest organized by the collective. The demonstration was held outside Britain’s Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ).

A spokesman for the hacktivist group believes the targeted attack was carried out by GCHQ officials.

The protest, which began outside Britain’s Cheltenham-based spy base last Friday, was reportedly launched to highlight an ongoing assault on Britons’ privacy rights against a backdrop of increasing mass surveillance. But prior to the main day of protest scheduled for Saturday, Anonymous UK’s website was taken down. The incident occurred late Friday evening.

This is not the first time the group has had such an experience. A spokesperson for the hacktivist collective, who runs Anonymous UK's online radio station, insists they have been unjustly targeted by GCHQ on multiple occasions.

“One of our servers was destroyed and our UK radio station has been shut down,” the spokesperson told RT on Friday, adding that the group's site was also taken down following the launch of a campaign to feed homeless people.

Commenting on the cyber attack, the spokesman said that if a member of the public targeted a government site in this manner, they could "get up to five years in prison the UK." Yet “GHHQ has no one to answer to.”

“This is why we protest,” he stressed.

Although GCHQ allegedly attempted to liaise with Anonymous UK in advance of the demonstration, a spokesperson for the collective said the group declined to respond. The collective believes privacy rights advocates have a democratic right to protest peacefully, and shouldn't have to justify their desire to do so to UK authorities.

Probed as to whether Anonymous UK plans to issue a formal complaint about the targeting of its website, a spokesperson said “we can’t complain to anyone” because “GCHQ would just deny it.”

Central to the group’s privacy rights concerns is an alleged UK intelligence operation called Tempora. Covert documents sent to the Guardian by US whistleblower Edward Snowden state that the program facilitates British intelligence officers’ access to private data. Such information relates specifically to email, social networking, and telephone conversations.

Britain’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal is currently seeking to discern whether Tempora exists, and if it violates Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights – which deals with citizens’ right to privacy. A final judgment on the case is yet to emerge, and the group of high profile UK and international civil liberties groups that launched the proceedings is currently awaiting an outcome.

Anonymous UK told RT on Friday that the collective is doubtful the final judgement will favor the public’s right to privacy.

According to the hacktivist collective, approximately 60 protesters attended the demonstration over the weekend in a bid to raise awareness about the intrusive nature of GCHQ mass surveillance. Others estimate the number of attendees may have been more moderate. Anonymous UK stated all activists demonstrated in a peaceful and lawful manner, and there were no arrests. Nevertheless, its site remains inaccessible visitors.

The UK-based collective is a subset of Anonymous, a nebulous international network of activists and hacktvists known for politically charged, subversive maneuvers worldwide. Recent actions carried out by the broader group include efforts to tackle global inequality, operations to counter government attacks on citizens’ privacy rights, efforts to mitigate child pornography, and a “cyber assault” against Israel to counter IDF operations in Gaza.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 3 september 2014 @ 19:31:26 #94
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144145525
quote:
quote:
Have the UK police successfully broken anonymity on the internet? They certainly seemed to imply as much when the National Crime Agency proudly announced last week that it had made 660 arrests after an operation to identify people viewing indecent images of children online.

The announcement raises questions about just how anonymous it is possible to be online, particularly in the dark net and through systems like Tor, which is used by criminals, but also many others with legitimate reasons for wanting to remain anonymous such as journalists, whistleblowers, and political activists under repressive regimes.

We should also treat the NCA bust with some scepticism, given its very convenient political timing.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 5 september 2014 @ 15:23:21 #95
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144204308
quote:
Lulz and Dissent: A New Book on Anonymous

Last March, I read Alice Marwick’s Status Update, a fascinating ethnographic account of Silicon Valley culture and how entwined that culture is in the design of the social media platforms that we use daily. It’s a world that presumes good things come to those who are smart and work hard and, within this meritocracy, everyone’s an entrepreneur with a personal brand to develop.

I’ve just finished reading another ethnography that provides a fascinating counterpoint. Gabriella Coleman, a cultural anthropologist at McGill University, has been studying Anonymous since 2008 and has a terrific book coming out this November from Verso, Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy. Members of Anonymous and the tech workers who created Twitter, Facebook, and many other hot tech brands have some things in common. They resist hierarchy and value individuality. They socialize and develop projects using Internet channels. They aren’t intimidated by established institutions and resist government control.

But there’s a fundamental difference. The culture Marwick studied values aggregating wealth and attention. Anonymous abhors personal attention-seeking as a means of accumulating capital. While Marwick showed a culture that assumed individual striving could lead to entrepreneurial success, a form of success created by capturing data about social interactions online, the portrait Coleman develops of Anonymous is an anarchic collective that subsumes individuality to the pursuit of lulz (deviant humor) and the free flow of information. In a sense, it’s the free-wheeling ethos of the old Internet at war with the new, one that is dominated by giant companies that determine the rules about how we will interact online and promote personal branding to conduct monetizable surveillance. Remember the New Yorker cartoon, “on the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog?” Now corporations operating through the internet not only know who you are, they know what brand of dog food you buy.

Coleman’s book starts with the disreputable roots of the Anonymous collective in the boisterous trolling conducted on 4Chan, which embraced anonymity and practiced extreme Rabelaisian permissibility. In a sense it was the “primordial stew” that gave rise to a movement that is characterized by deviance that is carnivalistic in the Bakhtinian sense and yet has a strongly moral bent when it comes to free speech. For an anthropologist, the self-organizing complexity of this constantly morphing group is a fascinating puzzle. Its anti-celebrity ethos, which also values individual rights, upends “the ideological divide between individualism and collectivism” while presenting an alternative approach to the society itself.

Anonymous began to recognize its potential as a political force when some members suggested their collective trolling power should be directed at the Church of Scientology, which was using strongarm tactics to suppress a video they objected to. Mass trolling worked. Coleman was able to observe how that initial protest came together and how it set the stage for other forms of dissent, including attacks against banks that tried to cripple WikiLeaks by cutting off access to donations. Anonymous began to take on other political causes. It (they?) played a significant role in the opening weeks of the Arab Spring and launched other actions, including some that have backfired, such as the recent release of an incorrect name when protestors at Ferguson demanded to know which officer shot Michael Brown. These actions are often what one Anon called a “moral pretzel,” very similar to the ethical issues that come with any disruptive political direct action, but with greater legal consequences. And like any protest movement that gets the attention of the authorities, it is subject to infiltration by informants and agents provocateurs.

Coleman does a fantastic job of chronicling Anonymous’s political turn while explaining her own moral pretzels as a researcher. She illuminates a movement that bucks the cultural trend to self-promote and examines the “fractal chaos” of a leaderless collective that is deliberately hard to pin down but looks a little bit like the Internet when it was young.

Reading studies like this and Marwick’s Status Update make me impatient to figure out how to better prepare our students to engage in the world by understanding the structures of information that are evolving around us. While students need to recognize what scholarship looks like so that they can learn about the ethical practices underlying scholarly discovery, the world of information exhibits its own fractal chaos that makes the oversimplified categories “scholarly” and “popular” misleadingly naive. That said, this book demonstrates how valuable it is to have scholars studying phenomena like the emergence of Anonymous as a radically collective political force

Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy won't be released until November, but meanwhile you can read some of Coleman's articles about Anonymous in Wired, the Index on Censorship and elsewhere.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 6 september 2014 @ 16:57:39 #96
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144242873

quote:
Anonymous - Message To Cameron and Obama

David Cameron and President Obama need to take action NOW! Rid the world of ISIS.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 7 september 2014 @ 12:23:07 #97
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144267684
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 7 september 2014 @ 21:50:22 #98
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144291502
quote:
quote:
Leiderman’s been called Anonymous’ lawyer of choice, and has defended or advised Anons from political refugee Commander X through LulzSec, AntiSec, incarcerated Anonymous spokesman Barrett Brown, and more. We asked him why he chose this field rather than something that might buy him a yacht or at least the ability to sleep at night. He replied that it was certainly anything but a calculated careerist move, and less his choice than the inevitable result of recent changes in the way the courts are used by The Powers That be.
quote:
We first caught him on the cell at an airport thanks to a delayed flight from a location he is not allowed to disclose. Because thats just how he rolls. Heck, the man has his own Anonymous trading card. Next, we played Facebook and Twitter and email tag for some time, but finally re-connected via Skype; this time he was able to disclose that he was in his office, something we at the Cryptosphere had already surmised because his receptionist answered the phone. This interview has been stitched together from emails, PMs, DMs, calls via Skype, and calls via actual telephone over the course of some months. Its a long read: get yourself a beverage and comfortable chair. Its worth it.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 15 september 2014 @ 17:48:11 #99
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144556300
quote:
Anonymous Rave wordt manifestatie in industriegebied

De Anonymous Rave gaat toch door, maar nu als manifestatie. Dat heeft de organisatie afgesproken met burgemeester Eberhard van der Laan. De manifestatie staat gepland op 27 september, de datum waarop de rave oorspronkelijk was gepland.

De Anonymous Rave werd in juli aangekondigd als illegaal feest in de binnenstad. Het was een protest tegen hoge drank- en entreeprijzen in de Amsterdamse horeca.

Binnen korte tijd hadden 54.000 mensen zich op Facebook aangemeld voor de Anonymous Rave. Er zouden vijf podia in de binnenstad worden opgebouwd, waar verschillende dj's zouden draaien. Entree zou gratis zijn en iedereen kon eigen drank meenemen.

De gemeente voorzag veiligheidsproblemen en kwam met behulp van nachtburgemeester Mirik Milan in contact met de organisatoren, aldus een woordvoerder. De uitkomst is dat het geen rave maar een manifestatie wordt. De locatie is niet in de binnenstad, maar in industriegebied Westpoort. De organisatie zal het evenement morgen op Facebook aankondigen. Hoe het er precies uit gaat zien, is nog niet bekend.

De mensen achter Anonymous Rave zeggen zich in de toekomst te willen richten op betaalbare evenementen. 'We willen het mogelijk maken dat elke doelgroep, rijk of arm, in Amsterdam kan uitgaan.'
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 19 september 2014 @ 18:40:42 #100
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144700845
quote:
Putin considers plan to unplug Russia from the internet 'in an emergency'

Kremlin to discuss taking control of the .ru domain and measures to disconnect Russians from the web in the event of unrest

The Kremlin is considering radical plans to unplug Russia from the global internet in the event of a serious military confrontation or big anti-government protests at home, Russian officials hinted on Friday.

President Vladimir Putin will convene a meeting of his security council on Monday. It will discuss what steps Moscow might take to disconnect Russian citizens from the web "in an emergency", the Vedomosti newspaper reported. The goal would be to strengthen Russia's sovereignty in cyberspace. The proposals could also bring the domain .ru under state control, it suggested.

Russian TV and most of the country's newspapers are under the Kremlin's thumb. But unlike in China, the Russian internet has so far remained a comparatively open place for discussion, albeit one contested by state-sponsored bloggers and Putin fans.

The move comes at a time when Russia has been bitterly critical of the western media, which Moscow says has adopted a biased attitude towards events in Ukraine. Russian channels have portrayed the conflict in Ukraine as a heroic fight against "fascists" in Kiev. They have disputed western reports that Russian soldiers and heavy weapons are involved. A BBC team that went to investigate reports of Russian servicemen killed in Ukraine was beaten up this week.

According to Vedomosti, Russia plans to introduce the new measures early next year. The Kremlin has been wrestling for some time with how to reduce Russia's dependency on American technology and digital infrastructure, amid fears that its communications are vulnerable to US spying. It has mooted building a "national internet", which would in effect be a domestic intranet. These proposals go further, expanding the government's control over ordinary Russian internet users and their digital habits.

Andrei Soldatov, an expert on Russia's spy agencies, described the plans as big news. In an email from Moscow he said he "didn't actually believe" Russian officials would disconnect the internet. But he said the moves were a "real step forward in the development of a besieged fortress mentality".

He wrote: "Before, such ideas were mostly to do with so-called government communications (how to make them independent from western technologies). Now they want to expand this crazy idea to the entire internet of the country."

Soldatov said it would be technically possible for Moscow to shut off the internet because Russia has "surprisingly few" international exchange points. All of them are under the control of national long-distance operations, like Rostelecom, which are close to the authorities, he said.

The most ominous element, he added, was the security council's apparent proposal to take control over .ru, as well as the domains .su (for Soviet Union) and .рф (Russian Federation in Cyrillic). These domains currently belong to a non-government organisation, the coordination centre of the national domain, rather than to government. Many are currently hosted abroad.

"The thing might be approved very quickly, and this means it shows a way to the next step – to force all domains in the .ru zone to be hosted in Russia," Soldatov said. Kazakhstan, an authoritarian state intolerant of online criticism, did something similar two years ago, he said, adding that such a move would affect his own website Agentura.ru, which is hosted in Germany.

Putin's press secretary, Dmitry Peskov, confirmed the meeting would take place on Monday, adding that much of it was likely to be in closed session. The communications ministry declined to comment on Friday.

While Putin enjoys popular support, with his approval ratings boosted by Russia's takeover of Crimea from Ukraine in March, the danger of mass unrest is not lost on the Kremlin. In 2011-2012 tens of thousands of Russians protested in Moscow after Putin announced he was returning as president and shoving aside his temporary successor Dmitry Medvedev. The protests fizzled out following a series of arrests, harassment of opposition figures, and high-profile trials.

The Russian economy, which is already teetering on the verge of recession, is reeling from ever more stringent Western sanctions over Moscow's alleged support for separatists in eastern-Ukraine. Washington and Brussels have introduced several rounds of sanctions that are the toughest punitive measures since the cold war.

An employee of a large communications provider told Vedomosti Moscow did not want to unplug the world wide web but to protect Russian cyberspace in case of further western sanctions that may affect the internet.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 20 september 2014 @ 18:45:33 #101
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144728972
quote:
quote:
In order to overcome the dilemma of privacy on internet, FBI has requested an amendment in the Rule 41 of Federal rules of criminal procedure.

According to the proposed amendment, FBI will have more control over overseas computer in an attempt to safeguard user’s anonymity in the world of internet. Furthermore, FBI will also enjoy seizure of any target whose identity is concealed by any technological means (TOR, VPN technology, proxies or hosted somewhere on darknet). An extract from the proposed amendment is as follows:
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 september 2014 @ 14:18:03 #102
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144751473
#climatemarch

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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 september 2014 @ 18:59:37 #103
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144762708
YourAnonNews twitterde op zondag 21-09-2014 om 18:00:33 Confront the cause of the climate crisis. Stop Capital. Join us tomorrow to #FloodWallStreet #peoplesclimate http://t.co/Ia2CRc7y0z reageer retweet
quote:
quote:
Join the flood on September 22 starting at 9 am. The economy of the 1% is destroying the planet, flooding our homes, and wrecking our communities. After the People’s Climate March, wearing blue, we will bring the crisis to its cause with a mass sit-in at the heart of capital.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 25 september 2014 @ 13:42:53 #104
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_144890542
quote:
Anonymous Set For Second Million Mask March on 5 November

Anonymous is calling on all members to join a global event on 5 November to protest against war crimes, abuse of power and infringement of civil liberties.

Launched last year, the Million Mask March was organised by the hacktivist group Anonymous to protest at a huge range of issues from government corruption to NSA spying and war crimes.

On 5 November 2013, marches took place at over 400 locations around the globe, with thousands of people gathering in London to take part in the march - including comedian Russell Brand. The event was organised to coincide with Guy Fawkes Day, reflecting the iconic Guy Fawkes mask which has become a symbol of Anonymous.


The event in London last year was peaceful for the most part but there were 15 arrests with some protesters turning violent when the large police presence tried to remove them.

Some of the protestors were also arrested for starting a fire in front of Buckingham Palace

Operation Vendetta

The 2014 running of the event will be under the banner of Operation Vendetta, one of Anonymous' on-going campaigns protesting against government corruption.

"November 5th is a day of international rebellion against oppressive governments, on this day, Anonymous UK will unite with the world wide collective and take to the streets for a protest like none that has ever been seen in history," a video announcing the second Million Mask March said.

The event in London will begin at 6pm on 5 November at Trafalgar Square and like last year is likely to move down Whitehall to parliament.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 2 oktober 2014 @ 21:59:02 #105
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145138562
AnonymousPress twitterde op donderdag 02-10-2014 om 19:22:56 RT @tlng13: all the best to the Anonymous!! #UmbrellaRevolution Operation Hong Kong http://t.co/ynkB5qTe3n reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 2 oktober 2014 @ 22:56:30 #106
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145141043

quote:
Report: Hacker collective Anonymous joins Hong Kong’s Occupy Central

Reporting on the hacker collective Anonymous is always fraught. This loosely organized group has no clear leader and no clear agenda. The anarchic nature of its technological attacks make it difficult to establish a who-what-where-when-why. And, of course, hackers use nom de guerres. Heck: Even the Islamic State has a spokesman.

Yet, in attacks on Israel, Visa and, to a lesser extent, Ferguson, Mo., showed that Anonymous — whoever and whatever it is at any given time — can be effective. Unlike 4chan, which revels in naked celebrity pics, it seems to have a social conscience. And its propaganda — straight out of “V for Vendetta” — makes good copy.

“Members of Anonymous — the shadowy, snide international collective of hackers and online activists — have played a key role in the growing confrontation outside St. Louis over Mr. Brown’s death,” the New York Times wrote in August, “goading and threatening the authorities, and calling the effort Operation Ferguson.”

So here goes: Anonymous has code on the ground in Hong Kong, the South China Morning Post reports. The group announced it will wage cyberwar on the government in a video circulated through the Web site News2share.

“It has come to our attention that recent tactics used against peaceful protesters here in the United States have found their way to Hong Kong,” a mechanical-sounding voice in the video says. “To the protesters in Hong Kong, we have heard your plea for help. Take heart and take to your streets. You are not alone in this fight. Anonymous members all over the world stand with you, and will help in your fight for democracy.

The video goes on to threaten to “deface and take every Web-based asset of your government off line.”

The South China Morning Post posted images of some Web sites it said were affected (warning: link contains profanity), but did not identify them. “Despite these vehement threats, the hacks thus far appear to be not on government websites but rather small organisations – including an Autism Partnership site – registered with a .hk domain name,” the paper wrote.

A list of Hong Kong government agency Web sites appears here. Early Thursday morning, many seemed un-hacked. Then again, Anonymous said it was offering its “first and only warning,” so perhaps it hasn’t acted yet.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 3 oktober 2014 @ 17:08:59 #107
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145159754
quote:
Erdogan: 'Ik ben in toenemende mate een tegenstander van internet'


De Turkse premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan is 'elke dag in toenemende mate een tegenstander van het internet.' Hij heeft dit volgens de voorzitter van het Committee to Protect Journalists gisteren zelf gezegd tijdens een conferentie over persvrijheid. Tegelijkertijd zou Erdogan beloofd hebben de persvrijheid in Turkije te verbeteren.


Eerder deze maand voerde de regering van Erdogan een wet door waardoor de overheid meer controle heeft over het internet en telecommunicatie. Dit gebeurde ondanks het feit dat Turkije internationaal werd berispt voor pogingen om YouTube en Twitter te blokkeren, waarop dagelijks beschuldigingen van corruptie werden gepubliceerd. Zelf noemde Erdogan het publiceren van belastende informatie over hem 'chantage'.

Erdogan ziet in het vrije internet vooral een gevaar, stelde hij tijdens de anderhalf uur durende ontmoeting met internationale verdedigers van vrije journalistiek. Zo is hij bang dat criminelen en terroristische organisaties online leden werven.

Mikpunt van spot
Ook stelde Erdogan dat 'media nooit de vrijheid hadden moeten krijgen om te beledigen.' De premier werd onlangs zelf het mikpunt van spot nadat hij had beweerd dat vrouwen niet moeten lachen in het openbaar. Op sociale media verschenen vervolgens veel foto's van Turkse vrouwen waarop zij de politicus uitlachten.

Hoewel Rowe het niet eens is met het beleid van de Turkse regering, voelt ze zich aangemoedigd door het feit dat ze bereid zijn verdedigers van vrije pers te ontmoeten: 'We zijn blij met hun beloftes en we geloven dat de Turkse regeringsleiders de ernst van de internationale bezorgdheid inzien.'
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 11 oktober 2014 @ 10:06:19 #108
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145422081
quote:
Anonymous Hackers Threaten Chinese Government with Website Blackouts and Data Leaks

Online activist group anonymous has warned authorities in Hong Kong and China that it will launch a massive attack on websites and leak tens of thousands of government email address details.

The group said on Friday that it will carry out its latest threat on Saturday through a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack.

"Here's your heads up, prepare for us, try to stop it, the only success you will have will be taking all your sites offline," Anonymous said in a statement.

"China, you cannot stop us. You should have expected us before abusing your power against the citizens of Hong Kong."

The hacktivist group announced its support of the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong at the start of October, stating in a video: "The time has come for democracy for the citizens of Hong Kong."

Since then, five suspected members of the group have been arrested in the region in connection with hacking attacks on Hong Kong's government websites.

The latest attack will apparently target websites of China's Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Public Security, and the Hong Kong police.

"If this is true, it will show that the Chinese government is a victim of internet hacking," Hong Lei, a spokesperson for China's Foreign Ministry, said at a news briefing on Friday morning.

"China has consistently stressed our opposition to all internet hacking activities. We rebuke the acts of the organisation."

Anonymous's original message to protestors in Hong Kong said: "To the protesters in Hong Kong, we have heard your plea for help. You are not alone in this fight. Anonymous members all over the world stand with you and will help in your fight for democracy.

"To the Hong Kong police and any others that are called to the protests, we are watching you very closely and have already begun to wage war on you for your inhumane actions against your own citizens."

Protests in the former British colony started last month after Beijing decided it was to screen candidates for the first election in the territory in 2017.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 20 oktober 2014 @ 10:21:08 #109
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145725822
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 26 oktober 2014 @ 11:42:37 #110
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145952893
quote:
quote:
Deception and Propaganda in Social Media

A year after the revelations by Edward Snowden, more or less everybody is aware of the astonishing extent of online surveillance. An outcome of this increased awareness is the development of various protective measures, including encryption practices, privacy protection measures as well as the development of anonymised platforms, such as Kwikdesk, an anonymous and ephemeral version of Twitter. However, other aspects of state and corporate control of social media have received less attention. In the face of rising inequality and increasing political mobilisation from the bottom, the ruling class must pro-actively defend the current power structures and a way to do this includes not only surveillance, but also deception and propaganda in social media. The really dark Internet is a reference to this layer of surveillance and disinformation – the spread of false information which intends to undermine, confuse, disrupt, and eventually defuse any socio-political action that threatens to unsettle the status quo.

With surveillance a given, we must now begin to learn about strategies and tactics of deception and disinformation, coming from states, reactionary and fascist political groupings, and corporations.

While a lot has been written on the signal intelligence contents of the NSA documents, less is known about the kinds of human intelligence used by government agencies and corporations. In a leaked NSA presentation which would have made Goebbels proud, a British spy agency – the Joint Threat Research Intelligence Group (JTRIG) – explicitly refers to its digital propaganda tactics: the circulation of false information aimed at destroying the reputation of its targets and the use of insights from the social sciences in order to manipulate online communications in line with their political objectives.

The presentation goes on to list techniques for dissimulation or ‘hiding the real’ through ‘masking, repackaging, and dazzling’, and for simulation, or ‘showing the false’ through ‘mimicking, inventing and decoying’; it goes on to refer to techniques for managing attention, infiltrating networks, planting ruses and causing disruption. The aim is to build ‘cyber-magicians’, who can confuse and manipulate ‘targets’. The presentation concludes by estimating that ‘by 2013 JTRIG will have a staff of 150+, fully trained’. Though we cannot be sure of the status of such plans following the leaks, it would be naïve to assume that they have been dropped.
- See more at: http://theoccupiedtimes.org/?p=13166#sthash.2yopTRUk.dpuf
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 26 oktober 2014 @ 20:59:55 #111
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145972998
quote:
quote:
‘Everything’s corrupt, everything’s fu*ked up.’

The word “epic” long ago lost all its linguistic potency when Burger King and Hot Topic began to use it in the advertisement of their products. Yet if ever if there was an occasion to resurrect the term, it would be to describe the music video released today by elements of Anonymous along with Ice Cube, Eminem, and Korn.

They team up to splice together a nuance-eschewing, face-melting, testosterone-charged collaboration meant to incept a massive wave of action against the seemingly indomitable power of corporatist-totalitarianism within the world’s leading liberal republics.

The video features some hilarious spots of Rob Ford–perhaps the Western world’s most flamboyant symbol of transparent corpo-political stoogism–as well as the mainstream media’s two favorite tools of distraction, Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus. There are also a number of clips of Obama acting especially bourgeois while surrounded by animated cameras, implying that the spying-industrial-complex is an apolitical institution supported and grown by whichever political party is in office.




It might be the most insane music video you’ve seen in a long time–and for some, it may inspire the visceral outrage necessary to orient toward a path of action. Others will just roll their eyes.

Check out the video below, and keep in mind the Worldwide Wave of Action begins on April 4 at “former occupation sites around the world.”
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 26 oktober 2014 @ 21:02:30 #112
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_145973188
quote:
quote:
HONG KONG—Shares of Tianhe Chemicals Group, the Chinese company accused by “hacktivist” group Anonymous Analytics of falsifying some of its financial reporting, fell 43% after their monthlong trading halt was lifted. Late Wednesday, the company …
Tianhe Chemical Slumps After Resuming Trade in Hong Kong - Bloomberg
Tianhe shares plunge after trading resumes - Financial Times
UPDATE 2-Tianhe Chemicals CEO buys back shares after price plunges on …Reuters
South China Morning Post (subscription) -Reuters Blogs (blog)
all 12 news articles »
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 1 november 2014 @ 17:29:45 #113
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146189337
quote:
quote:
Felony charges have been dropped against 11 of the 14 Anonymous-linked hacktivists who pleaded guilty to waging a cyber-attack on the PayPal website. Meanwhile, the company has been derided on Twitter for launching a new promo campaign tagged #PayPal15.

Known as part of the “PayPal 14,” the 11 originally reached plea deals with federal prosecutors in December 2013, admitting their participation in an online attack that briefly took down the PayPal website nearly four years ago.

After entering guilty pleas to one felony count of conspiracy and one misdemeanor count of damaging a computer, their sentencing was delayed for nearly a year. If the defendants could demonstrate good behavior during that time, they could potentially escape only with probation and restitution payments.

The defendants appeared in federal court on Wednesday, where each person heard whether the court would follow through with the charges or drop them, according to Texas-based journalist Douglas Lucas.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 4 november 2014 @ 14:48:54 #114
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146292343
joshcorman twitterde op dinsdag 04-11-2014 om 14:24:41 PSA: Remember, remember the 5th of November. Good excuse to read "Building a Better #Anonymous” blog http://t.co/SDaZv9WJu6 reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 5 november 2014 @ 19:07:06 #115
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146340605
PRHacks twitterde op woensdag 05-11-2014 om 17:01:46 Live: I am marching with students in Central for #MillionMaskMarch. Police very nervous. #Anonymous #OccupyHK http://t.co/o627R1EAIq reageer retweet




durmayankadin twitterde op woensdag 05-11-2014 om 17:47:17 Turkish police on call at Güvenpark #Ankara 18.35 for #MillionMaskMarch Guy gonna get them :)) @YourAnonNews http://t.co/wC1tMaYxR4 reageer retweet


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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 november 2014 @ 10:41:29 #116
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146526286
quote:
G20 blanket ban on masks is not supported by security laws, expert says

Former Queensland solicitor general argues protesters wearing masks ‘to make a political point’ have a lawful excuse, but police say ban remains

Security laws do not support a blanket ban by police on people wearing masks while protesting the G20 meeting in Brisbane this week, according to the former Queensland solicitor general.

Barrister Walter Sofronoff, who was solicitor general from 2005 until he resigned in March, said it might be lawful to wear masks in the controlled area of the inner city in order “to make a political point”.

His opinion raises questions about police attempts to use the G20 security act to prevent protesters – including those under the Anonymous group – from taking masks into the “declared area”, where everything from guns and knives to large banners, tin cans and eggs will also be banned.

Police appear to have shifted their stance on the use of megaphones, which their negotiators previously said would lead to protests being shut down.

A police spokeswoman told Guardian Australia in a statement that protest leaders would be allowed to use megaphones to rally and organise crowds.

“The police have determined that if the leader of a protest group has a megaphone for the purpose of coordinating, organising and for the safety of the group this will be permitted,” she said.

“However, the possession or use of a megaphone by the protest leader or any other member of the protest group for the purpose of disrupting a G20 meeting will not be permitted.”


A Italian protester wearing a Guy Fawkes mask during a national demonstration of public service workers in Rome in November. Photograph: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images

Negotiators have also told protest organisers that Guy Fawkes masks worn by members of digital activist group Anonymous would not be allowed.

This has prompted an online call from some Anonymous members to defy the ban, while other protesters are expected to wear masks as part of theatrical costumes to illustrate political points.

Asked if police were reviewing their position on masks, the spokeswoman said they were not.

“They are still prohibited and if a person does not have a lawful excuse police will enforce that aspect of the law,” she said.

Sofronoff told Guardian Australia that wearing a mask as “a political statement” would qualify as a “lawful excuse” under the act.

“I may be wearing a mask to make a political point because symbolism is also part of political speech, just as political donations are,” Sofronoff said.

Sofronoff said no Australian law was valid if it obstructed freedom of political speech “unless it is reasonably adapted to a proper end consistent with maintaining our system of government”.

“The proper end that this law serves is the protection of the security of the visitors to G20,” Sofronoff said.

This meant the arrest of someone wearing a mask who appeared to be a genuine threat of disrupting the G20 meeting would be valid.

“But it’s not a blanket prohibition against masks, it’s a prohibition against masks provided you don’t have a reasonable excuse, and a reasonable excuse is, ‘I’m making a political statement’,” he said.

“On the other hand, if I’m wearing a mask, and standing on the steps where Obama’s going to walk up, and a policeman says, what’s your reasonable excuse – at that point there’s a strong argument they need to see the faces of people.

“But not when you’re marching through Queen St, one of 200 peaceful people chanting and screaming but offering no threat.”

Sofronoff’s interpretation is at odds with police who have told protest groups that peaceful protest was not a lawful excuse for carrying prohibited items.

Protest organisers have told police that confrontations over such issues at demonstrations would result in “a rapid loss in goodwill”.

Sofronoff noted the G20 laws allowed protest groups to “march to your heart’s content” in the declared area without seeking permission from police.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 11 november 2014 @ 13:41:28 #117
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146531720
quote:
quote:
Jon Cowden is the most famous Anonymous member of which nobody has heard.

He was sentenced in March of last year for hacking into Israeli websites as part of the ongoing Anonymous Ops against Israel and in favour of Gaza. By cracking the websites, he gained access to information which he then posted freely online. Contrary to reports that he served one month, he says, “I was sentenced last year and served 13 months and two days. Not one month at all. I got sentenced to 15 months but served 85% of that.” That number doesn’t cover the (increasingly routine) pretrial custodial period, nor the period during the trial, when he was also in custody.

Interestingly, even the online report of his specific exploits have been censored out of existence. It’s almost FBI self-parody.

We caught up with Cowden, now out and looking for employment, via email. As a newly released prisoner, he was eager to speak about the challenges facing someone wishing to put his past behind him and contribute to society in legally sanctioned ways.
Interview op de site.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 november 2014 @ 01:48:49 #118
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146670381
HeavenLeeOps twitterde op vrijdag 14-11-2014 om 23:12:04 KKK Vows To Kill Ferguson Black Protesters, Secret Meetings With Police http://t.co/ePomFJlKsD”; #OpKKK reageer retweet
drumbeats4peace twitterde op vrijdag 14-11-2014 om 23:00:28 The St Louis chapter of the KKK has been outed by @ThatsRacistAF and @AnonCopWatch Follow them Also use #OpKKK and #HoodsOff reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 november 2014 @ 01:49:53 #119
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146670393
quote:
quote:
The Ku Klux Klan has openly declared that they will use lethal force against Ferguson protesters, a claim more threatening to the people of Ferguson, a 60 percent African American community, as claims again emerge that the Klan is in secret discussions with local police.



The KKK began distributing a flier in the St. Louis area promising to use lethal force against any protesters in Ferguson they deem as violent.



Frank Ancona, imperial wizard of the KKK chapter, spoke with the Riverfront Times about the flier and intentions of the KKK as large-scale protests loom with the approaching grand jury announcement in the police officer Darren Wilson case in which he shot unarmed Michael Brown, an African American youth with his hands in the air, saying, “Don’t Shoot!”



KKK members were reportedly raising money to support Wilson, their “hero” as they called him for shooting Brown.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 november 2014 @ 12:41:12 #120
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146676642
Passie_Kracht twitterde op zaterdag 15-11-2014 om 12:03:44 I'm setting up a petition to keep Julien Blanc and RSD out of the Netherlands. #takedownjulienblanc reageer retweet
YourAnonCentral twitterde op zaterdag 15-11-2014 om 11:53:30 How RSD is scamming the PUAs it instructs, RSD = fakes and liars. #takedownjulienblanc #takedownrsd #TakeDownPUA http://t.co/FPx4T9ovQc reageer retweet



[ Bericht 1% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 15-11-2014 12:46:42 ]
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 november 2014 @ 12:46:07 #121
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146676791
quote:
quote:
A Home Office minister has lobbied Theresa May to ban a sexually abusive and racist US "pick-up artist" from entering the UK because of his "utterly abhorrent statements".
quote:
quote:
Canadians who campaigned to prevent a notorious American "pickup artist" from spreading his message on this side of the border claimed victory Tuesday.
quote:
quote:

JULIEN BLANC FOI EXPULSO DA AUSTRÁLIA POR DAR AULAS CONSIDERADAS ABUSIVAS CONTRA MULHERES (Foto: REPRODUÇÃO YOUTUBE/MSDOOM99)
quote:
quote:
Pickup artist Julien Blanc has been forced to leave Australia. Britain and Canada are also considering a ban

Is Julien Blanc the most hated man in the world? A series of online petitions against him suggest he might be.

Blanc, who describes himself as the “international leader in dating advice,” is a self-styled pickup artist (PUA) who travels around the U.S. and around the world, teaching seminars to men on how to meet and seduce women. On Nov. 6, Australia revoked Blanc’s visa before he held a seminar in Melbourne after an online Change.org petition argued he promoted “violence and emotional abuse against women.” The petition received thousands of signatures.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 november 2014 @ 15:47:22 #122
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146682132
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 16 november 2014 @ 19:49:27 #123
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146719948
Fitty of fake?

YourKKKcentral twitterde op zondag 16-11-2014 om 19:22:06 Brothers at @KuKluxKlanUSA we have aquired the identities of many Anonymous members, please follow back and promote us. #OpKKK reageer retweet
YourKKKcentral twitterde op zondag 16-11-2014 om 19:22:06 Brothers at @KuKluxKlanUSA we have aquired the identities of many Anonymous members, please follow back and promote us. #OpKKK reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 17 november 2014 @ 09:53:39 #124
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146735631
Yep, fitty:

AnonMythic twitterde op maandag 17-11-2014 om 09:40:37 #OpKKK | @KuKluxKlanUSA is now under anonymous control. Great job everyone involved in it, keep pushing. #Anonymous #hacktivist #ExpectUs reageer retweet
quote:
Anonymous Hacks Ku Klux Klan Twitter Accounts and Websites Following Ferguson Threats

Anonymous has taken control of two Twitter accounts related to the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) after the white supremacist group threatened "lethal force" on anyone protesting in Ferguson, Missouri.

Anonymous, the global online hacktivist movement, has taken control of two official Twitter accounts associated with the KKK as well as knocking four of the organisation's websites offline.

IBTimes UK has learned from the Anonymous members involved that several email accounts associated with the KKK have also been compromised in the last 24 hours and it has begun doxxing (publicly revealing a person's identity and personal information) of the KKK group which has been threatening them.

It is also promising to publish "many documents" relating to the KKK in the coming hours.

The takeover of the Twitter accounts comes after several days when insults and threats were traded online between the two groups with the KKK claiming Anonymous would not be able to do anything:
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 17 november 2014 @ 10:31:22 #125
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146736269
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 november 2014 @ 17:15:20 #126
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146813916
SageOfSixAnons twitterde op woensdag 19-11-2014 om 12:38:40 Frank Ancona has now threatened to shoot anyone wearing Guy Fawkes mask in response to #HoodsOff #OpKKK http://t.co/7gJi7kbrFE reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 november 2014 @ 10:18:43 #127
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146834971
quote:
#BBCTrending: Anonymous takes on the Ku Klux Klan

Did the hacktivist group Anonymous go too far in fighting the KKK?

With a promise that "This is just the beginning," the international hacktivist group Anonymous continued to control the Ku Klux Klan's online presence on Tuesday days after the KKK threatened to hurt potential protesters in Ferguson, Missouri. On social media, many celebrated the online group's actions.

The Anonymous cyberwar started during the weekend after the white supremacist group issued a warning to any potential rioters waiting for a grand jury decision on a possible charges against Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, who shot and killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown in August.

Using the hashtags #OpKKK and #HoodsOff, Anonymous "unhooded" alleged Klan members online, and provided links to social media accounts which contained their photos, addresses, phone numbers, ages, workplaces, and photos of their children.

Most Twitter users appeared supportive of Anonymous.

"I daresay that @KuKluxKlanUSA will remember, remember, remember the 16th of November. Bravo, Anonymous, Bravo. #oppKKK #hoodsoff," wrote Carlos Larkin.

After back-and-forth taunting, in which the KKK wrote "We are continuing to read Anonymous threats with much amusement" and "I thought you Anons were all about free speech. Cowards!", Anonymous gained access to the KKK website and took over its Twitter account.

The most recent tweet from the hacked @KuKluxKlanUSA account was on Monday evening, showing a unicorn and rainbow in front of a sunset scene.

Responding to criticism about violating free speech, Anonymous released this statement:

"We are not attacking you because of what you believe in, as we fight for freedom of speech. We are attacking you because of your threats to use lethal attacks against us at the Ferguson protests… The Ku Klux Klan is a terrorist group. The blood of thousands of human beings are on the hands of the Klansmen."

Although every American has a right to free speech, The Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights organisation that tracks hate groups, argues that the right does not include permission to organise hate crimes.

But while they have also exposed members of hate groups, they take a different approach than that of Anonymous.

"As a general matter, we will out people if we feel they are major player in the movement," said Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Law Center.

"We would never post pictures of their kids, or where they live. We don't out any small person who has radical right views; only if they are hiding behind anonymity to do something really loathsome."

For its part, Anonymous is not giving up.

"Let the cyberwar begin," it announced in a video. "We are legion. We do not forget. We do not forgive. Ku Klux Klan, you should have expected us."
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 09:19:38 #128
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146862201
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 09:33:09 #129
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146862474
quote:

quote:
Several days ago, the South East Missouri Chapter of the KKK known as TAKKKK distributed flyers in Ferguson, MO making lethal threats toward activists on the ground. In response, several activists asked Anonymous to launch #OpKKK. Local Anons in the St Louis and Ferguson area then launched #HoodsOff as a way to identify Klan members who might try to embed themselves within the protester community. After identifying multiple members of TAKKKK, we discovered that 3 of the highest ranking members were present at a Darren Wilson rally in Imperial, MO, that had previously been rumored to be organized by the Klan. At the time of the rally, both The Klan, and the organization known as “We Support Darren Wilson” denied this claim, and it was then dropped. But, after several identities of TAKKKK members where posted online, the “We Support Darren Wilson” group removed multiple photos from social media that where taken at the rally. The photos where removed from social media BEFORE we made public our findings. This made us suspicious, and we then continued to search for the Darren Wilson/TAKKKK connection.

The circumstantial evidence was overwhelming.

Then we got a tip.

A source came forward claiming they had information that would link Frank Ancona and TAKKKK to Darren Wilson and the events unfolding in Ferguson. After multiple conversations with the informant, we where able to confirm this person was not connected to Darren Wilson, but instead had direct ties to his girlfriend, Ferguson Police Officer Barbara Spradling. We where so focused on Darren Wilson himself, that we let the fact slip by us that Officer Spradling was from the Imperial, MO area where Ancona co-organized the fundraiser for Darren Wilson. During the time that we where verifying this information, the global collective of Anonymous joined in on #OpKKK thereby taking this operation to the next level, taking multiple Klan websites off line, and taking over the national KKK twitter page. #OpKKK then began to gain the attention of media around the world, and death threats towards Anons from Ancona and other members of TAKKKK started to come our way.

Then, early yesterday morning we received an email from our whistle blower that read like this:

. “This has gotten out of control. They want to kill you. And after you release this information, they will want to kill me. I am scared for my life right now. I am begging you to please do not release the information that I gave. I’m afraid that because the information I provided is so specific, that it will definately be traced back to me, and I will be in danger. I am a long time supporter of Anonymous, and have trusted you with my identity. Now I feel my life is in your hands. I’m begging you please. I have a family to think of.”

All Anons involved in this where immediatly notified, and spent most of yesterday discussing this matter. We went back and forth about this situation, and debated on how to handle this plea from the whistle blower. We decided to try and take the information that we where given and connect the dots ourselves. We were unsuccessful. After much deliberation, we have decided as important as this information was, we will not endanger the life of any person. We believe the information to be too specific to this person to release to the public. We will instead, hold this information until we can connect the dots ourselves, without putting innocent lives at risk.

We are confident that as we continue to expose members of the terrorist organization TAKKKK, we will no doubt connect them to Ferguson Law enforcement on our own. Ex TAKKKK member Henry Harrell has come forward saying,

“I know for a fact that the TAKKKK had a lot to do with what went on in Ferguson”

He then stated that certain law enforcement in the area are silent members of TAKKKK known as “Ghoul Squad” and continued by outing the recently deceased Leadwood, MO Police Chief as a TAKKKK member.

We know for a fact that Ancona was called in to Ferguson by Ghoul Squad members employed by both Ferguson and St Louis County PD. We will continue our efforts to expose all law enforcement affiliated with TAKKKK, while at the same time protecting activists on the ground in Ferguson fighting for justice.

Furthermore, the global collective of Anonymous promises to continue it’s war on the terrorist group known as the KKK.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 11:22:30 #130
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AnonCopWatch twitterde op vrijdag 21-11-2014 om 08:07:50 KKK member James Pratt insinuates Anon arrests in Ferguson are retaliation for #OpKKK http://t.co/SZUO0TnCxG reageer retweet
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  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 12:09:30 #131
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  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 12:23:44 #132
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pi_146866380


[ Bericht 100% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 21-11-2014 12:24:09 ]
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 12:25:17 #133
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146866409
quote:
Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous by Gabriella Coleman – review

Anonymous are back – this week the group hacked the Ku Klux Klan. This is a long-awaited and compelling study of the hactivist collective

In September, photos of naked celebrities were hacked and then posted on the image-sharing website 4chan, to the shock and surprise of much of the world’s media. Gabriella Coleman would not have been surprised. On 4chan, posting nudes of strangers and celebrities happens almost every day: and this exciting, dreadful, raucous website provides the opening scene for her long-awaited story of the hacktivist collective Anonymous. The movement evolved, from a loose collective of teenaged 4channers posting porn, into one of the most interesting and unusual groups of our time, terrifying businesses, governments and individuals with their hacking and programming skills.

Coleman, who accidentally stumbled into 4chan while studying Scientology, expertly guides the reader through this surprising evolution. The story of Anonymous begins with members of 4chan getting dragged into an online fight with Scientologists, who had been trying to prevent people from sharing a bizarre video of its most famous adherent, Tom Cruise, online. The 4channers were emboldened by success and shifted to politics, attacking the PayPal website for refusing to accept donations for the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. The book really comes alive in early 2011, when these activists (“anons”), having adopted their name, turned their gaze to Tunisia, alerting an initially indifferent media to the revolution and exposing the corrupt Tunisian government, before lending support to the worldwide Occupy movement. Coleman is in the thick of it throughout, watching the group’s activity subsequently fracture into more militant and random attacks against businesses and governments, and as the FBI and other police forces start to prosecute several of its main protagonists.

Anyone interested in Anonymous, or the shape of protest in the age of the internet, will find abundant new details and smart insight here. Coleman has enjoyed unique access to the shadowy group’s inner workings, its core members and its secretive chat rooms. For all the computer wizardry, it is still a real movement of real people.

Yet she is often too present in her story, and the result is unnecessary detail (“I felt OK, but a little tired – certainly under-caffeinated”) or self-admiration. Coleman, who used the pseudonym Biella, quotes anons talking about her: “I don’t think she realises how much she’s contributed to Anonymous.” Later she documents a demonstration she attended, where “on seeing me, a pair of [anons] nodded. One gave me a thumbs up and told me to ‘keep up the good work’.”

She is not quite Margaret Mead in Samoa, but at times her chats with anons on internet relay channels (used by anons to communicate) give the strong impression she’d rather like to be a hacktivist herself. Her language throughout betrays her loyalties. Anonymous’s announcement declaring war on Scientology is “poetic and inspirational”; its members are “contemporary trickster figures” who wear a mask that “functions as a eternal beacon, broadcasting the value of equality”. She admits to being so angry with Sabu – the Anonymous snitch recruited by the FBI – that “it took a month before my anger receded enough” for her to talk to him again.

She amply demonstrates that Anonymous have done much that is admirable, and that the group is far more complex than the press caricature of basement-dwelling criminals. They tend to fight for things most of us support: privacy online, freedom of expression, government transparency. But too little attention is given to the way they trample over others to get there. One of their early targets was Hal Turner, a neo-Nazi. Repellent – but is it okay for a vigilante mob to relentlessly attack him? Members of the radical, ballsy offshoot of Anonymous, Lulzsec, hacked media outlets because they didn’t like a TV show; went after the NHS; hacked a Skype call between the FBI, Metropolitian police and the Garda; leaked the email messages, names, phone numbers, home addresses and passwords belonging to Arizona police officers; defaced the website of the centre-right Irish political party Fine Gael; and uploaded thousands of email addresses of innocent people. Coleman doesn’t denounce this, preferring to stress that Lulzsec “demonstrated the importance of art, expression, autonomy, and creation through unalienated labour”. She includes a thoughtful and much-needed discussion of Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS ) – a way to bring down a website – as a form of legitimate political protest, but she thinks it is hypocritical for the British spy agency GCHQ to use a DDoS, while arresting Anonymous activists who do the same. “The law”, she writes, “is not equally applied.” But then governments often do things that citizens cannot.

Coleman does well to avoid the jargon and technical language that often characterises books about the net, although her account lacks the journalistic fizz of Parmy Olson’s We Are Anonymous (2012), and includes awkward turns of phrase. There is a clunky description of Anonymous as “meshed together by wires, transistors, and Wi-Fi signals – replete with miles of tubes pumping blood … the analogue of these fabulously grotesque and chaotically precise systems that, if picked apart, become what we call people”. And she makes the peculiar suggestion that “members of the public discovered their jaws dropping lower and lower by the day, as if they were strapped into some orthodontic-transparency device, hand cranked by Julian Assange himself”.

For all that, this is a worthwhile and enjoyable examination of an often mysterious group, written by a genuine expert. In the end Coleman succeeds in her chief aim: to show that Anonymous are neither criminals nor bored teenagers, but are driven on the whole by political motivations which are for the most part thoughtful, considered and courageous. She reveals the group to be far more interesting and morally nuanced than is often believed, using digital tools and tactics to tilt rights and freedoms away from companies and governments and towards people.

For much of 2014, Anonymous seemed to have gone quiet. But, as Coleman’s book demonstrates, it is a reactive, unpredictable and dynamic movement. Last week, it surged back into action: after the Ku Klux Klan threatened to use lethal force in Ferguson, Missouri following riots there, Anonymous declared cyber war on the group. They hacked the KKK’s Twitter account and attacked servers that hosted its sites; they even started to release the personal details of KKK members. As usual, it was part joke, part principled; part justified, part irresponsible. A movement for our times.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 23:11:04 #134
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pi_146886587
quote:
Anonymous hackers to Ferguson police: ‘We are the law now’

Hackers with the group, Anonymous, sent a stark message to police in Ferguson, as well as to Ku Klux Klan members assembled at the scene, to be on guard — that any injuries to protesters will be duly noted.

“To the KKK and police: kkk-in-new-video-we-are-the-law-now/” target=”_blank”>Be peaceful or you will fee the consequences,” the hacking group said in a video reported by The Free Thought Project. “To the protesters: Do not be afraid. We are here for you and will protect and serve you. We are the law now.”

The video was actually a response to one sent out by Frank Ancona with the Traditionalist American Knights of the KKK that vowed to “hunt down” members of Anonymous, Raw Story reported.

In that video, the KKK warned the hackers: “You’ll be strung up next to the chimps. On display for the whole world to see. The Klan is to be feared, not threatened. Turn away or face the consequences.”

Anonymous and the KKK have been engaged in a public battle for some time. The hacking group took over the Klan’s Twitter account just recently, and revealed the names and addresses of KKK members living near Ferguson.

The hackers’ video then suggested the KKK refrain from aiding police with crowd control in Ferguson.

“If you attempt to aid the police, just know that there are more of us out there than there are of you,” the group said in its video, Raw Story reported. “But you will not know who we are. We are everywhere. We are among the protesters, and we are among you.”
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
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het blijven wel bazen hoor, die anonymous gasten _O_
There are only 151 Pokémon.
  vrijdag 21 november 2014 @ 23:52:43 #136
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146887903
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 22 november 2014 @ 10:26:26 #137
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146893084
Anonymous is overal:

quote:
quote:
The war between Anonymous and the Ku Klux Klan over the rights of protesters in Ferguson has been raging. The war involves a faction of Anonymous that has been in existence for years, but has remained a closely guarded secret. It also involves a factionalized hate group that has been unsuccessfully trying to rebrand itself as a kinder, gentler version of the KKK.
quote:
For its part the Klan has engaged in a major campaign of disinformation, or maybe it’s just that one faction has no idea what the other factions are doing. An alleged phone call between Missouri Klan leader Frank Ancona and Anonymous activist Alex Poucher seems to indicate that his faction of the Klan actually want to help the protesters with their legal troubles. Ancona even offered to give the protesters access to Klan lawyers.

[Audio op de site]

Of course, it’s hard to believe a word that comes out of Ancona’s mouth when he is the same Klansmen that checked-in on Facebook from the Ferguson Police Department with the comment:

. “I was going to tie a watermelon to the back of my SUV and lead them [the protesters] all south.

If you listened to the recording, you’ll hear Ancona indicate that the Klan really isn’t racist.

Other Klansmen have condemned Ancona, but the website is probably still #TangoDown due to Anonymous operations.
quote:
NOWsec was formed around the time of Oscar Grant’s murder. That was more than five years ago. The Anti-Media talked to one of the reclusive activists through an encrypted chat. It was the first time an activist connected to NOWsec spoke with the press about the faction.

The activist, who is identified only as “Kafir,” was hesitant to answer questions about the size and strength of NOWsec.

. “The amount of Anons in NOWsec is confidential. It’s made up of both local and non local Anons.” [local meaning activists in Ferguson]

Estimates about the size and strength vary greatly, but most place the group’s core membership in the range of 40 to 120.

When asked about the comments made by Ancona in regards to helping the protesters, the doubt was crystal clear.

. “Ancona is trying to do damage control. The offer is not genuine.”
quote:
An employee with access to the St. Louis County Police Department (who also happens to be a NOWsec sympathizer) is aware of NOWsec’s operations and believes officers are worried.

. “There have been discussions about it. They aren’t happy.”

The employee provided a list of names that will be turned over to NOWsec for examination and comparison.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 22 november 2014 @ 19:43:38 #138
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 24 november 2014 @ 16:50:27 #139
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pi_146959423
quote:
quote:
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The so-called "hacktivist" group Anonymous has taken credit for shutting down the city of Cleveland's website after a city police officer shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice, whom police believed to be armed.

The manager of the city's server called police about 3:30 a.m. Monday to report the website was "under attack," according to police and city officials. A short time later, the city's website went down and is still unaccessible.

Anonymous is taking credit for the attack, claiming it's in response to the police shooting Tamir, who was carrying a BB gun in a park outside Cudell Recreation Center.

Police said they were responding to reports of a "male with a gun threatening," and Tamir did not follow orders from the officers to keep his hands up. Instead, police said, he lifted his shirt and removed the gun from his waistband, and the officer fired two shots. At least one hit Tamir in the stomach, and he later died at MetroHealth Medical Center.

In a video message posted on YouTube, Anonymous charges that an "untrained rookie officer" shot Tamir "in cold blood," and asks why the officer did not Taser the child.
het artikel gaat verder.
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  dinsdag 25 november 2014 @ 15:26:50 #140
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_146991106
#Ferguson

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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 29 november 2014 @ 00:41:50 #141
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pi_147108542

SPOILER
Om spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 29 november 2014 @ 00:42:42 #142
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147108570
quote:
Father claims police covered up son’s murder by Westminster paedophile ring

Vishambar Mehrotra, whose eight-year-old son was killed in 1981, says police ignored tipoff from male prostitute

The father of a murdered boy has claimed that his son may have died at the hands of a Westminster paedophile ring and said Scotland Yard helped cover up the crime.

Vishambar Mehrotra, a retired magistrate whose eight-year-old son Vishal was killed in 1981, said he was contacted by a male prostitute at the time who said the boy may have been abducted and murdered by “highly placed” paedophiles linked to a now notorious guesthouse.

Mehrotra told the Telegraph that the prostitute alleged that judges and politicians were involved in a child abuse ring – but when he took a recording of the call to the police they did nothing about it.

The claims are the latest concerning an alleged establishment paedophile ring in Westminster in the 1970s and 80s.

Scotland Yard, which has launched two linked investigations into the child abuse ring allegations, declined to comment on the latest claims.

Mehrotra’s son Vishal was abducted as he walked home to Putney after watching the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer ride to their wedding in a carriage on 29 July 1981.

He had gone ahead of other family members for the last few hundred yards. He was last seen less than a mile from the guesthouse.

Mehrotra told the Telegraph that a few months after his son’s disappearance he received an anonymous call from a male prostitute.

“I was contacted by a young man who seemed to be in his 20s. He told me he believed Vishal may have been taken by paedophiles in the Elm Guest House near Barnes Common. He said there were very highly placed people there. He talked about judges and politicians who were abusing little boys,” he said.

Mehrotra, a solicitor who was a JP at Wimbledon magistrates court until retiring in 2006, claims the man said he had already informed police about activities at the guesthouse, but had received no response.

He added: “I recorded the whole 15-minute conversation and took it to police. But instead of investigating it, they just pooh-poohed it and I never heard anything about the tape again. The whole thing went cold.

“At that time I trusted the police. But when nothing happened, I became confused and concerned. Now it is clear to me that there has been a huge cover-up. There is no doubt in my mind.”

Part of Vishal’s body was found in woodland in West Sussex in February 1982, seven months after he disappeared. There was no trace of his legs, pelvis or lower spine or of his outer clothes or Superman underwear.

Four months after Vishal’s remains were found, police raided the Elm Guest House and questioned dozens of men, reportedly including at least 30 prominent public figures and businessmen.

Mehrotra said: “This guesthouse was right next to where Vishal disappeared. There were predatory people there who were taking young boys and abusing them. It seems to me that it all adds up, so I can’t understand why the police have again failed to get in contact with me. I think the revelations of [Jimmy] Savile and others in recent months have opened up a Pandora’s box. Hopefully everything will all come out soon.”

The police raid was reported at the time to be linked to the disappearance of another boy, Martin Allen, 15, who went missing on Guy Fawkes Night 1979 and whose body has never been found.

Martin’s brother Kevin Allen, 51, told the Telegraph that police should reopen the investigation into the teenager’s disappearance and that he had always suspected a cover-up.

Nick Clegg, the deputy prime minister, said the case needed to be investigated. “It is absolutely shocking that survivors of child abuse were not listened to,” he said on LBC radio. “You cannot think of more serious or grotesque allegations. It clearly needs to be looked into.”

He said more broadly: “We are at early stage of a reckoning with our past that is on a scale and gravity that just a few months ago might have seemed unimaginable and almost too horrific to contemplate. The task is to peel back the layers of deception that appear to have happened in the past.”
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 29 november 2014 @ 01:19:37 #143
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147109694
quote:
quote:
Hacktivists aligned with the Anonymous movement have published credit card numbers and other personal information allegedly belonging to a leading Ku Klux Klan member amidst a grudge between the groups fueled by recent protests in Ferguson, Missouri.

Members of the loose-knit hacktivist collective have taken aim at the Klan in recent weeks after the KKK threatened to use lethal force against demonstrations descending on Ferguson to protest the August 9 killing of unarmed teenager Michael Brown by local police officer Darren Wilson. The feud between the groups has only escalated in the days since, though, and now Anons are circulating what they claim to be sensitive details about a powerful Klansman and his family.

Through a Twitter account formerly associated with the KKK but compromised by Anons earlier this month, hacktivists posted on Wednesday this week a trove of data purported to pertain to Frank Ancona, the self-described Imperial Wizard of the Missouri-based Traditionalist American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.

“We'll just leave this here,” Anons tweeted through the @KuKluxKlanUSA account, along with links to two documents containing data alleged to be Ancona’s home address, Social Security number, credit card details, social media profiles, tax records and information on his family.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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  zaterdag 29 november 2014 @ 01:20:38 #144
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pi_147109723
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  zaterdag 29 november 2014 @ 15:48:29 #145
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147118934
DoubleJake twitterde op vrijdag 28-11-2014 om 20:30:09 My account is back. I am very amused. Awarding 9 out of 10 rustles. reageer retweet
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  dinsdag 2 december 2014 @ 01:26:15 #146
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147208149
quote:
Protesters using tech to run rings around cops

Tech-savvy anarchists ran rings around the NYPD during last week’s Ferguson-related protests — and cops are now on edge over what the renegades may be able to pull off after a ruling in the Eric Garner case.

The NYPD is “very concerned, more because of recent events,” a law enforcement source said.

Last week, activists armed with untraceable “burner phones” used social media and online bulletin boards to stay one step ahead of city cops and create mayhem after a grand jury cleared Officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

The anarchists clearly won the game of “Whac-A-Mole’’ — shutting down major roads including the FDR Drive, Lincoln Tunnel and West Side Highway and frustrating the NYPD, sources said.

“They wore me out,” said one counterterror expert who monitored the protests. “Their ability to strategize on the fly is something we haven’t dealt with before to this degree.”

While the NYPD actively monitors Twitter, Facebook and other social media for intelligence, sources said the official chain of command keeps squadrons of cops from moving around as quickly as protesters.

A “technology gap” also favors the activists, many of whom have the newest electronic gear, sources said.

“A lot of these anarchists are from the Occupy Wall Street group. They are little rich kids, little techie brats,’’ a source said.

“They get their money from Mommy and Daddy. And they travel from the West Coast to the East Coast and everywhere in between to disrupt events that involve corporate America, world summits, civil rights and especially those that involve law enforcement.”

“They have their little MacBook Air computers, their Wi-Fi, their smartphones, and they’re off to the races. We’re reacting to these situations, which means we are not fully in control of them,” the source said.

Authorities suspect “a few hundred” of the estimated 4,000 protesters who took to New York City’s streets after the Ferguson decision used their knack for mobile technology to send out real-time advisories on where cops were located and where they were headed.

“They were giving instantaneous commands to their followers, and this enabled them to stay one step ahead of us,” a source noted.

As a result, cops were left to race around the city to try to stem the disruptions.

The developments now have cops “very worried” about the upcoming ruling by a grand jury investigating Garner’s death, sources said.

The Staten Island dad died in August after being put in a police chokehold while being busted for allegedly peddling loose cigarettes.

NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo — who was recorded putting Garner into the chokehold — testified before the panel Nov. 21, and a ruling on whether to indict him could be announced as soon as Monday.

“We’re expecting strong reaction and demonstrations when the decision comes down,” one source said.

Another source said: “The cops on standby will be in riot gear. That means helmets and sticks.”

Since the success of Twitter and Facebook in fueling the Arab Spring uprisings that toppled regimes in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, US activists have increasingly used the Web to organize and mobilize protests.

Last week, hundreds of tweets directed protesters to Union Square to await the Ferguson ruling.

After the verdict, NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton was splattered with fake blood, allegedly by “professional agitator’’ Diego Ibañez, 26.

Plans to disrupt the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade included the Twitter hashtag #StopTheParade.

And activist Ben Norton — busted in July during a protest in DC with the CODEPINK anti-war group — tweeted out a parade map.

“This is the route,” he wrote. “Be the change you want to see in the world. Make history. #IndictTheSystem.”

#STOPTHEPARADE This is the route. Be the change you want to see in the world. Make history. #IndictTheSystem pic.twitter.com/x8xziyC0Wq
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 5 december 2014 @ 22:29:22 #147
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147321954
quote:
KKK membership sinks 2 Florida cops

Echoing the once-segregated South, a Florida deputy police chief has resigned and an officer has been fired after the FBI reported that both belonged to the Ku Klux Klan

Fruitland Park Deputy Chief David Borst has denied involvement with the notorious white-hooded hate group that emerged after the Civil War and continued to terrorize and murder blacks through the mid-20th century.

The 49-year-old Borst, a department veteran of more than 20 years, was also fire chief for the Lake County city of 5,000, about 40 miles northwest of Orlando. He resigned both posts Thursday after being confronted with the FBI report.

Officer George Hunnewell, who was demoted last year over performance and attitude complaints, was fired Friday by Chief Terry Isaacs.

The state attorney's office is reviewing every arrest made by the officers and giving particular scrutiny to cases involving minorities, Isaacs said.

It the second time in five years that Klansmen have been found in the Fruitland Park Police Department. In 2009, Officer James Elkins resigned after photographs showed him in a white robe and pointy hood, and he later admitted he was a leader of the local KKK.

In the current cases, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement gave Isaacs a summary of an FBI investigation based on information from a confidential source who linked both officers to the Klan. No criminal wrongdoing was found, and the FBI said no other officers were linked to the white supremacists.

Chief Deputy State Attorney Ric Ridgway, whom Isaac contacted for advice, told the Orlando Sentinel that the report contained "a lot of fairly substantial evidence that tends to support" Borst's and Hunnewell's Klan membership.

But he pointed out that it's not illegal to belong to the KKK "even if you are the deputy chief."

"It's not a crime to hate people. It may be despicable, it may be immoral, but it's not a crime," he said.

Because of that, Fruitland Park officials had to decide whether Borst and Hunnewell had violated city standards and ethics.

"We cannot nor will we tolerate any philosophy that is inherently morally corrupt or one that espouses bigotry or any intolerance aimed at any groups or individuals because of their race, religion, ethnicity or gender or sexual orientation," said City Manager Gary La Venia.

Isaacs initially told the Orlando Sentinel on Friday that Borst was resigning for "personal family issues," and he would not address the Klan allegations.

"We are here, we are in place, and I want the public to know this type of conduct will not even be remotely tolerated," Isaacs told News 13.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 6 december 2014 @ 12:58:55 #148
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147330508
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 7 december 2014 @ 15:51:31 #149
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147360771
quote:
quote:
quote:
A video released by hacker collective Anonymous purports to show evidence of warrantless wiretapping in Chicago during a #blacklivesmatter protest. According to the video, a vehicle moved through the streets during protests, listening in on conversations.

The video (shared in its entirety below) opens with a scene of President Barack Obama addressing the nation. “Nobody is listening to your telephone calls,” he assures viewers. It goes on to show specific promises and assurances, quotes from the NSA, stating that no one will be subject to wiretapping without a warrant.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 11 december 2014 @ 18:14:33 #150
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147489286
quote:
7s.gif Op zaterdag 29 november 2014 00:41 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
[ afbeelding ]
SPOILER
Om spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
En de reactie is:

quote:
quote:
De Britse premier David Cameron zei gisteren dat het hoofdkwartier voor de overheidsinformatie GCHQ en het NCA evenveel moeite zullen doen om pedoseksuelen op te sporen als om terroristen te achterhalen. Volgens Cameron vindt de wereldwijde seksuele uitbuiting van kinderen op 'bijna industriële wijze' plaats. Als reactie daarop wil Cameron 'een licht schijnen op de meest donkere hoeken van het internet.'
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 11 december 2014 @ 23:36:04 #151
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147501808
quote:
quote:
The online hacktivist Anonymous has conducted a massive cyber attack on the official website of Oakland police, fire department and city website. As a result all targeted sites have been shut down.

Anonymous targeted the Oakland City Hall, Oakland police and fire departments website around 11 a.m.

It’s been few hours now that all sites are still down and readers are welcomed with warning messages like ”The page cannot be displayed Explanation: There is a problem with the page you are trying to reach and it cannot be displayed.”
quote:
The news of targeting these sites was announced by Anonymous on their Twitter account. The cyber attack was conducted under the banner of #ShutItDown and #ICantBreathe. (These hashtags show Anonymous has targeted these sites in retaliation against recent killings of black males in the United States).
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 15 december 2014 @ 19:06:48 #152
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147610615
quote:
quote:
Yesterday we reported how Anonymous with the help of Hagash Team hacked and leaked emails of government officials from Sweden, India, Israel, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico.

What went unreported yesterday was another leak made by Anonymous in which emails addresses of New Zealand and Swedish police which were dumped online against the seizure of The Pirate Bay servers.

The leak was announced by Anonymous from their official Twitter handle about 14 hours ago. Here is the tweet showing the original Pastebin link of the leak conducted by Anonymous.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 16 december 2014 @ 17:14:51 #153
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147642403
quote:
quote:
De bronnen van Bloomberg stellen verder dat Sony niet helemaal volledig is geweest over de toedracht van de PSN-hack.

Hierbij werden de gegevens van tientallen miljoenen Playstation-gebruikers gestolen. Er zou echter ook bedrijfsinformatie zijn buitgemaakt die de illegale verkoop van Sony's games, films en muziek mogelijk maakte.

Bovendien zou de cyberaanval onterecht enkel aan de hackersgroepering Anonymous zijn toegeschreven. De bronnen spreken over minimaal drie groeperingen, waaronder een uit Rusland die al jaren games van Sony zou stelen.

Een woordvoerder van Sony zegt tegenover Bloomberg niet specifiek op geruchten in te gaan. Wel benadrukt ze dat er geen aanleiding is voor haar om aan te nemen dat de hack uit 2011 groter was in omvang en ernst dan eerder gecommuniceerd.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 16 december 2014 @ 22:23:08 #154
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147654804
quote:
Hackers leak Swedish government logins in response to Pirate Bay raid

A group of hackers leaked the log-in details of 38 government emails (who were mostly from Sweden) in retaliation for the Pirate Bay police raid last week.

The Anonymous hacktivist group also claims to have hacked into government email accounts of Israel, India, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico.

According to Swedish news site The Local, the Swedish Internet company Telia also suffered because of the Pirate Bay raid. On 12 December they suffered a distributed denial-of-service attack, which affected their online services and user connections.

Pirate Bay, the illegal file sharing site, was taken down last week after a Swedish police raid but it was shortly brought back to life by file sharing competitors Isohunt.

“We, the Isohunt.to team, copied the base of the PirateBay in order to save it to the generations of users. Nothing will be forgotten.”

David Jacoby, Kaspersky Lab’s chief researcher, commented on the latest attacks:

“These attacks don’t come from nowhere. The Pirate Bay raid has provoked feelings in these groups”.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 01:18:36 #155
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147790455
quote:
quote:
The infamous hacker collective Anonymous has announced that they’ll be responding to North Korea for the Sony hack. The hackers known as #GOP, or Guardians of Peace, who are believed to be a North Korean group, have been compared to Anonymous, and Anon has expressed agreement with them on some matters. However, now that Sony has pulled The Interview from theaters in response to the hacking and threats, Anon has turned their eyes on North Korea in a less agreeable light.

Thursday evening into Friday morning, one of Anonymous’ many Twitter accounts offered responses to the Sony hack, and the decision to pull the movie, hinting that Anonymous would be offering the movie to the world themselves.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 01:20:03 #156
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147790477
quote:
quote:
Is Iggy Azalea being blackmailed by Anonymous this week on Twitter? It appears the hackers activist group called Anonymous is threatening to leak the star’s sex tape if she does not “comply or else.” Billboard News reveals this Saturday, Dec. 20, 2014, that the hit rapper is being demanded to say sorry soon about her social actions or face dire consequences following a series of hostile media posts.
quote:
"You are guilty of misappropriating black culture, insulting peaceful protesters, and making light of Eric Garner's death. @IGGYAZALEA," contended the faceless group this Friday evening via a Twitter post. The music star has been demanded to "release a statement apologizing to @AzealiaBanks and the protesters in NYC" by Anonymous as well."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 10:48:10 #157
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147795147
quote:
Brother?

Dear my "brother" Sabu.

Greetings from the real world. You know, where cause and consequence reign free and mighty. I'll send you a postcard sometime. Anyway... How is being a human bidet for the FBI treating you? The very people you taught the young and impressionable to hate. I heard you now have a job as a security consultant? That sounds fun. Life is looking pretty cosy for you currently. Hey, talking of cosy; It's Jeremy Hammonds birthday soon, January the 8th. I was considering sending him book or something because, from experience, jail isn't too cosy and he could do with things to do to pass the time. After all, 10 years is a hell of a stint for jail, paedophiles and rapists get less.

Do you remember Jeremy at all? He's one of the people you set up and sold out to save yourself. But enough about Jeremy, let's talk about you Hector. I can tell you love talking about good old Sabu lately after all.

I must admit that after the initial sting at the realisation of what you did over our time spent communicating, I haven't thought about you much. I feel a strong sense of injustice over what happened and the way things went, but as a general rule it's a case of 'out of sight, out of mind'. But then you started popping up on my time line - 'Sabu has attended VICE as a VIP.' ' Sabu is doing an interview for CBS news.' 'Sabu speaks about his days of hacking for CNET.' You get the point.

So I watch, and I have to be honest, even though you did what you did I was still kind of half expecting a show of remorse or even an acceptance for what you did. Something, anything. But it was like wishing from blood from a stone. You tried to rationalise what you did and you outright lied. You flaunt yourself on TV making yourself out to be some kind of modern day hero, asking who will guard the guards and various other bullshit. Let's not forget Hector, we had to endure your bullshit for a long time and we know exactly what you are.

Remember the time Jake and Mustafa wanted to walk away? You knew Jake was young as you had spoken to him numerous times via voice chat. It was too much and they didn't want to be a part of it any more. But Big-Bad Sabu came out and you raged at them in IRC. I asked you to back off them but you wouldn't, and so Jake and Mustafa stayed around longer than they wanted and got deeper than they had ever intended. You actively pulled children back into a world of crime to continue something they didn't even want to do. You are a bully and a criminal and the only person who was caught who hasn't paid a sufficient price for what you did. You were the worst of all of us. The knowledge you lacked in technical ability you made up for in manipulation and a big loud mouth with the ability to coax people into doing things. Using your online persona and charismatic ways to adjust peoples view on things to what you were trying to spin at the time. Pure peer pressure. Nobody, especially the children you dragged in, could say no to you or you would attempt to scare them.

You were caught but instead of taking responsibility, you bent over and let the FBI take turns at riding you out. "Mastermind" (I laugh every time.) you are not, but a manipulating conductor of targets and (admittedly) persuasive and entirely convincing social engineer you are.
Jeremy and I were mostly happy exploring and reporting exploits if you remember correctly. Sure, we had some lulz along the way, but who's idea was it to go for big targets for pure self gain? Credit cards, the dumping of personal information, ruining of lives. This was all on the Great Sabu. Is this what masterminding a group is? Just telling people to be bigger shits than they need to be on the Internet but doing non of it himself? Backing people into corners and claiming you had a hand in any of it other than setting people up to do your dirty work.
The only thing you masterminded was your own freedom by coercing and manipulating Jeremy and I into doing things you couldn't do. You manufactured these scenarios and targets to make us look like bigger threats than we ever were or would have been without your constant pushing. Yes, we were able to do these things, but we had no intention of doing so without you orchestrating a few targets and spinning some crap reasons of why. Constantly giving us speeches of why we should do these things and using our weakness of wanting to spread concerns about security against us. You wanted us to flex our abilities in front of you so you could log it and go crying back to the FBI in order for them to fear us more than they feared you; you turned what we were doing into something much more sinister so that they thought that apprehending us was more in their interests than putting you in jail. All so you could go back home and take selfies of yourself for the media.

If the authorities have anything to fear, it isn't our skills (although, people should fix their shit. Seriously. For every ones sake.) it's people like you who run their mouth and rile the impressionable up to a point of anger, using your charismatic way of exciting people into a false sense of revolution. Whilst all you care about is yourself and your ulterior motives. We were interested in the way things work and our want and our need to learn and penetrate so-called secure systems clouded our judgement of your real intentions. I take full responsibility for what I have done. I've served my time in jail, I was tagged, I'm on probation, I have restrictions that hinder my general progress towards a career but I have accepted the punishment - so if you think that this is me trying to offshoot any blame, then don't. I know what I've done. I actually feel most shame for some of the things I said to people along the way and lives I effected more than anything. But you have taken exactly ZERO responsibility for any of this.

So who are you Hector? 'Legendary hacker' ? 'leader of anonymous and Lulzsec' ? You would have functioned better as a cult leader. Pushing, pressuring and preying on younger and smarter people than yourself and running them into the ground. If all you did was relay information for the FBI and steal credit card details (which you didn't even do. You got us to do it for you.) then what is your purpose anyway? Since most of the words you spun us were under influence of the FBI you couldn't have meant any of it considering you were just trying to get us to do things to report. You don't care about movements or activism or rights, because you try sell out anybody who does. You know a few good tricks but as a general rule your hacking know-how is quite limited. So who are you Hector Xavier Monsegur and why are you on TV? Because I spent quite a while getting to know you, and all I see is a coward and a fraud.

"I would stay away from anonymous" says ANONYMOUSabu who riled up thousands to hate authorities and even tried to incite violence towards them.

"It was too much publicity" says the person whose main focus was to talk shit on twitter.

"They knew my weakness was my kids" says the man who I continuously warned to back away from all of this and never come back, for your kids sake. I tried to protect those kids way before you even tried to use them as a reason for saving yourself and betraying your friends. I wouldn't blame you for choosing your children over your friends if it saved them from going into the system, any sane person would - but I do blame you for putting crime before your children in the first place. It should have never come down to that decision to begin with and you know I told you this countless times. Spinning your kids as a reason for being a coward is idiotic and false and makes you look desperate to try rationalise what you did.

'helped intercept attacks and share them with the government' - attacks that YOU initially thought up, so you didn't prevent anything, you just suggested something and when we spoke about it you relayed what information we gathered and you put an end to it and avoided nearly 30 years in prison? Wow. You certainly are an American hero, a (what was it you said?) "inspiration" to people. I, for one, can't wait to teach my children to set my friends up and help the FBI entrap. A true role model to all.

"it wasn't a situation where I identified anybody. I didn't point my fingers at anybody." - I'll let the FBI handle this one:
"monsegur also provided crucial and detailed information about the formation, organisation, hierarchy and membership of these hacking groups, as well as specific information about their planning and execution of many major cyber attacks, including the specific roles of his co-conspirators in committing those crimes."
"Monsegur assists law enforcement in identifying and locating lulzsec members and affiliates. In addition to this crucial historical information, Monsegur proactively cooperated with ongoing Government investigations. Working sometimes literally around the clock, at the direction of the law enforcement. Monsegur engages his co-conspirators in online chats and were critical to confirming their identities and whereabouts."
So the FBI were wrong? In that case surely you can go join Jeremy in jail as because snitching on your 'brothers' is the only reason you're at home eating doughnuts right now.


I won't babble on any more because but I will ask you, respectfully, to stop talking so much shit and own up to something (preferably something that you actually did and not somebody else. Claiming responsibility to make yourself looked more skilled than you are is just strange Hector.) You're on TV giggling like a little school girl about how you used to hack free AOL Internet as a child as Jeremys talent rots away in jail by your hand.

Oh, before I forget and obviously completely unrelated - what is the legal age of sexual consent over there? 18? How old did you think I was? 16? You weren't the only one who kept logs Hector.
Be a decent human for once in your life and find that hole to crawl back into instead of rubbing what you did in peoples faces.

Yours respectfully,
Your "brother" Ryan.

(@APT1337)
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 11:40:07 #158
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147796012
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 12:43:15 #159
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147797576
#OPDeathEaters:

quote:
'Krant mocht in jaren tachtig niet over Engelse pedobende publiceren'

Een Britse krant die in de jaren tachtig wilde publiceren over een politieonderzoek in een huis waar pedofielen samenkwamen, heeft destijds een officiële waarschuwing gekregen om dat niet te doen.

De voormalige redacteur Hilton Tims van de lokale krant Surrey Comet heeft dat verklaard tijdens het onderzoek waarmee de Britse politie duidelijk wil krijgen of een pedobende op hoog niveau is beschermd in de jaren zeventig en tachtig.

Tims wilde berichten over een politieonderzoek in het Elm Guest House in Barnes, waar een groep beruchte pedofielen zou hebben geopereerd. De krant kreeg daarop een zogeheten D-notificatie, een formele waarschuwing geen informatie te publiceren die de nationale veiligheid in gevaar zou kunnen brengen, meldt de zondagskrant The Observer.

Het politieonderzoek richt zich op een groep prominente figuren, waarbij mogelijk ook parlementariërs, politieambtenaren, militairen en mensen met banden met het koningshuis waren betrokken. De groep heeft mogelijk ook kinderen gedood. De politie riep deze week slachtoffers op zich te melden.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 21 december 2014 @ 12:50:12 #160
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147797803
#OPDeathEaters

quote:
Theresa May scraps panel for inquiry into child sex abuse, report says

Panel members have angrily accused home secretary of ignoring the majority of abuse survivors with latest move, according to Exaro News

Theresa May is to scrap the panel for the independent inquiry into child sex abuse, it has been reported.

The home secretary wrote to each member of the panel to tell them she is considering turning it into a statutory inquiry, or setting up a fresh statutory inquiry or a Royal Commission, according to the Exaro News website.

The letter, which followed a meeting between May and panel members on Monday to discuss the future of the inquiry, added that any statutory inquiry panel would be newly appointed, and that existing panel members can apply for positions on the new panel.

She put this decision down to concerns raised about the panel by abuse survivors. May wrote: “As I said on Monday, I am currently considering these three options and I appreciate this has implications for the members of the panel.

“I should like to make clear that I appointed each and every one of you for your experience, your professionalism and your undoubted commitment.

“I know that it has not been easy, that you are working in an incredibly sensitive and difficult subject area and that some of you have faced significant personal criticism.”

Current panel members have accused May of listening to a vocal minority instead of the majority of abuse survivors, and urged the home secretary to convert the inquiry to statutory status and keep the current panel.

One panel member, Sharon Evans, chief executive of Dot Com Children’s Foundation, which promotes child safeguarding, and herself an abuse survivor, wrote in a response to May that she felt “devastated at the prospect of the independent inquiry being halted”. She said that it had been made clear to the panel “off the record” that the panel will be stood down in the New Year.

“As a person who suffered sexual abuse between the ages of three and seven, it was important that the experiences of victims and survivors were integral to the inquiry,” Evans wrote. “It was agreed by the panel that these experiences would form our line of questioning of institutions and ‘the experiences of victims and survivors would be at the heart of the inquiry’.”

The independent panel inquiry into child sexual abuse was set up to consider whether public bodies and other non-state institutions failed in their duty of care to protect children from sexual abuse in England and Wales.

Previously, the inquiry lost two chairs over accusations of conflicts of interest and survivors told May that they had also lost confidence in the rest of the panel.

Earlier this month it was revealed that two members of the panel had been accused of sending threatening or insulting emails to victims who had criticised the inquiry. Lawyers for one abuse survivor wrote to the home secretary to complain of a string of unsolicited communications, including an allegedly threatening email sent two days before an official meeting in November that both panellists and an abuse survivor were due to attend. The victim, who is on medication for post-traumatic stress disorder, was left too anxious to attend.

Evans noted, however, that the panel met with more than 70 representatives of victims and survivors of abuse, 90% of whom supported the independent panel. “There has been a small number of individuals and survivor groups engaging in personal attacks on panel members though social media and the press,” she wrote. “In the face of hostility by certain individuals, my concern is that the independent panel has been controlled to such a degree that it was unable to rebut or refute allegations.

“My second concern is that halting the inquiry at this point would send a very negative message to so many people we have already met and who have promised they can have confidence in us to do the right thing.”

It was also reported on Saturday that a former local newspaper executive who claimed that he was issued with an official warning against reporting on an exclusive paedophile ring, was interviewed by an officer working for Operation Fernbridge, the criminal investigation examining claims of sexual abuse and grooming of children by a VIP ring of paedophiles that included MPs, police officers and people with links to the royal family.

Hilton Tims, 81, had claimed that his paper, the Surrey Comet, was issued with a D notice – an official warning not to publish intelligence that might damage national security – when he sought to report on a police investigation into Elm Guest House in 1984.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 22 december 2014 @ 17:32:33 #161
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147848174
#OPDeathEaters

quote:
Five Westminster paedophile rings probed by Scotland Yard

Claims emerge of a complex web of child abuse at the heart of government, as leading MP in campaign for justice hands list of 22 names to police

Police are investigating claims that up to five paedophile rings operated at the heart of Westminster with the involvement of “highly influential” politicians.

A Labour MP who has handed a dossier of evidence to Scotland Yard said he now believed the complexity of child abuse networks at the heart of government in the Seventies and Eighties had been seriously underestimated.

John Mann, MP for Bassetlaw, said it was “inconceivable” that police would not now arrest and interview some of the politicians he has named in a list handed to detectives earlier this month.

Mr Mann, who has spent months sifting evidence from members of the public, met Scotland Yard and handed over evidence on 22 politicians, including three serving MPs and three members of the House of Lords.

Although some on the list are now dead, it also contains the names of other figures who are still alive but no longer active in the Westminster scene, Mr Mann said.

“There are at least five paedophile rings which involved MPs,” he said.

“Each of them involved at least one MP, some involved more, and these were groups of people who knew about the activities of one another.

“In some cases I believe they committed abuse together.”

Fourteen of the individuals identified by Mr Mann were Conservative politicians, five were Labour and three were from other parties.

Thirteen former ministers were among the list, Mr Mann said.

He insisted he would not be using parliamentary privilege to name the politicians who feature on the list because he believes they should be fully and properly investigated by the police.

“What the police are doing now is what should have taken place a long time ago,” he said.

“Three of these figures were highly influential.”

The MP, who has played an instrumental role in securing an inquiry into the alleged establishment paedophile rings, distilled the list of names from hundreds of pieces of information handed to him by members of the public.

“I think the 22 names are all worthy of investigation by the police," Mr Mann told The Telegraph.

“In my opinion the evidence against approximately half of them is very compelling.
het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 22 december 2014 @ 23:02:57 #162
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147861366
quote:
quote:
A news went viral yesterday claiming online hacktivists Anonymous have threatened to leak sex tape of Australian model Iggy Azalea unless she apologizes to American rapper, singer, and songwriter Azealia Banks on some racial issue.

Well based on our personal investigation and conversation with some of the most reliable Anonymous handles on Twitter, we found out that Anonymous has not made any such threat.

The Twitter account @TheAnonMessage, who was making these threat (has been deleted by Twitter) is nothing but a troll and home to lies and fake Tweets. (Probably a wannabe and an attention seeker).
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 23 december 2014 @ 22:59:29 #163
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147899896
quote:
quote:
Tango down: Internet access in North Korea goes black after the hacktivist collective known as Anonymous promised revenge against North Korea for hacking Sony and forcing the withdrawal of the controversial film "The Interview."

A Dec. 23 report issued by CNN concerning the Internet outages that have plagued North Korea over the past 48 hours made a cryptic reference to the Anonymous collective being behind the attack, noting the party responsible could be “a 15-year-old in a Guy Fawkes mask.”

Those familiar with Anonymous know that the ubiquitous Guy Fawkes mask is often associated with the hacktivist collective.

Matthew Prince, president of CloudFlare, a performance and security company, told CNN that the U.S. government is probably not behind the attack, but that it's well within the realm of possibility that a single individual could have been behind the interruption:
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 26 december 2014 @ 20:15:06 #164
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_147982806
quote:
quote:
Uh oh. Lizard Patrol, the hacking group claiming responsibility for the Christmas attacks on PlayStation and Xbox Live, has announced a new target: Tor, the anonymous internet service.
quote:
The hacker group appears to be attempting to dominate Tor's relays to the point where it can comprise anonymity. Tor keeps you anonymous by bouncing your communications around a network of volunteer nodes. But if one group is controlling the majority of the nodes, it could be able to eavesdrop on a substantial number of vulnerable users. Which means Lizard Squad could gain the power to track Tor users if it infiltrates enough of the network.

So far, they have already established over 3000 relays, nearly half of the total number. That's very not good.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 27 december 2014 @ 20:04:39 #165
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148019696
quote:
Anonymous Leaked A Massive List Of Passwords And Credit Card Numbers

Following through on threats of a Christmas hack, a Twitter account claiming affiliation with Anonymous released a list of what it says are usernames and passwords for 13,000 accounts on Amazon, PlayStation, XBox Live, Hulu Plus, Walmart and other retail and entertainment services.

The hack additionally included credit card numbers, security codes and expiration dates.The trove was linked to in a Friday tweet.

In addition to providing account information for online retailer, gaming and video services, the cache also includes information for a variety of pornography sites. The Daily Dot has compiled a full list of affected companies.

And just to top it off, the group included a stolen download of “The Interview.” When Sony pulled the release of “The Interview,” Anonymous claimed on Twitter they would release the film themselves. It seems the company’s decision to distribute the film in certain theaters and online in the U.S. did not deter the hackers. (As TechCrunch noted earlier, “The Interview” was reportedly torrented 750,000 times in its first 20 hours)

The allegedly stolen account information for PlayStation and Xbox Live was posted just a day after another hacker group called Lizard Squad claimed responsibility for taking the two networks out on the likely the biggest gaming day of the year.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 28 december 2014 @ 11:22:09 #166
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148040173
quote:
quote:
After joining lizardsquads IRC network (hosted by OVH) I noticed a flaw.
Even though their were 290 users in their channel, their were 4200 users on the network.
This prompted me to do a /who * (which would show users without usermode +i enabled)

I was promptly flooded off their IRC network with lines of text such as this.

[04:26:35] •›› Who: • HZWJJF H DGRDYMOM@221.212.155.104.bc.googleusercontent.com KSUUZF
[04:26:35] •›› Who: • JWJMVO H FMTIU@13.214.155.104.bc.googleusercontent.com UMKQTRQ
[04:26:35] •›› Who: • VQJAUBTT H XRHF@33.218.155.104.bc.googleusercontent.com ZKYJ
[04:26:35] •›› Who: • SSTHW H NKRCJBM@127.210.155.104.bc.googleusercontent.com LYIBCZ
[04:26:35] •›› Who: • LXIZQPLJ H WHXLFA@254.212.155.104.bc.googleusercontent.com QCPCE

With this being said and my extenstive research into botnet culture. I am able to identify several characteristics that leads me to believe said machines are infected with a linux bot known as Kaiten (detectable as Trojan.Tsunami.B in ClamAV).

1) Kaiten characteristic is that Kaiten generates the USER, IDENT and NICK with makestring.
2) Kaiten by default sends a MODE-xi (in IRC this would remove hostmasking, allowing you to view the REAL IP of the bots inside of the botnet. usermode -i disables invisible flag (allowing a /who * to show you)

This is an extreme exposure for LizardSquad as we now know this information

irc.darkode.com has address 198.100.144.122

This in the botnet world is known as a C&C (command and control) server.

OrgAbuseHandle: ABUSE3956-ARIN
OrgAbuseName: Abuse
OrgAbusePhone: +1-855-684-5463
OrgAbuseEmail: abuse@ovh.ca
OrgAbuseRef: http://whois.arin.net/rest/poc/ABUSE3956-ARIN

for all of those wanting to have this C&C shut down.

As far was the google IPs, Due to the volume of infected machines and it being isolated to only google, I do not believe it is a widespread exploit. I believe this to be either a cause of 1 of 3 ways.
1) There was a hackforums post discussing the abuse of google clouds $500 free credit, allowing them to script something that would set up hundreds of VPSes.
2) Credit card fraud on google cloud services.
3) An exploit into google cloud services panel, allowing them to execute commands thus uploading and executing their kaitens. (highly unlikely, but plausible)

Listed below are a list of google IPs that have been infected with kaiten that LizardSquad is using for Denial of Services attacks.
De pastebin gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 28 december 2014 @ 11:24:17 #167
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148040233
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 29 december 2014 @ 23:06:54 #168
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148118665
quote:
Many Faces behind the Mask

Gabriella Coleman and Michael Busch
quote:
There’s primarily two misconceptions I am trying to squash. The first is that Anonymous is a name that is still used today for trollish actions and second that Anonymous is random.

Since late 2011, the name has been primarily used for activist endeavors. And again, some of their tactics are controversial—including some which are trollish—but it has primarily been deployed for the purpose of political activity. The name, I am sure, can be used for hard core trolling but for whatever reason, for the last three years, the great bulk of activity under the Anonymous banner has been used for activist operations.

And while Anons are unpredictable, they aren’t random. By that I mean that it is very hard to forecast when they will show up and what the consequences of their actions may be—they don’t even know themselves—but there are identifiable logics at work. For instance, they are usually triggered into action by existing events. The exception is when they are hacking, for example, into government or corporation computers for the purpose of exposing shoddy security, sabotage, or finding information of corruption to leak.

But generally they are reacting to world events, or trying to expose corruption. There are stable teams that work together, as opposed to being an amorphous group that comes together out of the blue. So that’s the first set of misconceptions I wanted to target.

Another misconception has to do with who’s behind the mask. There’s a common but totally incorrect idea that everyone involved is white and middle-class. Some are and the diversity may not be radically deep (nor are most academic departments either, where I happen to work). There are fewer women, especially in the hacking crews, for example. But when it comes to age, ethnicity and class—especially class—it is a lot more diverse than people assume. Many of the PayPal 14—those charged with DdoSing PayPal in support of Wikileaks—are not able to easily pay their fine (of slightly over $5000 each) because many don't come from economically privileged backgrounds. Many participants are teenagers or in their early 20s but there is a sizable chunk of folks in their 30s and 40s.

Pseudoanonymity allows for strange gatherings of people who would never associate if it weren’t for the fact that they are cloaked. Take LulzSec, for instance, the breakaway group that went on a hacking spree for fifty days. Among the group you had a Puerto Rican living in a New York City housing project, a sixteen-year-old Iraqi immigrant in London, you had an ex-military participant, a white anti-capitalist anarchist, and two Irish chemistry students, one of whom had a lot of experience with radical politics due to the fact that his father had been a member of the Irish Republican Army—an interestingly diverse group, to say the least.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 1 januari 2015 @ 15:22:14 #169
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148217117
quote:
quote:
De Britse politie heeft een 22-jarige man opgepakt die onder meer verdacht wordt van de recente grote DDoS-aanval op Xbox Live en Playstation Network.

De arrestatie is zowel door Daily Dot als door hackerscollectief Lizard Squad gemeld.

De man zou bij dat collectief horen, dat rond de feestdagen in opspraak kwam toen het zowel Xbox Live en Playstation Network met een DDoS aanval onbereikbaar maakte. Woensdagavond maakte ook de Britse politie melding van de arrestatie.

Volgens Lizard Squad zijn er naast de Brit nog twee leden van het collectief opgepakt. De Brit is gearresteerd op verdenking van identiteitsfraude en het overtreden van de Computer Misuse Act.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 1 januari 2015 @ 21:54:35 #170
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148229361
GCHQ over TOR:

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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 4 januari 2015 @ 14:54:46 #171
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148317427
#OPDeathEaters:

quote:
'Voormalig Britse minister betrokken bij pedofielengroep'

Een Britse minister uit het kabinet van Margaret Thatcher zou ruim dertig jaar geleden een jongen hebben verkracht. Scotland Yard heeft de minister, Peter Morrison, in bescherming genomen in plaats van hem te vervolgen. Die beschuldiging uit het slachtoffer zondag in de Britse krant The Telegraph.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 9 januari 2015 @ 10:52:25 #172
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148497398

quote:
#OpCharlieHebdo

Anonymous #francophone // #OpCharlieHebdo 01/07/2015
Never attack the media

Message to the enemy of the freedom of speech.

January 7, 2015, freedom of speech has suffered an inhuman assault. Terrorists broke into the premises of the "Charlie Hebdo" newspaper and shot in cold blood several satirical cartoon artists, journalists and two policemen. The killers are still at large. Disgusted and also shocked, we can not fall to our knees. It is our responsibility to react.

First, we wish to express our condolences to the families of the victims of this cowardly and despicable act. We are all affected by the death of Cabu, Charb, Tignous and Wolinski, great artists that marked their talent throughout the history of the press and died for freedom. We do not forget the other victims killed and injured in the attack that were the targets of these murderers.

It is clear that some people do not want, in a free world, this inviolable and sacred right to express in any way one's opinions. Anonymous will never leave this right violated by obscurantism and mysticism. We will fight always and everywhere the enemies of freedom of speech. Charlie Hebdo, historical figure of satirical journalism has now been targeted. Anonymous must remind every citizen that the freedom of the press is a fundamental principle of democratic countries. Freedom of opinion, speech and to publish articles without any threat, and stress is a right "inalienable." Anonymous has always fought the slayers of these rights and will never allow a person to be shot down radically for publishing an article, a drawing, an opinion ...

Freedom of speech and opinion is a non-negotiable thing, to tackle it is to attack democracy. Expect a massive frontal reaction from us because the struggle for the defense of those freedoms is the foundation of our movement.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive.
We do not forget.
Expect us!


IRC: irc.anonops.com Port: 6667 Port SSL: 6697 #francophone & #OpCharlieHebdo // https://webchat.anonops.com/
Twitter: @OpCharlieHebdo // #JeSuisCharlie
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 9 januari 2015 @ 10:54:34 #173
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148497451
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 11 januari 2015 @ 19:52:17 #174
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148578846
quote:
quote:
Anonymous appears to be taking baby steps in its war against the Charlie Hebdo attackers, temporarily taking down a jihadist website. The site went down for one or two hours, just enough time for Anonymous hacktivists to declare #TangoDown on Twitter. Still, there are a few additional developments.

As previously reported by the Inquisitr, shortly after the massacre at the Charlie Hebdo headquarters, hackers from the activist group Anonymous declared war. The group opened a new Twitter account and hashtag, #OpCharlieHebdo, and made this ominous threat to the terrorists.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_148580695
Papierversnipperaar-privé-topic?
  dinsdag 13 januari 2015 @ 08:43:41 #176
116015 SicSicSics
Crushing Cranial Contents!
pi_148632307
Wat vinden we (Papier?) van de hypocrisie van Anonymous over het sluiten/ aanvallen van Jihadwebsites 'vóór de vrijheid van meningsuiting'? Omdat er een boodschap op staat die anonymous niet welgevallig is?

En hoe is dat anders dan een krampachtige overheidsreactie om, in een poging tot 'bescherming', meer controle te willen hebben over wat er op internet staat?

[ Bericht 6% gewijzigd door SicSicSics op 13-01-2015 08:56:05 ]
Fine, fuck you then!
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
  dinsdag 13 januari 2015 @ 13:48:04 #177
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148639458
quote:
14s.gif Op dinsdag 13 januari 2015 08:43 schreef SicSicSics het volgende:
Wat vinden we (Papier?) van de hypocrisie van Anonymous over het sluiten/ aanvallen van Jihadwebsites 'vóór de vrijheid van meningsuiting'? Omdat er een boodschap op staat die anonymous niet welgevallig is?

En hoe is dat anders dan een krampachtige overheidsreactie om, in een poging tot 'bescherming', meer controle te willen hebben over wat er op internet staat?
Die discussie is al zo oud als Anonymous politiek actief is. Er zijn Anons die zelfs DDos aanvallen afwijzen omdat dat ook een vorm van (tijdelijke) censuur is. Sommige Anons willen media-sites met rust laten en voor anderen is alles toegestaan, zolang het doel maar goed is.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 13 januari 2015 @ 13:53:53 #178
116015 SicSicSics
Crushing Cranial Contents!
pi_148639603
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 13 januari 2015 13:48 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
voor anderen is alles toegestaan, zolang het doel maar goed is.
Radicalen :D overal heb je van die lui. Ik hoop alleen dat zij ooit zelf kunnen lachen om het hoge 'fucking for virginity' gehalte van hun eigen doen en laten.
Fine, fuck you then!
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
  zaterdag 17 januari 2015 @ 11:02:09 #179
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148771054
quote:
Behind Anonymous’s Operation to Reveal Britain’s Elite Child-Rape Syndicate

As last week's horrifying news from France dominated the European and global news cycles, much of the media's attention toward the growing allegations of British political elite being involved in a ring of child rape has notably subsided. Online, however, a group of activists—some associated with the hacktivist group Anonymous—have been pushing for more attention to be brought to this deeply unsettling issue percolating in the UK. Their efforts are being organized under the hashtag banner of #OpDeathEaters.

In December, Scotland Yard made the shocking admission that new allegations pertaining to the rape and murder of young boys by so-called VIPs in Britain's political world are true.

A man who goes only by the pseudonym Nick came out to the media and the authorities to allege that he was the victim of rape and abuse by high-profile political figures in Britain in the 1970s and 1980s. According to Kenny McDonald, the detective in charge of the investigation into Nick's claims, "Nick has been spoken to by experienced officers from the child abuse team and experienced officers from the murder investigation team. They and I believe what Nick is saying is credible and true."

Nick went on to tell the BBC that children who were swept up in this VIP ring were brutally abused, and would be attacked if they did not obey the men who were holding them hostage. He also describes what appears to have been a fairly brazen operation: "People who drove us around could come forward. Staff in some of the locations could come forward. There are so many people who must have had suspicions. We weren't smuggled in under a blanket through the back door. It was done openly and people must have questioned that and they need to come forward."

Just as Britain was processing the shocking news of child rape and murder by its political elite, in January, Prince Andrew was accused of having sex with a minor who alleges she was the "sex slave" of a billionaire. A lawsuit brought against the US Department of Justice by a woman named Virginia Roberts has alleged that Jeffrey Epstein—a disgraced financier and known friend of Prince Andrew who, in 2008, pleaded guilty to "felony solicitation and procuring a person under the age of 18 for prostitution"—had forced her to have sex with Prince Andrew.

Epstein himself is no stranger to allegations and lawsuits pertaining to sexual crimes involving children. Three 12-year-old girls were allegedly brought to Epstein from France as a "birthday gift." He has also been sued over a dozen times by girls who claim they were abused while underage, all of which were settled out of court. A former Palm Beach Police Chief whose department investigated Epstein in 2005, after complaints were brought to them by the parents of a 14-year-old girl, told the Daily Beast that Epstein's case was "minimized by the State Attorney's Office, then bargained down by the U.S. Department of Justice."

The core of Roberts's claim against the DOJ is that they should throw out the plea deal given to Epstein in 2007.

As for Prince Andrew, he and Buckingham Palace have categorically denied that Roberts's claims are true. He may even be immune to the lawsuit, as it was filed in American courts. Prime Minister David Cameron, however, has so far refused to defend Prince Andrew publicly.

A photograph of Prince Andrew, with his arm around a 17-year-old Virginia Roberts, has since appeared in various media outlets.

In her suit, Virginia Roberts claims she was used "for sexual purposes to many other powerful men, including numerous prominent American politicians, powerful business executives, foreign presidents, a well-known Prime Minister and other world leaders." Photographs have placed Stephen Hawking and Bill Clinton on Jeffrey Epstein's private island—which has been described as an "Island of Sin"—though no such allegations have been brought against either man.

VICE contacted Heather Marsh, author of Binding Chaos, who says she "set the objective [for #OpDeathEaters] and brought the initial research and story to the Internet where it has been taken up by Anonymous and others." Marsh does not identify as a member of Anonymous.

According to her, the central objective of #OpDeathEaters is to "establish independent, internationally linked, victim-led inquiries into high-level complicity, obstruction of justice, and cover-ups in the paedosadism and child-trafficking industries." Its targets are: "Those in positions of power who control or enable the industry, globally."

When asked about the media attention to this issue so far, Marsh rated it "ridiculously low," adding that this is "the biggest story to break in the UK in centuries."

She continued: "What media coverage there is from the more prominent outlets is a diversion instead of investigation. Media has consistently depicted the rape, torture, murder, abduction, and blackmail of children as 'child sex' or a 'sex scandal' and the child victims as 'prostitutes' or even 'rent boys.'"

The connection between Epstein and Prince Andrew, Marsh believes, "could potentially implicate members of the royal household and others in their circle in not just complicity in the crimes of child trafficking and rape but also in obstruction of justice and influence peddling in criminal networks."

To be clear, Prince Andrew is being accused of having sex with Roberts when she was a minor, who claims she was forced on him by Epstein as part of "an orgy with numerous other underaged girls." He's not being accused of child trafficking itself.

In critiquing the media coverage of the Prince Andrew allegations thus far, Marsh pointed out that it is often "presented as a 'salacious' story about 'Prince Andrew's personal life' instead of the matter of urgent public interest it is." She went on to say: "The equally urgent stories [about high-profile human trafficking rings] in other countries are also ignored in both their own and international media, and all of these stories are presented as isolated incidents instead of the interconnected global network of influence and potential blackmail they are part of."

While Marsh's claims of an "interconnected global network" of human trafficking by high-profile politicians and powerful figures are impossible to prove, it is true that much of the reporting on the Prince Andrew allegations fails to contextualize it against the Scotland Yard-approved claims of a British VIP child rape and murder syndicate, which, at the very least, is believed to have operated in the 1970s and 1980s.

Marsh told VICE that Britain's new #WeProtect internet filter, meant to keep child porn off the web, is also making research into this subject difficult for her counterparts in England. She also is very clear to distinguish the seriousness of the crimes of Epstein, the proven allegations against British VIPs in the 70s and 80s, and the potential wrongdoing of Prince Andrew, as different than just "lonely men in their basements," adding: "They were officials with drivers, security, an army of staff, secret services, courts and police covering for them and years of victims and they belonged to international networks."

When asked about the success of #OpDeathEaters thus far, Marsh told VICE: "My initial goals were to have a core group of researchers, journalists and activists accept the validity and scale of the story and begin looking further, to change the propaganda in the way the story was covered, and to have the momentum unstoppable by Christmas. I believe those things have been successful. Having this fairly unbelievable story widely accepted was the biggest hurdle, and one I had to bank all of my credibility on, but it is not questioned by anyone who has seen the data."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 22 januari 2015 @ 21:52:04 #180
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148959236
quote:
Journalist Barrett Brown sentenced to 63 months in federal prison, must pay $890K in restitution

The intelligence and security journalist has already served more than two years in prison for charges related to his proximity to sources within the hacktivist entity known as Anonymous.

A court in Dallas has sentenced Barrett Brown to 63 months in federal prison, minus 28 months already served. For count one in the case, he receives 48 months. For count 2, he receives 12 months. And for count 3, he receives 3 months. He is also ordered to pay $890,000 in restitution.

The government's charges against the intelligence and security reporter stemmed from his relationship with sources close to the hacker group Anonymous, and the fact that Brown published a link to publicly-available copies of leaked Stratfor documents.

Brown read a statement to the court during the sentencing hearing, and you can read that statement in entirety here.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 januari 2015 @ 11:49:01 #181
116015 SicSicSics
Crushing Cranial Contents!
pi_148973801
quote:
7s.gif Op donderdag 22 januari 2015 21:52 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Het artikel gaat verder.
Even een crosspost die ik ook in BNW zette. Hoeveel 'anons' zouden nu gaan zeuren over persvrijheid en een hetze tegen 'anonymous'?

Quotes dan maar los ;)

Lekker ventje wel:
quote:
“That’s why [the agent's] life is over, but when I say his life is over, I don’t say I’m going to kill him, but I am going to ruin his life and look into his [expletive] kids.”
quote:
...he says he will regard any federal law-enforcement raids as assassination attempts and “shoot all of them and kill them if they come."
quote:
...Brown said he always knew he would die before he turned 40 and “I wouldn’t mind going out with two FBI sidearms like a [expletive] Egyptian Pharaoh.”
America is echt een intolerante fascistenstaat als je dat al niet eens meer mag zeggen :')

quote:
...has been indicted on three federal charges: making an online threat, retaliating against a federal officer and conspiring to release the personal information of a U.S. government employee.
Heeft ie nog mazzel met zijn straf volgens mij! :D

http://crimeblog.dallasne(...)piracy-charges.html/

vrijdag 23 januari 2015 11:42
Fine, fuck you then!
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
  vrijdag 23 januari 2015 @ 16:20:03 #182
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148982038
quote:
Anonymous Infiltrates the Police, Cop Facing Discipline After Wearing Guy Fawkes Mask to Protest

Miami Beach, Florida – A North Miami Beach Police officer is facing disciplinary action from his police department for his involvement in “Anonymous” and his refusal to take off a mask at a recent protest that he organized and participated in.

According to officials at the North Miami Beach Police Department, Officer Ericson Harrell violated department policies when he was arrested in Plantation during a one man protest against Obamacare.

Commanders at the police department said that his actions were “unbecoming of an officer”and that he will be suspended without pay. However, since Harrell was suspended with pay immediately after his arrest, his pay will be docked 20 hours, according to police department spokeswoman Major Kathy Katerman.

Katerman also said that Harrell is an “above average officer” and that the department was “disappointed in this, absolutely. Any policy violation we take very seriously. We expect he’ll improve his behavior or face more discipline.”

Harrell was off duty at the time of his arrest on November 22, 2013 and has been dealing with harassment from the police department ever since. The results of his lengthy internal investigation were finally announced this week.

At the one man protest, he was wearing a black cape and a Guy Fawkes mask that is oftentimes worn by supporters of Anonymous. The officer was also reportedly holding a flagpole with an inverted U.S. flag. When he was approached by officers and told to take off his mask he refused, and was eventually arrested for obstructing traffic and violating a local ordinance against wearing masks in public. According to local defense attorneys, the law against masks and hoods was created in 1951 as a response to the Ku Klux Klan.

Although the charges against Harrell were soon dropped, he faces constant scrutiny at work because the police department now knows his political beliefs.

After his arrest in Plantation, investigators confiscated his police issued laptop and reprimanded him for spending time on “conspiracy theory-related websites” and other non-work material during work hours. However, it is likely that the sites in question were on personal time, and it is interesting that the department specifically mentioned “conspiracy theory-related websites” in their report.

At the outcome of an internal police department investigation, the North Miami police also specifically reprimanded him for “being part of an organization that could interfere with the agency.”

In addition to the official discipline received from the department, Harrell may lose access to government computer databases, which he uses for work. According to The Sun Sentinel, Harrell was warned that associating with Anonymous could put his computer access at risk and that he could lose his police certification.

Below is an interview with Harrell, when he first became an outspoken police officer.

Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 januari 2015 @ 16:25:17 #183
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148982229
quote:
Anonymous calls for activists to help expose international paedophile networks with 'Operation DeathEaters'

Hacktivist group Anonymous, which has made public attacks on extremists, corporations and religious and governmental bodies, is calling for help in its fight against international paedophile networks, or what it calls the “paedosadist industry”.

In a project named Operation DeathEaters, Anonymous says it is is planning on collating evidence against international paedophile rings and their severe abuse of children and find the links between different operations, and to bring them to justice.

Anonymous has issued a video instructing activists on how they can aid in the operation, which has appeared at a time of serious allegations of historic child sexual abuse levied against prominent UK figures, including claims that a VIP Westminster paedophile ring existed in the past.
quote:
Recent allegations have led to the Met police’s investigation into three alleged murder cases of young boys dating back to the 1970s and 1980s that have been linked to claims that there existed a VIP Westminster paedophile ring allegedly involving high profile establishment figures.

“The Westminster paedophile ring is one of many cases where Operation DeathEaters has actively pursued and sought truth, in order to end the hideous crimes concealed behind the British elite,” Anonymous alleges in a statement.

“In fear of these investigations being bungled over time, the operation’s objectives are clear and simple: source public information before it disappears, push for independent enquiry, and offer support to witnesses and the victims where needed.”
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 januari 2015 @ 16:30:22 #184
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148982407
quote:
6s.gif Op vrijdag 23 januari 2015 11:49 schreef SicSicSics het volgende:

[..]

Even een crosspost die ik ook in BNW zette. Hoeveel 'anons' zouden nu gaan zeuren over persvrijheid en een hetze tegen 'anonymous'?

Quotes dan maar los ;)

Lekker ventje wel:

[..]

[..]

[..]

America is echt een intolerante fascistenstaat als je dat al niet eens meer mag zeggen :')

[..]

Heeft ie nog mazzel met zijn straf volgens mij! :D

http://crimeblog.dallasne(...)piracy-charges.html/

vrijdag 23 januari 2015 11:42
Barrett Brown word vervolgt vanwege Project PM, een onderzoeksproject naar samenwerkende overheden en internetbeveiligingsbedrijven. Project PM werd opgericht na de hack van HBGary Federal. Uit gelekte documenten bleek dat overheidsdiensten, The Bank of America, e.d. samenwerkten om vakbonden, mensenrechtenorganisaties en kritische journalistiek als WikiLeaks en Glenn Greenwald onschadelijk te maken.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 23 januari 2015 @ 23:57:56 #185
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_148997836
quote:
Bad, Bad Barrett Brown

The sentencing of someone who couldn’t hack his way out of a paper bag is the latest sign that we’re in the middle of a nerd scare.

By Gabriella Coleman

Among both American and British law-enforcement communities, the temptation runs strong to treat hackers and hacktivists in simplistic terms. The public was offered a rare glimpse of this reductive tendency by a published cache of leaked NSA and GCHQ documents. In a presentation slide evaluating various uses of the anonymizing tool Tor, hacktivists like Anonymous are slotted firmly and unambiguously into the “bad” category—immediately adjacent to both pedophiles and criminals.

. Anonymous and LulzSec are right up there with pedophiles and state-sponsored hackers, says GCHQ, with regards to Tor. pic.twitter.com/MjU3XKwlhP
— Andrew Blake (@apblake) December 29, 2014


On Thursday, this moral binary was once again rehashed in a Dallas courthouse, when Judge Samuel Lindsay handed down a stiff sentence to journalist and rabble-rousing activist Barrett Brown. Brown had originally faced 17 charges and was convicted of three crimes: making threats against an FBI agent, obstruction of a search warrant, and assisting the Anonymous hackers who infiltrated and gutted Austin, Texas–based intelligence company Stratfor. (It must be said that the threats, delivered as a video tirade, were hyperbolic and preposterous but illegal.) Brown, who has already been behind bars for more than two years, received an additional 35 months in jail and a fine of nearly $1 million to be paid to Stratfor. The judge ruled that Brown “more than merely reported the hackers’ activities”—he helped organize them.

With Thursday’s sentencing, the state confirmed a notable new trend: the willingness to single out and prosecute not only politically motivated hackers, but also geeks and journalists who work closely with them—like Brown. He wasn’t a hacker, nor was he officially charged with hacking crimes. (His prosecution did not rely on the controversial Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, responsible most recently for ensnaring Aaron Swartz, a well-respected hacktivist who committed suicide.) Far from it. As an anthropologist who was embedded in Anonymous’ Internet Relay Chat channels for more than two years, I watched Brown lend a helping hand during many political operations initiated by the faceless collective. But it remained a running joke in Anonymous that Barrett could not “hack” himself out of a paper bag.

And yet, Barrett Brown is nonetheless the latest victim of what advocate and lawyer Gráinne O’Neill has dubbed “the nerd scare”: Over the past couple of years, scores of hackers have been arrested in a single, unprecedented, cohesive swoop—and largely in direct retaliation to politically motivated hacks, such as those organized by the collective Anonymous. These hacks are not about getting rich—they are digital direct action intended to increase transparency and to protest censorship and corruption.

Brown’s role in Anonymous was as an avid strategist and organizer. The creator of an online think tank and crowdsourced wiki called Project PM, Brown was particularly committed to exposing the growth and corruption of private security and intelligence firms like Stratfor. What private military contractors like Blackwater are to the U.S. military, private intelligence firms are to institutions like the National Security Agency. Edward Snowden worked for one such contractor. And Brown aimed to uncover any evidence of malfeasance in this industry through the scraps of information provided by leakers and hackers.

Let me state again that Brown did not coordinate—much less partake in—the actual infiltration of Stratfor, which took place in December 2011. During the incursion, Anonymous hackers swiped credit card numbers, emails, and other information, then distributed the material online. Most notoriously, they used thousands of the stolen credit card numbers to donate money to nonprofit and charity organizations. (It’s entirely possible that the cards weren’t all used for such Robin Hood–esque purposes, of course, but evidence suggests that donations were made.)

Brown was mostly interested in the emails, but he did share a link to the credit card numbers that had been stolen by Anonymous hackers. At one point, he faced a charge for posting that link. Out of all of the 17 counts he originally faced, this one was the most controversial: He had not stolen or used the credit card information but was simply reposting a widely circulated link from one chat room to another. This charge was dropped in March 2014, but the judge nevertheless agreed with the prosecution’s arguments on Thursday that linking to the stolen data had aided the hackers.

Once the hack had been completed, Brown sought the emails to scour for evidence of abuse and corruption. Brown, operating unabashedly and under the mantel of his given name, was not the only one to believe the emails were vital to the public interest. WikiLeaks eventually published many of them, and their contents demonstrate Brown’s journalistic instincts. They describe Stratfor’s involvement in a range of disconcerting activity, including the criminal monitoring of activists. A 1984 explosion at a Union Carbide India Ltd. plant in Bhopal, India—widely considered the worst industrial disaster in world history—left thousands dead and more than 500,000 exposed to deadly chemicals. Stratfor was hired by Dow Chemical to keep tabs on activist groups like the Yes Men and Bhopal Medical Appeal—which were actively working to publicize the issue and assist the victims.

Soon after WikiLeaks posted the emails, Stratfor issued a terse statement saying that it was unwilling to verify the authenticity of the leaked emails: “Some of the emails may be forged or altered to include inaccuracies; some may be authentic. We will not validate either. Nor will we explain the thinking that went into them.”

According to journalist Steve Horn, who sifted through thousands of Stratfor emails and wrote a two-part series examining the tactics deployed by the firm and its predecessors, the majority of company emails show that “the most important service Stratfor provides is its sociological analysis in service to corporate power and capital, not the dirty on-the-ground work,” as he put it. Indeed, only a smattering of emails point to direct, though low-level, involvement in the monitoring of activists. Still, between emerging examples of abuse and the enormous difficulty in accessing corporate records, we should, at a minimum, be troubled by actions that punish journalistic attempts to bring such information into the public domain. Brown is certainly not a journalist in the strict traditional sense. But he (and his Project PM) contributed to a burgeoning “fifth estate”: the hackers, leakers, independent journalists, and bloggers increasingly working with “the fourth estate,” the mainstream news, to inform the public about wrongdoing.

Hacker arrests are nothing new, but never before have they been so intensely concentrated. Raids were more sporadic throughout the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, and usually took one of two distinct forms: Law enforcement would target lone, apolitical hackers like Kevin Mitnick and Gary McKinnon, or aim to cripple infrastructures used by whole groups of underground hackers—closing down the bulletin-board systems where they congregated and otherwise disrupting their often-illegal activities. The largest and most famous of these American raids was Operation Sundevil. Carried out across 14 U.S. cities on May 8, 1990, the operation resulted in 27 search warrants executed and four arrests made. Worldwide, hackers wielding their skills for political aims were largely ignored by law enforcement. (Of course, every rule has its exceptions, as demonstrated by the 30 counts of computer crimes brought against a young Julian Assange in 1991.)

This approach changed with the appearance of Anonymous. In 2011 and 2012, its successes spurred a multinational coordinated crackdown that delivered more than 100 arrests around the world. In the U.S., all those put behind bars as part of this “nerd scare” have been actual hackers—with the exception of Barrett Brown.

Had he simply had the fortune of being born and residing on the other side of the Atlantic, say in the United Kingdom or Ireland, where some Anonymous hackers have been tried, his punishment in all likelihood would have been less severe. Comparatively speaking, the Irish and British Anonymous cases were remarkably mild. Two Irish hackers who defaced a website received no jail time. In May 2013, after pleading guilty to one charge of hacking the Pentagon and conspiring to hack Sony, Britain’s National Health Service, and Rupert Murdoch’s News International, Ryan “Kayla” Ackroyd was sentenced to 30 months in British jail, of which he served 10; notably, he received no fine or fee. Brown’s restitution fee will virtually guarantee years of indentured servitude.

Like so many hackers, whistleblowers, journalists, and hacktivists who have recently dared to take a stand for press freedom, accountability, and increased transparency, Brown is now paying a steep price. But he wasn’t a hacker. In fact, in 2013 an American hacker, Jeremy Hammond, pleaded guilty to this crime and is currently serving a 10-year sentence for it. Yet Brown still has to pay close to $1 million to Stratfor as if he had been the one to do it. If Stratfor’s vice president of intelligence, Fred Burton, truly lives by the code, “Admit nothing, deny everything and make counter-accusations”—as one email purports—then we can see the importance of the leaks and whistleblowing activities of Anonymous, and also the actions of those like Barrett Brown, who both assisted the collective, and utilized their work in the interest of the public.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 januari 2015 @ 12:53:38 #186
116015 SicSicSics
Crushing Cranial Contents!
pi_149006818
quote:
7s.gif Op vrijdag 23 januari 2015 16:30 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Barrett Brown word vervolgt vanwege Project PM, een onderzoeksproject naar samenwerkende overheden en internetbeveiligingsbedrijven.
Dat hebben ze dan aardig uit de juridische stukken weten te houden. En die tweets en youtubefilmpjes zijn natuurlijk gestaged en/ of uit hun verband getrokken? Of zijn die gewoon acceptabel?
Fine, fuck you then!
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
  zaterdag 24 januari 2015 @ 12:55:15 #187
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149006863
quote:
15s.gif Op zaterdag 24 januari 2015 12:53 schreef SicSicSics het volgende:

[..]

Dat hebben ze dan aardig uit de juridische stukken weten te houden. En die tweets en youtubefilmpjes zijn natuurlijk gestaged en/ of uit hun verband getrokken? Of zijn die gewoon acceptabel?
Deze reeks staat vol links naar gebeurtenissen rond Barrett Brown. Als het je echt interesseert kan je gewoon research plegen.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 januari 2015 @ 12:55:47 #188
116015 SicSicSics
Crushing Cranial Contents!
pi_149006877
quote:
7s.gif Op zaterdag 24 januari 2015 12:55 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:
Deze reeks staat vol links naar gebeurtenissen rond Barrett Brown. Als het je echt interesseert kan je gewoon research plegen.
Ik zal eens rondklikken. ^O^
Fine, fuck you then!
The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts.
  dinsdag 27 januari 2015 @ 12:51:06 #189
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149101662

SPOILER
Om spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 31 januari 2015 @ 18:10:19 #190
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149241037
quote:
My Post Cyberpunk Indentured Servitude

Journalist Barrett Brown looks back in anger at the government’s trumped up charges against him as he starts a 63 month prison sentence.


Not long ago I was a mild-mannered freelance journalist, activist, and satirist, contributing to outlets like the Guardian and Vanity Fair. But last Thursday I was sentenced to 63 months in federal prison in a case that Reporters Without Borders cited as a key factor in its reduction of America’s press freedom rankings from 33 to 46. As inconvenient as this is for me, the upside is that for the first time in the two and a half years since I was arrested, I am at last able to speak freely about what has been happening to me and why—and what it means for the press and the republic as a whole.

A portion of my sentence stems from an attempt I made to conceal from the government the identities of certain contacts of mine: pro-democracy activists living under Middle Eastern dictatorships such as Bahrain, with which the U.S. is known to share intelligence on such things. Another large chunk is due to an admittedly ill-conceived public threat I made—in the midst of opiate withdrawal and what court psychologists say was a manic state brought on by medication issues—to investigate and humiliate an F.B.I. agent, who had himself threatened to indict my mother in an attempt to get me to cooperate against individuals associated with the Anonymous movement (my mother was indeed charged). Though I clearly stated that my intent was not violent, the prosecution claimed that my “victim,” Dallas-based Special Agent Robert Smith, had reason to fear that I might physically harm him and even his children—in which case it is not immediately obvious why the prosecution felt the need to alter the end of the sentence in question when quoting it on the indictment. (My complete statement, (PDF) in which I make a point of noting that I was merely going to proceed along lines spelled out by the FBI-linked contractor C.E.O. Aaron Barr while he was investigating activists on behalf of his corporate clients, and that I was doing so perfunctorily, and merely in order to make a point about the F.B.I.’s traditional reluctance to investigate its allies, has been viewed on YouTube by well over 100,000 people, including the dozens of reporters who have covered the story; none of them seem to agree with the Department of Justice contention that a journalist’s threat to “look into” someone in an explicitly non-violent manner necessarily entails violence.) A separate declaration I made to the effect that I’d defend my family from any illegal armed raids by the government, while silly and bombastic, was not actually illegal under the threats statutes. To judge from similar comments made by Senator Joni Ernst, it would not even have necessarily precluded me from delivering the G.O.P.’s recent response to the State of the Union address.

But the charges that prompted the most international outrage were those alleging fraud. In late 2011, I copied and pasted a link to a publicly-available file, which chat transcripts introduced in court showed that I initially believed to contain the same leaked corporate emails I’d long been in the habit of reviewing for my Guardian articles. The file turned out to contain customer data, including credit card numbers. Although the government’s own forensics showed that I never opened the file, the D.O.J. contended (PDF) that I had thereby engaged in 11 counts of aggravated identity theft, punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of 22 years in federal prison.

The feds were eventually forced to drop these precedent-setting charges, after which I agreed to plea to the spurious make-believe crimes described above, so as to avoid the perils of a Texas jury. (As the government itself warned in a 2013 public filing, (PDF) my status as an atheist would have seriously damaged my ability to get a fair trial here in Dallas—although one might wonder how a jury would know I’m an atheist unless the government made a point of bringing it up, as they did, say, in that 2013 public filing.)

I also had to plea to an Accessory After the Fact charge for having contacted the corporate espionage outfit Stratfor after some Anonymous-affiliated hackers stole several million of the firm’s emails and vowed to publish them online; I offered to arrange with the hackers to redact any of those communications that could potentially have endangered any foreign contacts if made public. For this, I will not only serve additional prison time, but have also been ordered to pay the company over $800,000—which is to say that I will spend the rest of my life in a strange state of post-cyberpunk indentured servitude to an amoral private intelligence firm that’s perhaps best known for having spied on Bhopal activists on behalf of Dow Chemical. That the prosecution did not quite manage to articulate how I did any damage to this particular company did not seem to dissuade U.S. District Judge Sam A. Lindsay in this matter. Likewise, His Honor did not express any visible interest in the fact that the F.B.I. itself has acknowledged having actually overseen the hack on Stratfor via its confidential informant, Hector “Sabu” Monsegur, who recently appeared in a national television interview with Charlie Rose to discuss his role in these matters.

Quite understandably, most media coverage of last week’s sentencing hearing has focused on the exciting twist ending. Despite having dropped the notorious “linking” charges, the government still managed to convince Judge Lindsay to hold me responsible for the act of copying and pasting a link—a link that was already public, and which led to a file which was already itself public, and to which other journalists had also linked without being prosecuted for it—by way of a sentencing mechanism known as “relevant conduct.” In doing so, Judge Lindsay stated that this would not actually cause any concern among journalists—an exquisitely bizarre claim insomuch as countless journalists have been expressing concern over this very matter since the charges were first brought in 2012, with Wired’s Quinn Norton even having testified at a prior hearing that she herself would have been subject to such prosecution not only in the Stratfor affair, but throughout much of her career reporting on online security. In the wake of last week’s sentencing, Norton announced she could no longer report on security breaches and advised her colleagues to refrain as well.

I will leave it to Judge Lindsay to explain to the concerned members of the press that they are not actually concerned; based on the commentary that’s now coming out of outlets ranging from the U.S. News & World Report to The Intercept and the Columbia Journalism Review, His Honor has a big job ahead of him. Instead, I will merely point out the other major scandal inherent to this case, one which has so far gone largely unreported—that in addition to having lost the “right to link” journalists have also now lost the “right to quote.” In trying to make the case that I was a violent threat to Agent Smith, the prosecution attributed to me the following statement: “Dead men can’t leak stuff … illegally shoot the son of a bitch.” I will admit that this is clearly an outright call for murder, and thus would certainly seem to warrant an F.B.I. investigation. The problem is that it wasn’t I who uttered this, but rather Fox News commentator Bob Beckel, who said it on national television in the course of a no-doubt productive discussion about Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. I had merely quoted the statement on my Twitter feed—in disapproval, of course, as I happen to admire Assange, and he, himself, has put out a statement expressing astonishment that the U.S. government would attribute to me a call for his murder made by someone else on a major cable news network. Now, it would be one thing if this had simply been a misunderstanding on the part of the D.O.J., which, in all fairness, was clearly in a rush to flesh out its fabricated case against me. But when my attorneys pointed this out in a motion to dismiss the charge, the prosecutor, Candina Heath, actually stuck to her guns, arguing that, by quoting this, I had “promoted” the idea. Among many other things, this leaves open the question of why Bob Beckel has not been indicted. The answer is that, unlike me, Beckel did not spend much of 2011 investigating the full extent of the Team Themis conspiracy, in which F.B.I.-linked contracting firms prepared a covert and criminal scheme by which to launch cyber-attacks in a campaign of intimidation against activists and journalists deemed supportive of Wikileaks—a conspiracy that, as the press and even some members of Congress noted at the time that it was foiled and made public by Anonymous, had been put in motion by none other than the D.O.J. itself.

The dozen or so Americans who still have faith in the essential decency of the D.O.J., despite the assorted scandals of the last 15 years, might find it hard to believe that the charges against me were actually prompted by my efforts to bring attention to the agency’s own wrong-doing. It’s a fine thing, then, that the late journalist Michael Hastings saw fit to publish a copy of the original search warrants in my case, which list Themis firms HBGary Federal and Endgame Systems as subjects to be searched among my files, along with echelon2.org, the website on which my colleagues and I posted our research on the matter. Stratfor, the firm I allegedly cost almost a million dollars via a single phone call, is left unmentioned.

But what should worry Americans most is not that the various frightening aspects of this case can fill a rather wordy article. What should worry them is that this is not even that article. The great bulk of the government’s demonstrable lies, contradictions, and instances of perjury are still sealed and thus unavailable to the public. Other matters are just now coming to light, such as the revelation, two days before my sentencing, that the D.O.J. had withheld from my defense team sealed chat transcripts from the Jeremy Hammond hacking case which contradicted its key claim that I was a co-conspirator in the Stratfor hack. And there are still other aspects of all this, such as the F.B.I.’s seizure of my copy of the Declaration of Independence as evidence of my criminal activity, that I blush to even commit to print, lest I not be believed, even despite the F.B.I. itself having now confirmed it.

Suffice to say that I shall produce a far more comprehensive account of this whole affair later this year, even if I have few illusions that it will make much difference; a state that had reason to fear the press would not have acted as openly as it has, for as long as it has, and to such ends as it has. If anyone needs me in the meantime, I’ll be in prison.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 1 februari 2015 @ 16:19:12 #191
93076 BaajGuardian
De echte BG, die tof is.
pi_149266481

die mensen hebben macht he, is dat niet mooienheid.
vertegenwoordigers van de v.s. met joysticks in hun schoot.
Vraag yvonne maar hoe tof ik ben, die gaf mij er ooit een tagje voor.
  donderdag 5 februari 2015 @ 15:29:52 #192
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149389869
quote:
The government's cyberterrorism 'concerns' are a pretext for their own hacking operations

Jeremy Hammond

The US has always been the world leader of cyberwar, hacking damn near everyone without any repercussions. And, for years, US intelligence officials and private contractors have been milking hacks to secure billions in cyber security programs: all you need is an enemy, and they will sell you the cure.

Their blatant hypocrisy, threat inflation and militaristic rhetoric must be challenged if we are to have a free and equal internet.

That familiar formula is playing out again with the recent Sony hack. We are supposed to be shocked that these “cyber-terrorists” – purportedly from North Korea – would attack our critical infrastructure and, clearly swift retaliation is in order. But, despite the apocalyptic hype, the Sony hack was not fundamentally different from any other high-profile breach in recent years: personal information was stolen, embarrassing private emails were published and silly political rhetoric and threats were posted on Pastebin. In many ways, it’s similar to an Anonymous operation except that, this time, the FBI accused North Korea. That accusation was based on supposed forensic analysis which they have not publicly produced after refusing to participate in joint inquiries.
This official narrative is disputed by many renowned infosec figures. Any skilled hacker or well-financed nation-state practices anti-forensics measures like modifying logs and using proxies to make the attacks appear to originate elsewhere. And North Korea has already been falsely accused of several cyber-attacks – including attacks against US and South Korean targets in July 2009 and again in 2013. The inherent difficulty of identifying the true attackers should give us pause
before we rush to judgment.

It is, however, the perfect pretext for the US to launch their own hacking operations (not that they’ve ever needed any justification before).

Authorities are once again sounding the cyber-terrorist alarm, promoting a “Free Speech vs North Korea” showdown because the attackers were allegedly angry about The Interview, a comedy about a CIA plot to assassinate Kim Jong Un (which Sony reportedly consulted with the State Department and the right-wing RAND Corporation to produce). I am not able to see the movie from prison, so I can’t give you a proper critique; maybe it is amusing but, considering the CIA’s long and vicious history of assassinations, secret prisons, torture, extrajudicial executions-by-drone and overthrowing democratically-elected governments to install dictatorships, it is not at all surprising Sony would get hacked for making a movie gloating about that.

Sony, too, is an unusual poster child for free-speech advocates in light of their history of lawsuits in defense of their “intellectual property”. Years ago, my LulzSec comrades hacked Sony in retaliation for their prosecution of an individual who published information on how to jailbreak the Playstation 3. (Citing the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, Sony sued not only the original publisher but attempted to go after everyone who even watched the instructional video on YouTube.) This time, Sony’s army of lawyers have threatened news organizations and individual Twitter accounts with lawsuits in an atrocious and ultimately ineffective attempt to prevent discussion of their now-public internal emails, demonstrating exactly how they feel about the First Amendment.
When I think about free speech, I am not crying over a multi-billion dollar tech and media empire staging the withdrawal of their movies from theaters to generate PR for a record online release a week later. I’m thinking about the Alien Registration Act, the Palmer raids, the red scares, the Haymarket Martyrs, COINTELPRO and the House of Unamerican Activities. I think about the harassment of whistleblowers and journalists like Chelsea Manning, Barrett Brown, Julian Assange, James Risen and others, the protesters driven out of public parks at Occupy Wall Street and those that continue to be beaten and arrested at anti-police brutality protests. For seeking the truth, voicing our dissent, and demanding justice, we are criminalized and treated like terrorists.

Invoking the threat of “terrorism” is the biggest smoke-and-mirrors mechanism used to deny citizens both due process and free speech in the 21st century. Law enforcement agents use that word to summon images of 9/11 and Pearl Harbor and stoke public fear into justifying their mass surveillance dragnet – monitoring each and every communication, every internet transaction. The primary targets of these abuses have been Muslims and immigrants, but trumped-up federal terrorism charges have entrapped activists like the Cleveland Five and various earth and animal liberation warriors. Now the latest enemy is “cyber-terrorism”: the governments insist that our critical infrastructure is under attack, and we need draconian new measures to protect our “national security”.

Sensational Hollywood movies like “Live Free, Die Hard” and the new “Blackhat” propagate this false narrative with ridiculous and unfeasible “terrorist” hacker attacks on nuclear facilities and the power grid. No attacks like this have ever happened, but there is an active effort to recruit independent hackers to sell out and work for the man, purportedly to defend US networks and catch the bad guys.

But when the FBI did arrest a supposed “blackhat” – Hector Monsegur, aka Sabu – and turned him into an informant, they were more interested in hacking targets of their own choosing than preventing attacks on US targets. Despite live knowledge of our ongoing hacking operations through Sabu, they were unable (or unwilling) to stop me from following through with dozens of high profile hacks; some, like the Stratfor breach, they helped facilitate. Instead, Sabu asked me to hack hundreds of foreign government websites from a list he provided, which I regrettably did, unaware of his status as an informant.

And that’s what this hype of “cyber-terrorism” is all about: establishing pretexts for our ongoing offensive hacking operations. “...As we implement these responses, some will be seen, others may not be seen”, a State Department spokeswoman said as North Korea was hit with repeat cyber-attacks shutting down their internet while more economic sanctions are imposed (through which everyday North Koreans suffer). But for all the accusations against North Korea and China, there is no question that the US has always been the world leader in cyber-warfare. Amongst Snowden’s revelations was evidence of the US/Israeli STUXNET, FLAME and DuQu viruses, which infected hundreds of thousands of computers in dozens of countries. They hacked into corporations like Brazil’s Petrobas, news agencies like Al Jazeera, DDOS’d Anonymous chat servers, and even tapped the personal cellphones of world leaders. Our unparalleled efforts to assert military-style dominance over the internet is forcing other countries to develop their own hacking units, leading to a digital arms race which makes us all less safe.

If the US truly wanted to stop the proliferation of nation-state hacking, they would push for UN conferences to establish guidelines defining and prohibiting “cyber-warfare”. This would require coming clean and putting an end to their own operations, but if they won’t even abide by the Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war and the use of torture, there’s no reason to expect they wouldn’t continue hacking in secret. Just as the US government want a monopoly on the use of military force – waging wars to “spread democracy” while condemning those who fight back as “terrorists” – they correspondingly seek a monopoly on the use of hacking. Congress enhances computer crime statutes and the FBI locks up “bad guy” hackers like myself, while recruiting others to work for the government to commit attacks against sovereign countries. Then everyone acts surprised when foreign countries start using the same tactics on us.

When those in power break their own laws then there is no law and no moral authority; there are just competing factions in an international power struggle to control resources like oil, land, drugs and information. Like all wars, only the rich ruling class benefits, and everyone else suffers.

A different kind of cyber-war is possible: not one between nation-states but between the people and their governments.The internet’s natural state is anarchy and any attempts to militarize or corporatize it will be owned, exposed and driven offline anyway. I shed no tears when I hear about Sony, CENTCOM or police departments being hacked. In prison, we love hearing about all the bigshots getting hacked by guys like us. So keep on, true-to-the-code blackhats for great justice: instead of selling out your skills to the industry competing for federal contracts supporting US empire, actively undermine it by contributing anti-state solutions by developing encryption, anti-censorship and anonymity infrastructure. We’re cheering for you.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 februari 2015 @ 21:19:05 #193
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149401799
#OpDeathEaters:

quote:
quote:
Infamous hacker group Anonymous have called for several demonstrations in the UK to protest against what they believe is a huge coverup of paedophile networks by “those who are meant to protect”.

Anonymous have recently turned their attention to international and institutional paedophiles, including those connected to the Westminster child sex abuse scandal currently unfolding in the UK. The group are now calling for people to ‘take to the streets’ next Friday in London’s Trafalgar Square, Glasgow and Essex.

Heather Marsh, speaking on behalf of the group, explained that “Operation Death Eaters”, as the project is referred to, is not only seeking to expose those responsible for the crimes, but also those who enabled the sexual abuse to continue.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 9 februari 2015 @ 14:51:22 #194
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149508374
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 februari 2015 @ 14:41:53 #195
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149601139
YourAnonCentral twitterde op donderdag 12-02-2015 om 06:56:29 Netherlands Feb 13 Event | Location Amsterdam: https://t.co/B6gsmn6MKB #OpDeathEaters reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 februari 2015 @ 21:07:36 #196
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149613549
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 20 februari 2015 @ 14:28:15 #197
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_149857214
quote:
quote:
A 28-year-old hacker currently serving a six-month prison sentence for computer crimes now says that authorities asked him to help the United States gather information on Mexican drug cartels, then charged him with dozens of counts after he refused.

Fidel Salinas of Texas started his half-year prison sentence last Friday, according to court documents obtained by RT, three months after he accepted a plea deal that saw him owning up to a single count of accessing without authorization the computer system of Hidalgo County in 2012. The activity was part of an operation that authorities say involved the hacktivist collective Anonymous.

This Wednesday, however, Wired reported that Salinas said ahead of surrendering to US Marshals last week that the agreement he reached with the Department of Justice was hardly the first time that the two had discussed a deal.

According to Wired, Salinas told journalist Andy Greenberg that agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation attempted to recruit him to assist with the FBI’s own intelligence gathering operations in 2013. After Salinas shot them down, he soon found himself being charged with dozens of counts through no fewer than four indictments filed in US District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

In May 2013, Greenberg wrote this week, the FBI interrogated Salinas for six hours, during which they allegedly asked him to harness his cyber skills in order to help federal authorities gather intelligence on Mexican drug cartels — a previous target of Anonymous.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 27 februari 2015 @ 21:42:12 #198
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150126384
quote:
quote:
Anonymous, that group of masked “terrorists” who have taken on everything from ISIS to tiger hunters to high school bullies to the credit card industry has a new target this week. That would be Daniel Rosen, the US State Department’s Director of Counterterrorism Programs and Policy, and a natural enough target for payback from the hacktivists whom he has targeted, but business-as-usual hostility aside, there’s a whole new reason that the swashbuckling collective has this senior government official in its sights. His arrest Tuesday on charges of soliciting sex from a minor falls squarely within the scope of #OpDeathEaters, the enormous international operation to identify, expose, and remove pedophiles from positions of power in the elites of world governments.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_150144596
^O^
“Integrity is doing the right thing, even when no one is watching.”
― C.S. Lewis
  zondag 1 maart 2015 @ 14:31:37 #200
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150176866

quote:
#Gitmo2Chicago: protests target police 'black site'

Homan Square abuse allegations encircle mayor Rahm Emanuel as Anonymous, Occupy and Black Lives Matter take to social media and streets beyond Chicago

The Chicago police facility Homan Square was becoming the focus of an organized protest movement this weekend, as the hacktivist collective Anonymous and organizers associated with the Black Lives Matter movement seized on allegations of unconstitutional abuse at the secretive warehouse.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, the former top adviser to Barack Obama suddenly facing a runoff for re-election, remained at the political fulcrum of a mounting campaign both on social media and the streets of Chicago, where demonstrations were planned for Saturday outside what coordinated campaigners described as mirroring a CIA “black site”.

Organizer Travis McDermott said Saturday’s “Shut Down Homan Square” protest was one of several being planned as far away as Los Angeles.

“Hopefully with the presence we expect to have, that will put a little bit of pressure to say, ‘Hey, look – this isn’t going to go away,’” he said.

On Friday night, campaigners associated with the Occupy and Anonymous collectives took to Twitter, Instagram and other social-media platforms with the hashtag #Gitmo2Chicago to decry allegations of what users alternatively labeled as a “secret prison” and “torture soon coming to a city near you”.

Six people and multiple Chicago attorneys came forward to the Guardian this week with detailed accounts of police holding suspects and witnesses for sustained periods of detention inside Homan Square, without public records, access to attorneys or being read their most basic rights – involving what they said included shackling, physical abuse and being “disappeared” from legal counsel and family. The Guardian’s recent investigation into Chicago police brutality began the week before, with a two-part account of the tactics of Detective Richard Zuley, who went from Chicago homicide investigator to Guantánamo Bay torturer.
Het artikel gaat verder.

[ Bericht 9% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 01-03-2015 14:37:31 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 4 maart 2015 @ 12:52:41 #201
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150279551
quote:
The U.S. Government Should Pay Anonymous in Bitcoin to Fight ISIS

“We are Muslims, Christians, Jews,” the wire-frame Guy Fawkes mask announces in an eerie robot voice. “We are hackers, crackers, hacktivists, phishers, agents, spies, or just the guy from next door…. ISIS, we will hunt you, take down your sites, accounts, emails, and expose you…. You will be treated like a virus and we are the cure. We own the Internet.”

The “we” here is Anonymous, the vaunted global hacking collective that launched a furious online offensive against the Islamic State in early February, and which declared war on the group shortly after the fall of Mosul last June. As the alternative Counter Current News reported (and as Anonymous #OpISIS YouTube videos proudly trumpeted), these attacks exposed more than 6,600 Islamic State-linked Twitter accounts, along with 2,000 email addresses and about 100 IP/VPN channels. Several of the group’s major recruiting sites were also knocked offline.

But Fawkes’s wire-frame visage sounded about as frustrated as a robot voice can in a subsequent video released on Feb. 11, announcing a third attack. “With our last Operation ISIS, we showed the world and especially governments it’s not that hard to fight back ISIS online. So why’s no government doing it?”

Great question. How is it that the U.S. government, capable of coordinating a complex air campaign from nearly 6,000 miles away, remains virtually powerless against the Islamic State’s online messaging and distribution network? For months, the militant group’s horrifying, crisply edited videos of death marches, beheadings, and immolations have churned their way through the social media landscape, commanding near-instantaneous global attention. Add to this the group’s use of more intimate web platforms for international recruiting (20,000 foreign fighters from 90 countries at last count), and the scope of the problem only widens.

These online mouthpieces carry immense strategic value. The Islamic State’s June 2014 offensive into Mosul, for instance, was accompanied by a well-choreographed social media campaign, sowing terror and confusion far in advance of its fighters. Tellingly, when the Iraqi government finally acted, it did so by banning its own citizens’ access to Facebook and Twitter. Within the last month, videos of the Islamic State’s atrocities have resonated so strongly with citizens of Jordan and Egypt that they’ve provoked armed escalation and retaliation by these Arab governments. This is arguably exactly what the Islamic State wants.

If the United States is struggling to counter the Islamic State’s dispersed, rapidly regenerative online presence, why not turn to groups native to this digital habitat? Why not embrace the efforts of third-party hackers like Anonymous to dismantle the Islamic State — and even give them the resources to do so?

To date, the State Department’s tiny Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications — with its 21,000-follower “Think Again Turn Away” Twitter account — has been the tip of the spear in the U.S. effort to short-circuit the Islamic State’s propaganda machine. At best, its efforts are like spitting in the wind. At worst, it has been an embarrassment, as when the account confused al Qaeda and the Islamic State in a much-maligned tweet that baffled jihadis around the globe.

Although the Obama administration has announced a significant expansion of the office and put forth an encouraging plan to empower networks of university students to counter violent extremism online, these initiatives only address half the problem. As anyone who’s ever gotten in a political debate on Twitter can tell you, the availability of a viable counter-narrative in no way guarantees that somebody will actually listen to it. A remarkable number of people seek out information online with their minds firmly made up. Just as the United States must push back against Islamic State messaging, it must also take steps to tear out its voice box.

Those best suited to this task are not necessarily the thousands of professional hackers at U.S. Cyber Command and related agencies, who are trained and equipped to counter cyberattacks by rogue states and sophisticated non-state actors. Instead, the U.S. government should look to those unaffiliated, socially minded hackers (“hacktivists”) who have their own reasons to despise the Islamic State. This includes self-declared, underutilized “white hat” hackers, who use their expertise to test and improve the cyber-defenses of companies. It also includes those individuals and hacktivist collectives like Anonymous who have had a traditionally antagonistic relationship with the U.S. government.

Although a quick stroll through the 4chan image board, Anonymous’s early nesting ground, makes a terrible first impression, the fact is that hacktivists do have a moral compass. The targets selected by Anonymous and other groups — the recording industry and movie studios following the forced shutdown of a popular file-sharing website, accused rapists in Steubenville, Ohio, and even the United States government (following the federal indictment and suicide of hacker Aaron Schwartz) — suggest a loose set of guiding principles. Indeed, Anonymous even briefly joined the Syrian civil war when it hacked the email account of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in 2012. As a rule, hacktivists despise bullying, hypocrisy, and fundamentalism. The Islamic State couldn’t present a clearer target.

What might a U.S. “partnership” with dispersed, largely unaccountable — if not uncontrollable — groups of shadowy individuals often at odds with U.S. laws look like?

It’s a radical idea: a nonprofit foundation, sponsored by the anti-Islamic State coalition and funded through a mix of U.S. public support and private contributions. (Think NPR doing bounty-hunting.) This small institution could issue bite-sized rewards (or tote bags?) for proof of the identification or elimination of Islamic State-linked social media accounts, VPN/IP channels, recruiting websites, or any other sort of online refuge. Defining “proof” here would be a significant engineering challenge — but certainly not as hard as flying unmanned space planes or deploying Star Wars lasers.

Such bounties could be paid in Bitcoin, an anonymized, volatile cryptocurrency that’s understandably “suspect” to the U.S. government, but that remains popular among secretive online communities. By authorizing the use of Bitcoin, officials would be extending a fig leaf to the world’s hacktivists, respecting those critical hacker values of freedom and anonymity. Any other system — involving traceable payments or even potential registration as federal contractors — would almost certainly combust in a storm of paranoia and lightning accusations of government surveillance.

So long as the initiative attracted attention and payment proved quick, reliable, and tamper-proof — critical when dealing with hackers — it could open a new front in the digital war against the Islamic State. Already, social media administrators are struggling to shut down jihadi accounts at a pace that’s not even close to that with which they are being opened. A crowdsourced hacktivist army could supplement those efforts, identifying and flagging new nodes in the Islamic State’s network the moment they began attracting followers. These paid volunteers could also harass the Islamic State with phishing and distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks — the bread and butter of today’s online vigilantes. Strong verification mechanisms could incentivize a more surgical approach to identifications and attacks, limiting collateral damage.

The effect would be to exert a constant pressure on the Islamic State’s digital operations. Social media companies like Twitter, which have been fighting a long-running game of whack-a-mole against the Islamic State, could get a huge boost in their never-ending effort to track down targets. Long lists of jihadi accounts, compiled by hacktivists and verified by government proxies, could be sent to the immediate attention of social media monitors. Likewise, brute-force DDoS assaults (which overwhelm servers’ nonstop connection requests) against Islamic State websites and forum boards could stymie its global coordination and recruiting drives. Other, stealthier attacks could sow confusion among Islamic State supporters, as with Anonymous’s recent hack that compromised more than 2,000 emails.

The goal would be to push the Islamic State into deeper and deeper parts of the web. No longer would grisly execution videos trend so quickly worldwide; no longer could the Islamic State so easily pull the strings of public attention. As prospective jihadis (particularly in the West) found it harder to establish contact with recruiters in Iraq and Syria, governments would find it easier to identify and stop them. In time, the Islamic State’s global reach and influence would wane.

This sort of partnership wouldn’t require any deeper mending of the rifts between hacktivists and the U.S. government. Those attacking the Islamic State and seeking anonymized payment could be greeted with a simple message: “You don’t like us and we often don’t like you. Performing this service will in no way immunize you from applicable domestic laws, now or in the future. But we share a common enemy and will defeat it best by working together.”

If individuals and groups like Anonymous are performing this service for free today, why pay them? It’s a question that speaks to the dynamics of these decentralized groups. The fact is that, while loose hacktivist collectives are excellent at mounting one-time “operations” to disrupt or disable target networks, they’re much less effective at sustaining that pressure over the long run. Those involved can get bored or distracted. The effort can fizzle.

This poses a problem. After all, there will never be a single decisive moment — an online Battle of the Bulge — that drives the Islamic State off the Internet for good. So long as the group exists, its fighters will always gravitate toward online services to achieve their goals of international terrorism and recruitment. Accordingly, rolling back the Islamic State’s virtual operations will be a continual task, akin to spraying for pests or mowing a really big lawn. This is the kind of job you pay for.

“Enlisting trolls to fight trolls” sounds like a surreal, distinctly 21st-century idea. It’s not. The United States has often embraced unlikely collaborators to realize strategic goals. In the early 1940s, tens of thousands of American Jeeps rumbled into Nazi Germany — driven by Soviet soldiers. In the 1980s, Afghan mujahideen shot down Soviet helicopters with U.S.-supplied Stinger missiles. In the war-torn Iraq of 2007, the United States showered money on previously hostile Sunni tribes to finally quash al Qaeda’s influence. Even today, Washington navigates tenuous partnerships with Iranian-backed Shiite militias and the terrorist-designated Kurdistan Workers’ Party. By comparison, offering micropayments to socially minded hackers comes across as fairly benign. U.S. soldiers are less likely to one day find themselves on the wrong end of a U.S.-supplied piece of crypto-currency.

There are plenty of fair objections and points of criticism to a plan like this. For one, it’s truly a stretch to imagine the U.S. government buying up Bitcoin with public money — something that the Internal Revenue Service classifies a highly speculative form of property. Likewise, in an arrangement where hacktivists’ real identities would never be compromised, there could be no guarantee that these hackers would not be using U.S. government money to attack websites under U.S. legal protection (the kind of absurd perpetual-motion machine only federal policy could devise). Finally, the sanctioned employment of hacktivists would push against international norms that have long banned hacking and piracy. This model, harnessed by another government at a later date, could potentially imperil the same U.S. interests it now stands to aid.

Nonetheless, rallying a cybermilitia via a smart system of micropayments — therefore expanding the war against the Islamic State without compromising hacktivists’ fringe credentials — is still preferable to ham-fisted alternatives. Too much direct U.S. legal pressure on companies like Twitter, for instance, would run the risk of nationalizing what have become global platforms for conversation and debate. Trying to legislate the Islamic State off the web will do more harm than good. A real, lasting solution requires unorthodox thinking and respect for what the Internet has become.

In Iraq and Syria, kinetic operations against the Islamic State are proceeding, limiting the reach and power of the insurgent group. Yet on the Internet — on web services and servers largely based in the United States — the Islamic State still operates with impunity. For a war effort that hinges on the marginalization and rejection of its propaganda, this represents a gaping vulnerability. It’s long been a maxim of U.S. military operations that no safe haven should be left to the enemy. This thinking must now extend to the Islamic State’s terrible, pioneering use of the cyber-domain.

Loosely affiliated hacktivists have spent years honing their ability to harass and disrupt in this same domain. They also hate the Islamic State and all it stands for. Why not work with them?
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 7 maart 2015 @ 20:52:34 #202
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150396934
quote:
quote:
On March 11, Adam Bennett -- known by most as the radio voice of Anonymous, LoraxLive, who was arrested last year for alleged computer crimes -- will finally learn what he's being charged with.

This had been expected to happen this week. Instead, at the last minute, Australian Commonwealth prosecutors -- for the third time since the case began 10 months ago -- requested another delay to change its lineup of accusations against him.

Maddeningly, the prosecution also indicated it will be dropping its initial charges against Bennett, and adding a slew of new ones.

One charge the prosecution will be keeping is what amounts to criminal charges for a proof-of-concept penetration test of the Heartbleed vulnerability Bennett performed to check his employer's security.

Adam John Bennett was arrested and raided by Australian Federal Police on May 22nd, 2014 for allegedly hacking into AAPT Telecommunications and Indonesian government websites in 2012 as part of actions claimed by hacktivist entity Anonymous.

AAPT confirmed it was breached in July 2012, following claims by an Australian sect of Anonymous that it snatched 40GB of data from the major Australian internet service provider (ISP).

After stripping out personally identifiable information from the data (which included members of the Australian government), Anonymous released the data to raise awareness around expectations of data security: To demonstrate that if an ISP as large and trusted as AAPT can't keep its own data secure, it will be unable to keep Australians' data safe under the proposed laws.

At the time of the incident, Anonymous stated that breaching the ISP's systems was "not a one-man task" and that several people worked on the attack.

Soon to become law, the Australian government's controversial security expansion proposals state that ISPs would be required to store user activity online for a period of two years, including social networking and emails, and that intelligence agencies would be given increased access to sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

The proposal paper was released by the Attorney-General's Department for consideration by Parliament's joint houses Committee on Intelligence and National Security "to protect the nation."

It was announced this week that this globally controversial data retention scheme is currently before Parliament and is expected to pass. Perhaps the Anonymous incident is what inspired the legislators to recently add security requirements for Australian telcos to provide notification in the event of a security breach of its data stores, which will be mandated to be encrypted.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_150412206
quote:
“We are Muslims, Christians, Jews,” the wire-frame Guy Fawkes mask announces in an eerie robot voice. “We are hackers, crackers, hacktivists, phishers, agents, spies, or just the guy from next door…. ISIS, we will hunt you, take down your sites, accounts, emails, and expose you…. You will be treated like a virus and we are the cure.
Mooi dat zo'n organisatie als anonymus daar wat aan doet, aan ISIS! ^O^
“Integrity is doing the right thing, even when no one is watching.”
― C.S. Lewis
  maandag 9 maart 2015 @ 19:11:28 #204
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150468463
quote:
Anonymous is asking you to boycott these brands #OpDDD

In response to The Daily Dot providing Hector “Sabu the snitch” Monsegur with a writing position, Anonymous has launched #OpDDD (Destroy Daily Dot). The operation asks that all Anons and sympathizers unlike and unfollow the Daily Dot. It also requests that Anons immediately begin boycotting the following brands:

Vice
American Apparel
Drink Advisor
Kia
Smartwater
Best Buy
Deep Eddy Vodka
Federated Media
Tumblr

These brands are listed on the Daily Dot’s media page and appear to be advertisers.

Anonymous released a statement that says, in part:

. “Anonymous does not attack media nor does it censor it, however there are various ways to hold those who build their media empires and careers on the backs of movements, actions, and individuals accountable. #OpDDD / Operation Destroy Daily Dot is a boycott action, given that Daily Dot was given its credibility, celebrity, and wealth on the back of Anonymous and our operations, we seek to destroy it in the same manner it rose.”

For more information about Hector Monsegur, click here.

For the original Anonymous Pastebin, click here.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 12 maart 2015 @ 18:26:36 #205
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150571247
quote:
quote:
#OpISIS Hacktivist collective Anonymous down 5elafabook pronounced Khelafabook just when it went live, Facebook bans its FB offshoot

A pro-ISIS website and Facebook page met an untimely death at the hands of Anonymous and Facebook admin.

5elafabook which is pronounced Khelafabook and meaning “Caliphate book” went live with a message that it was a independent website/FB page and did not have links to the Islamic State.

However, Facebook, which has been pretty strict with pro-IS fan pages, found that khelafabook shared the same ideology as IS, so banned its Facebook account. Khelafabook was espousing the martyrdom tenets of IS as well wanted a worldwide implementation of Sharia.

The page however continued to operate till the Anonymous pounced on it.

The khalefabook FB page and website were brought to the notice of Anonymous, who have already sounded a call against the ISIS and its affiliates after the gruesome shooting of innocents at Charlie Hebdo office in Paris. The Anonymous operation called #OpISIS is a continuing operation, and Anonymous have successfully brought down several pro-ISIS websites and got several of their Twitter/Facebook pages banned.

Anonymous launched a full scale DDoS attack against the khalefabook and it had to go offline within hours after it was launched. Announcing the successful completion of bringing it down, Anonymous tweeted :
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 15 maart 2015 @ 21:46:24 #206
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150679076
quote:
quote:
Some people are speculating that the Anonymous group of hacktivists have attacked the BBC website over the suspension of Jeremy Clarkson.

The BBC website was down for a period of time on Saturday afternoon, and the Mirror, which carried the story at the top of its site, claims the group of hackers followed through on a threat from earlier in the week.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 21 maart 2015 @ 10:13:03 #207
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150876709
quote:
quote:
In the realm of social media wars, some are more fraught than others. There are the inevitable, tiresome third-glass-of-Malbec Friday night spats, and then there are the ones where lives, and possibly immortal souls, are at stake.

Anonymous is expert in both.

For months now, Anonymous has been doing what it does best. Not hacking. Not DDoSing to take websites offline. Nope. What they do best is hunt people, find those people, and taking them out, whatever it takes. And now they are after ISIS.
quote:
The Pentagon, meanwhile, appears less than pleased at the success of OpISIS. When you’re at war and civilians keep picking off your enemies every time their heads pop over the trenches, it decreases your ability to track and infiltrate the opposite side. Then again, they aren’t that good at keeping the Cyber Caliphate out of their own accounts; perhaps they should just delegate this front to Anons.

It seems to have been the claim by the American “patriot hacker” @th3j35t3r that he was responsible for many takedowns in OpCharlieHebdo that prodded Anonymous into getting off the fence and into action. They do loathe the Jester, and would not stand by while he took credit for what members claim were Anonymous victories.

Because of Anonymous’ big tent nature, there are both fundamentalist Muslims and fundamentalist Christians within its ranks, which makes any operation against an international religious-identified group a more complicated matter than it would be in a smaller, more homogeneous group.

Of #OpIceISIS, we shall not speak, except to mention that it came from the apparently compromised account @TheAnonMessage, which has gained media attention but not support within the Hive for numerous cases of doxing the wrong person (as in #OpFerguson) and announcing spurious wars between Anonymous and Iggy Azalea and (most recently) Kanye West. That operation has not gained widespread support, and appears to have died out.

There are multiple subgroups within Anonymous participating in OpISIS. Redcult has recently come to the fore, with a number of verified tangodowns, while previously long-established crew AnonGhost had led the kill tally. AnonGhost is known for strongly pro-Palestinian sentiment and actions, and OpISIS has not been universally welcomed within the team. While there has been no schism per se within the group, AnonGhost has taken a back seat to Redcult in recent weeks in terms of proclaimed victories.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 23 maart 2015 @ 11:30:21 #208
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150942806
quote:
Spooks left 'furious' after Anonymous hacktivists name and shame 9,200 ISIS supporters, sources claim

Is the drive to silence jihadis on social media closing down a key source of intelligence?

Anonymous hacktivists' have named and shamed around 9,200 ISIS members - prompting claims the shadowy group's actions are hampering the war against extremists.

Earlier this week, masked hacktivists handed Twitter a list of accounts thought to be operated by Islamic State fighters, supporters and recruiters, before calling on the social network to shut them down.

An industry source told us spooks had "concerns" about shutting down social media accounts.

Social media profiles one of the best ways of gathering intelligence on fighters in Syria and Iraq.

Experts and hackers also warned this drive to silence ISIS might simply drive it underground into the "dark web" where no-one can reach them.

A separate source with a close understanding of intelligence agencies and Twitter told us spies were frustrated with attempts to silence jihadis.

"Twitter will generally remove accounts when asked by the police," he said. "But MI5 and MI6 are furious when this happens, because it removes their ability to watch jihadis and gather intelligence."

We have spoken with hackers who were on the verge of identifying a key ISIS recruiter when contact suddenly went dead.

They had posed as a wannabe fighter and been invited deep into the online sanctum of ISIS.

They were planning to infect targets with "malware" capable of recording video footage to identify key recruiters to the police or military.

But suddenly many of the extremists they were hunting on Twitter and other social media disappeared.

"Deleting ISIS accounts is not hurting them, but it is wrecking our attempts to carry out surveillance operations," the hackers told us.

"ISIS are vanishing. If they go into the dark web, they are beyond anyone's reach."

The hackers showed us chat records they had managed to obtain from ISIS supporters' social media accounts.

One showed fighters in Syria telling superiors they had run out of ammunition - a useful piece of tactical information.

They hoped to gather much more data and hand it to the military, before the Anonymous campaign shut down their sources.

"All Anonymous has done is make ISIS more tech-savvy and cut off the information supply," they said.

Experts told us that silencing jihadis on social media closed down a key source of intelligence.

Jamie Bartlett, director of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media at the think tank Demos, said: "It is definitely important that Anonymous be involved in the war against ISIS because they are very good people to have as part of the fight.

"But on the whole, I think it's better to see what ISIS are doing. There are very few ways to gather intelligence about what's happening in Syria."

Abu Abdullah Britani, the nom de guerre of a British man who claims to be fighting in Syria, said social media blocks would not stop the Islamic State from spreading its message.

"The Twitter ban is useless and isn't going to silence our call or message," he said.

"Ban as many times as you like - our voice will just get louder and louder."

Taliban fighters in Afghanistan have previously given away their whereabouts by forgetting to turn off Twitter's geolocation function.

Last year, American spooks asked Twitter to keep ISIS supporters' accounts open.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 23 maart 2015 @ 11:32:19 #209
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150942845
YourAnonNews twitterde op maandag 23-03-2015 om 03:23:46 Hey feds, if you have to rely on social media to gather intel on ISIS; you're doing it fucking wrong. http://t.co/Ehx9DcVfI2 reageer retweet
YourAnonNews twitterde op maandag 23-03-2015 om 03:25:59 Also, feds - it would have helped if the USA/Allies wouldn't have destabilized the region in the first place and created this mess. #ISIS reageer retweet
YourAnonNews twitterde op maandag 23-03-2015 om 03:32:49 USA/Israel/Allies all are responsible for creating this horrendous mess in the middle east and these "spies" say we're fucking up their ops? reageer retweet
YourAnonNews twitterde op maandag 23-03-2015 om 03:35:17 Spies, idiots: let us clue you in on something; your Ops were designed to fail in the first place. It's the "war on terror," remember? reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 23 maart 2015 @ 17:01:10 #210
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_150953234
#OpDeatheaters

quote:
quote:
LONDON — Scotland Yard is being investigated over extraordinary claims that police officers were guilty of suppressing evidence, halting investigations, and colluding with politicians to cover up a pedophile network operating at the heart of the British government.

At last, the spotlight will fall on senior officers who have been accused of turning a blind eye to allegations of murder and child abuse because the men were considered too powerful to touch.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 1 april 2015 @ 00:42:30 #211
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151249091
quote:
Techdirt Podcast Episode 18: The Many Faces Of Anonymous, With Gabriella Coleman

People (especially those in the news media) love to talk about Anonymous, often making bold, sweeping and generally inaccurate proclamations about the group's nature and goals. Gabriella Coleman, on the other hand, has spent years closely studying and engaging with Anonymous in the real world, and developing a nuanced understanding of the nebulous phenomenon. Her new book Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous provides insider details about Anonymous that you won't find anywhere else, and she joins us to discuss it on this week's episode.

Follow the Techdirt Podcast on Soundcloud, subscribe via iTunes, or grab the RSS feed. You can also keep up with all the latest episodes right here on Techdirt.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 1 april 2015 @ 14:41:45 #212
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151262984
quote:
Anonymous hacker group threatens Israel with ‘cyber-holocaust’

Anonymous has threatened Israel with “the electronic holocaust” which, the group vowed, would “erase it from cyberspace” on April 7 for “crimes” in Palestine. Anonymous planned yet another cyberattack for just over a week before Holocaust Remembrance Day.

There is now just one week left until the attack, dubbed OpIsrael, that Anonymous declared in its video “message to Israel” back on March 4.

On the recording, a masked figure in a suit and tie reads a prepared statement promising to erase Israel from cyberspace for “crimes in the Palestinian territories.”

The group specifically addresses the Israeli government, saying that it has not “stopped...endless human right violations” and “illegal settlements”.

“You killed thousands of people, as in the last war against Gaza in 2014. You have shown that you do NOT respect international law,” the electronic voiceover says.

“We are coming back to punish you again,” Anonymous video vows.

The video message, delivered in English with Arabic subtitles, displays images from the Gaza conflict, including those showing the air strikes on the territory during the Israel Defence Forces Operation Protective Edge last summer.

“As we did many times, we'll take down your servers, government websites, Israeli military websites, banks, and public institutions. We’ll erase you from cyber-space as we have every year, 7 April 2015, will be an electronic holocaust,” it adds.


Anonymous addressed the youth of Palestine, urging for it to “never give up”. “We are with you, and will continue to defend you,” the group vowed.

It then continued with a “message to the foolish Benjamin Netanyahu, and all leaders in the Zionist entities” warning that cyber-attacks on Israeli devices, websites and personal data will continue “until the people of Palestine are free.”

“We always say expect us but you always fail. We are unexpected; we’ll show on 7 April 2015 what the electronic holocaust mean…” the voice says.

Anonymous slated its attack just a little over a week before Holocaust Remembrance Day, known in Israel as Yom HaShoah, which is marked on April 16.

Speaking to Newsweek magazine, Benjamin T. Decker, a senior intelligence analyst at Tel Aviv-based risk consultancy The Levantine Group, said that the Israeli government does not take Anonymous seriously. He has called the whole electronic holocaust threat “posturing” saying that over the four years that the group has carried out OpIsrael, hacking techniques have become more sophisticated, but there has been less damage caused.

“As the years have progressed we have seen that, despite their increasing sophistication in hacking techniques, we have seen less damage against Israeli cyber-infrastructures, largely due to Israel's pioneering of most cyber-warfare tactics, both offensive and defensive,” Decker told the magazine.

In April 2013 the hacktivist group claimed that a similar OpIsrael attack caused $3billion worth of damage to Israel, when it targeted over 100,000 websites, 40,000 Facebook pages, 5,000 Twitter accounts and 30,000 Israeli bank accounts.

The government, however, said that there were no major disruptions.

The past summer alone, Anonymous targeted Israel several times protesting Israel’s military incursion in Gaza.

In a wave of attacks against Israeli government websites it took down “hundreds” of websites portals, including those of Mossad and the IDF. Most of the attacks were repelled within a few hours.

Anonymous generally uses DDOS (distributed denial of service attacks) that overload a website with fake requests, making it unavailable for legitimate users.


Israel has been severely criticized for its political decisions amid the 2014 war in Gaza, which claimed the lives of more than 2,140 Palestinians – most of them civilians – and over 70 Israelis, many of whom were soldiers. The conflict ended with a truce between Israel and Hamas on August 26.

Anonymous launched its first OpIsrael cyber-attacks in November 2012 during Operation Pillar of Defense, an eight day Israeli Defense Force (IDF) incursion into the Gaza strip.

Back then some 700 Israeli website suffered repeated DDOS attacks, which targeted high-profile government systems such as the Foreign Ministry, the Bank of Jerusalem, the Israeli Defense Ministry, the IDF blog, and the Israeli President’s official website.

The Israeli Finance Ministry reported an estimated 44 million unique attacks on government websites over a four day period.

Following OpIsrael, Anonymous posted the online personal data of 5,000 Israeli officials, including names, ID numbers and personal emails.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 1 april 2015 @ 14:43:24 #213
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151263041
martinezsoares1 twitterde op woensdag 01-04-2015 om 14:33:31 Former Detective Sergeant Speaks Out On SRA Christ Church, Hampstead, London#opdeatheaters http://t.co/VWv6XfjgV5 reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 1 april 2015 @ 15:27:23 #214
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151264493
OpdeatheatersQc twitterde op woensdag 01-04-2015 om 13:16:44 Glad that all of our #OpDeathEaters accounts are back. Unfortunately, @OpSafeWinterMTL is now suspended. What's happening with @twitter? reageer retweet
quote:
#OpDeathEaters Canada - a statement

Greetings citizens of Canada.

We are #OpDeathEaters

In light of the recent wave of attacks against the #OpDeathEaters Canada twitter accounts, and the #OpDeathEaters tag, we have written up the following statement, and reassure our comrades and enemies that a mere suspension will not end our work on #OpDeathEaters.
The paradigm Canada employs for its Child Welfare Services treats children as if they are commodities, filling gaps in order to get more government funding. The less children there are in the Child Welfare System, the less funding that is allocated to organizations offering services to protect those children, turning the mandate on its head, turning children into the prey they sought to protect, allowing pedosadist activity to flourish.

No longer can we trust the authorities to protect our children. Communities are losing touch with themselves, values such a protecting children are no longer priority. If we do not protect our children, there won’t be anything worth protecting.
Not only the provincially determined child welfare services are at fault. In cities or towns where there have been more than one notorious child rapist, it gets "dealt" with, judge and jury, crime “punished” with a slap in the face of a jail-term. As a community, we still victimize the children, further making them vulnerable and easy prey. We spend too much energy on the shock factor of how one can commit these atrocities, we neglect that our children need healing, the parents need healing, the neighbours need healing, the community as a whole needs to heal. We don't know how to heal as a community, child rape and torture have not been dealt with, it continues to get worse.

#OpDeathEaters leads to a solution, this is not a Canadian issue, this is an international issue. The objective is an independent, internationally linked, victim-led inquiry/tribunal into the child trafficking and pedosadist industry.
Once an inquiry/tribunal is established, the constructive discussion will begin, as to what we as a community can do to protect our children going forward.

Twitter was just a start, #OpDeathEaters is only getting stronger.

All of the suspended accounts have been reinstated and the alternate accounts created today will be held for rebound Twitter handles if the need arises again in the future. We encourage you to follow both.

We are Anonymous
We are Legion
We do not forgive
We do not forget
We are not intimidated

#OpDeathEaters Canada
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 5 april 2015 @ 19:30:30 #215
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151395935
quote:
#OpISIS Anonymous release list of 70 pro ISIS websites and 14000 of Twitter ids

Anonymous take #OpISIS to next level with release of 70 pro ISIS websites and 14000 Twitter ids belonging to IS affiliates and supporters


Continuing their efforts to bring down websites and Twitter accounts of IS and their supporters, the online hacktivist group, Anonymous today released a list of 70 websites believed to be operated by supporters of ISIS.

The list of the websites is appended at Ghostbin with a message from GhostSec a member of the Anonymous legion.

. All websites listed below are frequently used by the Islamic State through
Twitter and other social media platforms for transmission of propaganda,
religion, recruitment, communications and intelligence gathering purposes.
Next to the URL you will find the company hosting content for that website.
Verification can be done by visiting http://check-host.net and entering the
website URL. It is our sincerest hope that the media use this as a tool
to show the world that the Islamic State is everywhere in some shape or form
and that companies are unaware of their customers content or they turn a blind
eye for easy profit and choose to accept bloodmoney. CloudFlare is by far the
largest offender on this list and they have been made aware of the specified
content they are protecting but chose to block us from contacting them rather
than addressing the issue. Together we can stop this from spreading and hold
these companies accountable for their less than ethical business practices.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 9 april 2015 @ 22:03:43 #216
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151531551
quote:
quote:
VINELAND, N.J. — The Vineland Police Department has found itself the latest target of Anonymous, a cyberactivist group, over allegations that police officers used excessive force that led to the death of 32-year-old Phillip G. White.

On March 31, a 911 call was placed by an unidentified man, who claimed that there was a man “going crazy” in the neighborhood, according to The Daily Journal.

After police officers arrived on the scene, EMS was called and a violent struggle ensued.

Police have released the radio calls transmitted from the scene. Over the course of four minutes, what sounds like a struggle by officers to control White can be heard.

At one point, an officer says, “I got a guy grabbing my gun. Dog’s on him right now.”

Shortly thereafter, the officer acknowledges that he subdued White, saying that White tried to disarm him.

White was taken by ambulance to the hospital, where he died.

Cellphone video from a bystander has been released, which appears to show an officer on top of White, calling for the police dog to attack while the officer punches White.

Police officials identified the officers involved in the incident as Louis Platania and Richard Janasiak. Anonymous threatened to launch cyberattacks if the officers’ names were not made public. The group allegedly posted personal information about the two officers on a hacker website.

Both officers were placed on paid administrative leave following the incident, which is standard procedure.

Stuart Alterman, the attorney representing the officers, said White showed “super-human strength” as the officers attempted to restrain him. Alterman also said White was pounding on a police car and tried to take the officers’ radios.

An autopsy report and toxicology results have not yet been made public.

The case is generating attention on social media, along with the Walter Scott case in South Carolina.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 10 april 2015 @ 13:36:03 #217
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151547836
quote:
quote:

Anonymous hacked several Chinese government websites including the Hunan (a province in China) Police Academy website in solidarity with pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong.


The hacker behind this hack goes with the handle of @AnonymousGlobo on Twitter, who has been involved in several cyber attacks on different websites in past.

AnonymousGlobo left a deface page along with a message on hacked Hunan Police Academy website, bashing the Chinese government for for arresting and not allowing protesters to demonstrate their issues in shape of a protest.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 10 april 2015 @ 20:44:21 #218
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151560613
Anony_Mia twitterde op vrijdag 10-04-2015 om 20:37:38 👮🏻👀 #FindPepperSprayMan aka Officer Alain Bourdages | Identified by #Anonymous | Nice work! @QuebecAnon http://t.co/w5VIQEgFuO reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 10 april 2015 @ 21:09:59 #219
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151561603
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 17 april 2015 @ 20:08:12 #220
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151782852
quote:
Two Anonymous related arrests in France

This week, in France, two Anons have been arrested and held for 48 hours. Both were charged with a number of cybercrimes dating back to December 11th, 2014.

The charges stem from an online action in protest of the underground storage of nuclear waste material by Andra, the National Agency for Radioactive Waste Management. Hactivists are alleged to have conducted a series of DDoS attacks on three websites belonging to Andra, the General Council of the Meuse and Lorraine Regional Council. Both men are facing charges relating to these attacks. The older of the two men faces two counts of “Fraudulent access and maintenance” of a computer system “implemented by the state,” and “obstruction or functional impairment” of that system.

The other man, a 19 year old student, is up against a total of four counts of the same charge, three relating to the above attacks and one for his alleged role in the January 6th DDoS carried out against the Ministry of Defense website. The action was claimed on social media by hackers identifying themselves only as Anonymous, and was admittedly a direct retaliation for the death of Remi Fraisse, a 21 year old botanist and environmental activist who was killed in October 2014 by a flashbang grenade thrown into a group of protesters by French police.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9mi_Fraisse

Due to their assumed affiliation with Anonymous, the prosecution has classified the alleged crimes as “organized gang” activity and is seeking to take advantage of a newly passed law which doubles the final sentence for both men. They will both appear in court on June 9th in Nancy. They face 10 years in prison and 150,000 euros in fines.

As is usually common with these types of cases, it is likely that charges may change or even mount as the investigation continues.

FreeAnons supports freedom fighters. We have arranged contact with both of the accused to offer support as well as access to the FreeAnons legal team. We will stand behind them in solidarity and continue to report on any new information as it becomes available.

We are the Anonymous Solidarity Network. We will not rest until all persecuted Anons are free
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 21 april 2015 @ 22:05:02 #221
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_151908020
quote:
Anonymous Hacker Who Exposed the Steubenville Rapists May Get More Prison Time Than Rapists



Deric Lostutter, the 26-year-old “hacktivist” who leaked the evidence that led to the conviction of two of the Steubenville, Ohio rapists is now facing more time behind bars than the rapists he exposed. The Steubenville Rape Case made national headlines when a video made by the rapists themselves, and their friends, proved that their victim was unconscious and unable to consent.

Instead of giving Lostutter thanks for exposing these criminals, however, the FBI raided his house last April. At first, Lostutter had denied that he was the man in the video, but he decided to come forward after the appalling reaction of the rapists after they were exposed.

Lostutter is now facing ten years behind bars if indicted for obtaining tweets and social media posts which revealed the details of the rape as well as for threatening action against the Steubenville rapists and school officials who helped to cover up the crime. Lostutter posted the video to the Steubenville High School football team website, bringing national attention to the case and the cover-up.

Word of Lostutter’s 10-years comes just as one of the rapists themselves, Ma’Lik Richomond, 16, was just released from prison for “good behavior.”

The Richomond family released a statement, following the release, which focused on how hard the past 16 months have been for Ma’Lik. The attorney for Ma’Lik’s rape victim noted there was no apology made to her in that statement.

“Although everyone hopes convicted criminals are rehabilitated, it is disheartening that this convicted rapist’s press release does not make a single reference to the victim and her family — whom he and his co-defendant scarred for life. One would expect to see the defendant publicly apologize for all the pain he caused rather than make statements about himself. Rape is about victims, not defendants. Obviously, the people writing his press release have yet to learn this important lesson,” attorney Robert Fitzsimmons said.

Stay tuned. You will be hearing more about this story.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 28 april 2015 @ 13:10:16 #222
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152093515
quote:
The hacker group Anonymous just took credit for a cyberattack on a giant telescope in Hawaii

It appears the stars have not yet aligned for the Thirty Meter Telescope project, which saw its main website targeted by an alleged cyberattack this weekend.

The site was unavailable for several hours, a project spokesperson confirmed, and a group known as Operation Green Rights — associated with the popular Anonymous movement — has claimed responsibility.

A post added yesterday on Operation Green Rights' website read: "Nothing will ever justify the destruction of ecosystems; filthy money can never replace them. Stand with the Hawaiian natives against #TMT." The statement accompanied a screenshot of a downed Hawaii state government site--also an apparent target of the cyberattack.

Cyberattacks, of course, seem to generally target large corporations or government departments, not science installations. But the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) is a particularly contentious project. In 2009, the project selected a site on Mauna Kea, the 13,796-foot dormant volcano located on the island of Hawaii, the largest island in the state of the same name.

That site is already home to a dozen existing telescopes, which take advantage of Mauna Kea's excellent elevation and lack of light pollution to collect information in the optical, infrared, and sub-millimeter ranges.

Despite approval from the state's Board of Land and Natural Resources in 2013, the TMT project has run into opposition since the site was first selected in 2009. Objections come from both native Hawaiians, to whom Mauna Kea is a sacred site, and environmental advocates, as they believe the telescope's construction will interfere with Mauna Kea's glacial ecosystem and perhaps put native species at risk.

More recently, peaceful protests against construction have been mounted, including an interruption of the groundbreaking ceremony in October 2014, which prompted temporary hold on construction from Hawaii Governor David Ige earlier this month.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 30 april 2015 @ 19:06:13 #223
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152158544
quote:
quote:
Een maand nadat een begin zou zijn gemaakt met de bouw van de internationale Thirty Meter Telescope is er op Mauna Kea, Hawaii, nog steeds geen schop in de grond gegaan. De raad van toezicht van het Office of Hawaiian Affairs boog zich vandaag opnieuw over de bezwaren en protesten van de oorspronkelijke bewoners van de archipel. De graafmachines en bulldozers staan voorlopig werkloos aan de kant van de weg, ergens halverwege de 4200 meter hoge vulkaantop.
quote:
Ook activistische milieuorganisaties scharen zich achter de protesten: afgelopen zondag is de website van de Thirty Meter Telescope korte tijd gehackt door Anonymous Operation Green Rights. Dat de prominente Californische astronome Sandy Faber (fervent voorstander van de TMT) het anderhalve week geleden in een uitgelekte interne e-mail had over 'een horde autochtone Hawaiianen die liegen over de impact van het project op de berg' hielp niet echt.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 2 mei 2015 @ 11:56:30 #224
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152204248
quote:
Why the U.S. should but won’t partner with hactivists Anonymous

For a barbaric movement grounded in early Islamic apocalyptic prophecies, what is perhaps most striking about the rapid rise of the Islamic State has been its use of modern technology. Leveraging the open nature and global reach of platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, Islamic State has used social media to recruit young would-be jihadis, to build a global network of sympathetic followers, and to intimidate Western audiences with its brutality.

The scale of this digital propaganda network is vast. A recent study by the Brookings Institution found that in late 2014 there were at least 46,000 Twitter accounts used by Islamic State supporters, with an average of 1,000 followers each.

But why has the United States, which has at its disposal vast cyberwar capabilities, an ever-expanding surveillance state and significant leverage over, and goodwill of, the American companies that are hosting this content, proved unable to quiet the online reach of this network of insurgents?

One answer is that the open nature of the Internet, combined with the constraints that democratic states face engaging effectively within it, has limited the capability of the United States to fight back. And this tells us a tremendous amount about the shifting nature of power in the digital age.

In the absence of effective state action against the Islamic State online, Anonymous has taken up the digital war. Already this ad hoc network of hackers and activists has downed scores of Web pages and hacked into dozens of Twitter accounts that allegedly belong to Islamic State members. Much like in the early days of the Arab Spring, where hackers provided online assistance and offered protection to activists, Anonymous is stepping in where the state has limited capacity.

This has recently led to calls for the United States to partner with Anonymous to launch cyberattacks against the Islamic State, and even paying hactivists in bitcoin. This sounds audacious, but plausible. Western governments have long collaborated with unsavory actors with the aim of larger strategic goals — as it is said, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

In theory, such a partnership could allow the Defense and State departments to overcome the constraints of their slow-moving, hierarchical, command-and-control systems. It could allow them to act more like a nimble startup than a legacy industrial corporation.

And it could be effective — we know that Anonymous hackers have been successful taking on a wide range of both established and emerging powers. In practice, however, there is substantial risk. As the failure of the clandestine USAID program to build a fake version of Twitter in Cuba to foster dissent demonstrates, states often stumble when they step into the murky world of online power.

But I would suggest there are other, more fundamental reasons, why the U.S. will never partner with Anonymous. This is because, at its core, Anonymous is different than the other perceived bad actors that government is more than willing to collaborate with. Anonymous represents a new form of decentralized power that challenges the very foundations of the state system.

First, the power structures that Anonymous embodies represent a fundamental threat to state dominance in the international system. The challenges that the state system were designed to solve — a lack of structure, instability, decentralized governance, loose and evolving ties — are precisely what makes groups like Anonymous powerful.

Legitimizing the type of decentralized, collaborative and anonymous power that Anonymous represents, therefore poses a threat to the hierarchical and state-led international system that the nation state depends on. This new form of power scares governments — so much so that they are willing to exert significant control over the network itself. As was revealed in the Snowden National Security Agency documents, the government wanted to collect it all, process it all, exploit it all, partner it all, sniff it all, know it all.

Second, over the course of modern history, we have placed tremendous power in the state. Whether it be through the justice system, the social welfare state or the military, government has been the primary enabler of collective action in our society. In exchange, we have put in place systems of accountability and laws to hold this power to account. For states seeking to fight new online powers, these norms of behavior make functioning effectively online at best difficult, and at worst counter to the expectations and laws governing their activities.

Third, the state is ultimately faced with a paradox — that the very attributes of the Internet that enable the Islamic State also enable the free enterprise and expression that make it arguably the most liberating technology in human history. The very real risk governments face is that in seeking to stop perceived nefarious actors online, they will also shut down the positive ones. Efforts by the NSA to break encryption, for example, won’t just help it fight illegal crypto-currencies, or Islamic State fighters using secure networking tools, but would also threaten the security of the online commerce sector. These efforts risk breaking the Internet.

For the U.S. government, partnering with Anonymous and legitimizing its structure is simply a bridge too far. And this limitation represents a crisis for state power in the digital age: One that curtails its ability to fight the online propaganda of a barbaric jihadist movement taking to Twitter to build its caliphate.

Taylor Owen is an assistant professor of digital media and global affairs at the University of British Columbia. He is the author of “Disruptive Power: The Crisis of the State in the Digital Age,” Oxford University Press, 2015. To comment, submit your letter to the editor at www.sfgate.com/submissions.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 4 mei 2015 @ 21:50:44 #225
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152278985
TanyaInAlameda twitterde op maandag 04-05-2015 om 21:07:20 Anonymous Shuts Down Worlds Largest X-Rated Animal Abuse Forum https://t.co/GB5oYsE8Rp via @@HackRead#OpBEAST !!!!! http://t.co/bbZlDouCGq reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 4 mei 2015 @ 21:53:56 #226
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152279127
quote:
quote:
Keeping Anonymous hackers out from news is simply impossible, the hacktivist movement is active 24 x 7 and you can always expect them to drop their cyber bomb on anyone at anytime — Just like today when WTO is under attack by Anonymous.


One of the hacktivist leading Anonymous movement on Twitter just breached the World Trade organization’s website and leaked its database along with personal data of thousands of its members from around the world.

In an exclusive conversation with Anonymous, HackRead was told that the method used for breaching WTO website was simple SQL injection and the site has a lot of data to download.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 5 mei 2015 @ 09:42:25 #227
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152289384
AnonymousGlobo twitterde op dinsdag 05-05-2015 om 05:18:11 You remember from the @BaltimorePolice emails. Here are the passwords of emails. Enjoy http://t.co/mDXmfdd4t8 U mad bro? #Anonymous #AntiSec reageer retweet
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 7 mei 2015 @ 20:14:19 #228
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152380116
quote:
Anonymous hacktivist warned Texas police days before Mohammed cartoon contest shooting

At 5:37pm on Friday, 1 May, a Twitter user affiliated with the Anonymous hacktivist group tweeted to the Garland Police Department's official Twitter account, warning them of a potential Islamic State attack in Texas.

The warning fell on deaf ears and two days later Elton Simpson (30), and his roommate, Nadir Soofi (34), from Phoenix, Arizona, opened fire on an unarmed security guard at the Curtis Culwell Center outside a contest to draw cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

The woman, who has spoken to the Daily Dot, lives outside the US but is part of a growing army of online activists -- some of whom at affiliated with Anonymous -- who have taken it upon themselves to seek out and highlight social media accounts and website linked to Islamic State in a bid to get them taken offline.

The Twitter user came across the @AnsarAlUmmah49 account and in particular a message which was referencing an upcoming attack in Garland. The Anonymous member tried to alert the Garland police to the potential threat by sending a message to its Twitter account.

That message was never seen it appears, with Garland Police Department spokesman Jon Darn telling the Daily Dot: "That is the first time I've heard that" when asked about the message, adding: "We were monitoring things; we had the FBI and ATF, but we didn't see anything [on Twitter]."

It has been revealed that Simpson flagged his actions on Twitter ahead of the attack. "May Allah accept us as the mujahideen," Simpson tweeted adding that he and Soofi pledged loyalty to "Amirul Mu'mineen" (the leader of the faithful), which officials believe referred to Isis leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi.

The shootings took place at an event entitled Muhammad Art Exhibit and Cartoon Contest which was organised under the banner of free speech but was always likely to provoke a reaction from Muslims who find such depictions blasphemous -- and directly links to the Charlie Hedbo attacks in Paris in January.

Under the banner #OpIsis, online activists have collated tens of thousands of Twitter and Facebook accounts which are linked to Isis and have been successful in getting a significant number of these taken offline.

However intelligence agencies have criticised these online campaigns by claiming that taking down websites and social media accounts associated with the jihadist group is shutting down a key source of intelligence gathering.

This argument has been frequently dismissed by Anonymous, who claim that the vast majority of these accounts and websites are used to spread propaganda with the hope of recruiting more people to its cause -- not to communicate valuable military strategic information.

Bron: www.ibtimes.co.uk
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 mei 2015 @ 20:48:02 #229
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152632417
quote:
quote:
DⒶʀKᙡiNɢ ಠ_ರೃ , a Swede associated with Anonymous, has claimed a new, and rather relentless, hack of the US National Security Agency’s email server. Nothing so mundane as username/password combinations, the Pastebin of the hack lists the methodology and blow-by-blow of what worked, what didn’t, and what the hacker thinks of the NSA security (hint: not much). Turns out, the NSA doesn’t even maintain its own email server: they’ve outsourced that to Qwest.
quote:
Pirate Party activist and Cryptosphere contributor Raymond Johansen shared the original tweet to Facebook when the Paste had 327 views. The tweet contains a live link to the Pastebin, of course.

Within eight minutes, he reports, the Pastebin had been taken down. “THEN they read me laughing at them for even trying.” Someone posted a link to the Google cache of the missing paste in the comments on Facebook, at which point the paste apparently re-materialized. “Within a minute of that the original paste is back up AGAIN – the NSA realizing I am making them look like class fulz. THAT moment is the single most ROFL inducing PSML unavoidable moment of my life. It is Anonspeak for “we know we fckd lets unfck ourself” – all the while actually doublefcking themselves – royally.”

The paste may have been tampered with in the interim, says Johansen. “The [second] paste we saw, maybe 12 hours old, had strange garbage on the end. IMO it has been tinkered with and I myself will not visit that pastebin – because OpSec.”

“AnonIntelGroup posted ‘Bring the Lulz back!’ a week ago. ‘Mission accompli!’ – I would say.”

Within three hours of that, however, Johansen noticed that the Facebook post itself was missing from his timeline, missing from his Timeline Review, and had been removed from all the groups and pages to which he had shared it. Gone, too, were the comments. He then made a new post, explaining the elision, which was screenshotted and linked above. The Cryptosphere was able to confirm independently via email updates that the original post existed, and was subsequently scrubbed by Facebook.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 16 mei 2015 @ 15:10:18 #230
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_152650767
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 3 juni 2015 @ 18:09:19 #231
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_153223326
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 9 juni 2015 @ 15:25:53 #232
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_153383338
quote:
Vanguard unit of hacktivists Anonymous meets ′Islamic State′ on cyberfront | News | DW.DE | 05.06.2015

In recent months, a self-described "elite branch" of the hacktivist group Anonymous has upped the ante in the fight against "Islamic State" (IS). In a statement, Ghost Security (GhostSec) announced its intent to "eliminate every piece of ISIS propaganda from the Internet in an effort to slow down ISIS recruitment online."

The group employs a more rigid organizational structure than the loosely knit umbrella group Anonymous, with ranking roles such as special operations and a quick reaction force capable of responding to developing situations at any moment.

"GhostSec operates like a military unit, with members responsible for intelligence gathering, organizing, logistics, and, of course, those operating the weapons, digital weapons that is," the group announced in one of various statements it has posted online.

Anonymous, a multinational network of politically inclined hackers, is well-known for its online exploits such as taking on the Church of Scientology to protest the religion's efforts to censor its critics, PayPal for refusing to process donations to the whistleblowers WikiLeaks, and even sites belonging to the governments of Mexico, Syria and Israel, among other states, for various affronts and human rights abuses cited by the group. The hackers most commonly use a distributed denial of service, or DDoS, attack, which overwhelms websites with traffic and makes them temporarily unavailable.

GhostSec's efforts against IS, however, mark the first time members of the activist group have actively pursued terrorist elements. And, further to the point, GhostSec has called its anti-IS operation, also known as #OpISIS or #OpIceISIS, the "largest endeavor in the history of Anonymous."

'Split' over Charlie Hebdo

In August 2014, the month the US government outlined its strategy to curb IS's digital presence, Anonymous announced #OpISIS. However, the operation did not garner significant support even within the group until 2015.

Gabriella Coleman, a professor at McGill University in Montreal, embedded herself in Anonymous to research her book "Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous." Coleman told DW that the attacks on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in January marked a turning point for the group.

"There is a chain of events that can help explain what happened. And it's basically Charlie Hebdo. It was a real kind of dramatic event that also split the Anonymous community," Coleman said.

On January 11, days after the attack in Paris, DigitaShadow, a ranking "operations" figure in GhostSec, announced the assault on IS.

"This is also the period of time when ISIS was gaining more visibility ... I don't think the operation would have happened without Charlie Hebdo, which then had this censorship angle, which is such a bread-and-butter issue for Anonymous," Coleman said.

Coleman said Anonymous, as "an open-source name," would naturally have many factions whose interests do not always necessarily align.

"What is interesting about this phenomenon is that you don't need coherence among the different groups. In fact, it's kind of expected that there will be serious divergences in opinion," Coleman said.

In online posts, GhostSec has acknowledged criticism of its actions, stating that "since its beginning there have been some that disapprove of what we are doing." Meanwhile, the group has taken proactive steps to elucidate its actions through video press releases and statements, alongside reporting its daily activities against IS.

'These unforgivable crimes'

Anonymous has gone to great lengths to impede IS's digital presence, especially its online recruiting via social media platforms.

"The Islamic State has ambitions to circumvent free speech and the Internet with the formation of a cyber caliphate designed to impose censorship upon all citizens of the world. In retaliation to these unforgivable crimes, we have decided to engage the Islamic State," GhostSec announced in a statement.

By May 8, after nearly four months of the operation, more than 500 IS websites had been attacked and 100 of them were "permanently offline," according to a damage report. Websites affiliated with IS were shut down 68 times in May, and GhostSec has closed 15 in the first week of June so far, according to attacks reported by group.

WauchulaGhost, a senior ranking "special operations" figure, told DW that suspected IS accounts and websites are cross-checked to determine threat potential before an attack.

"We use automation after users are added to the database. However, we do verify every single one of them with a well established team of 'hunters.' So no accounts are entered into the database without some eyes trained to spot Islamic State sympathizers or actual militants by content tweeted and behavior patterns," WauchulaGhost said.

WauchulaGhost added that information regarding threats is provided to the "nation it pertains to," while websites are scanned for intelligence before being shutdown.

"After critical information is extracted we take the websites down but recently sites that we are attacking are running to CloudFlare (website security company) for protection," WauchulaGhost noted.

GhostSec has also brought attention to US-based company CloudFlare for "protecting" IS websites.

GhostSec's vigilante cyberoffensive has its work cut out for it. IS has flourished online, employing a so-far-successful cyberstrategy to lure potential supporters.

In 2014, more than 11,902 IS Twitter accounts were created, according to research conducted by the Brookings Institution. Between September and December, more than 40,000 Twitter accounts were logged as supporting IS, although not all were active at the same time.

As social media platforms and governments struggle to cope with the growing online presence of the Islamic State, GhostSec appears prepared to continue acting beyond the confines of legality to "dismantle" the group's digital infrastructure.

"It’s a long battle that we intend to win. If you fight and give up, your opponent will take you, however, we will not stop and ISIS knows that," WauchulaGhost told DW.

Terrorist organization "Islamic State" is more than just simply savvy when it comes to using the internet as a propaganda tool. But what can be used to fight against such a profound social media strategy and smart users? (03.06.2015)

"Islamic State" is not only a threat on the battlefield, but also on the Internet, writes Kyle Matthews from the Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies. (28.05.2015)

Armed gunmen have stormed the headquarters of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. As many as 12 people are reported to have been killed in the incident. (07.01.2015)

"Islamic State" is not only a threat on the battlefield, but also on the Internet, writes Kyle Matthews from the Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies.

France's global network TV5Monde was taken off the air by self-styled "Islamic State" cyberjihadists for 18 hours. The hacking attack was "unprecedented in the history of television," the company says.

High-ranking officials from around the world will meet at the White House this week to discuss methods to combat violent extremism. The summit follows in the wake of recent terror attacks in Denmark, Libya and France.

The Journal from DW presents the most important news - up-to-date, in brief and quickly.
Bron: www.dw.de
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 13 juni 2015 @ 13:36:42 #233
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_153495950
quote:
Anonymous Has Been Hacking US Government Sites Since Last December

The FBI has released an official memo indicating that hackers related to Anonymous have been accessing federal government computers in various agencies for almost a year and stealing data.

Reuters viewed a copy of the memo, which was sent around the FBI on Thursday. The attacks came as the result of an exploit in Adobe software that allowed Anonymous hackers to plant backdoors in the computers they had infiltrated and then return at their leisure, apparently as recently as last month.

Reuters reports:

. The memo, distributed on Thursday, described the attacks as "a widespread problem that should be addressed." It said the breach affected the U.S. Army, Department of Energy, Department of Health and Human Services, and perhaps many more agencies.


Stolen data from the attacks includes information about government employees and their family members. The hackers also stole banking data. Reuters reports that the attacks have been connected to Lauri Love, a British hacker who was indicted in October for alleged hacking into US government agencies.

Reuters reports that an FBI spokeswoman "declined to elaborate" on the situation. Naturally. [Reuters]

Bron: gizmodo.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 23 juni 2015 @ 23:30:38 #234
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_153791511
quote:
Anonymous Claims It Leaked Passwords and Credit Card Info of Canadian Officials | Motherboard

Members of Anonymous are claiming responsibility for leaking an apparent trove of personal data that includes the names, email addresses, phone numbers, and partial credit card information of government employees.

The information is alleged to have been dumped from the online database of the Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Society of Canada, and was posted online shortly before noon on Tuesday.

Although the leak has not been officially confirmed, it includes private sector companies and industry groups, as well as employees from a swath of transportation-related government departments from municipal governments in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Calgary; provincial governments of Ontario and Alberta; and federal departments such as Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada, Environment Canada and Transport Canada.

If true, it would be the the third attack under what Anonymous has deemed #OpCyberPrivacy, which according to a member named ro0ted "is retaliation for the passing of Bill C51”—a controversial piece of anti-terrorism legislation recently signed into law.

In the group’s chatroom, ro0ted claimed to still have access to the site when contacted by Motherboard Tuesday afternoon, about three hours after the database was first posted to a document sharing website. The user declined to say how long Anonymous had access to the site, nor how many people were involved in the attack.

A voicemail message left with ITS Canada’s administrative manager Janneke Poelking has yet to be returned.

Those responsible claimed that everything in the database was stored in plaintext, or unencrypted. Passwords, the last four digits of credit card numbers, and what appears to be the financial amounts of transactions can all be readily identified in the dump.

A company called Biz-One, which is listed as the developer of the website, had yet to respond to a request for comment at the time of publication. Motherboard left a voicemail message with its president and CEO Julie King.

In the group's first #OpCyberPrivacy attack, several federal government websites—including the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service, were rendered temporarily inaccessible in a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack.

For the group's second attack, the website of la Fraternité des policiers et policières de Montréal was defaced.

The group said it has a list of future targets, but no schedule for attacks. One user who went by the name of Doemela in the chatroom said that the attackers "scan domains beloging [sic] to Canada" and "when there is a vulnerability it is investigated further."

"We said we would respond in order to prevent the NSA and other intelligence contractors from the further invasion of our privacy and violation of our rights," Doemela said.

Bron: motherboard.vice.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 9 juli 2015 @ 21:07:33 #235
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Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_154206128
quote:
quote:
An analysis from a University of Copenhagen graduate student suggests the online-phenomenon-turned-protest movement is more globally connected on the Web than previously thought.

The actual size and reach of the shadowy hacktivist collective Anonymous has long been the fodder of online squabbles. It's diminished by detractors and puffed up by ardent devotees.

So, a University of Copenhagen graduate student set out to determine the actual extent of Anonymous' influence around the world. And, it turns out that Anonymous appears to have a wider scope and is more international than previously imagined.

Even academics who study Anonymous were surprised. "The Anonymous network is larger than many of us thought," said Gabriella Coleman, an anthropology professor at McGill University and author of "Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous."
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 20 juli 2015 @ 13:30:43 #236
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_154485657
quote:
Anonymous in Cyberwar With Canadian Gov't After Mountie Killed Activist

On Monday, hacktivists said they had stepped up their operation to gain access to Canadian government secrets after a mounted police officer shot and killed an activist at an environmental protest in BC.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — The million-strong army of Anonymous group hacktivists is waging a cyberwar on Canadian authorities and law enforcers after a Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officer fatally shot an activist wearing a Guy Fawkes mask at an environmental protest in British Columbia last week.

The shooting in Dawson Creek, which Anonymous says was unprovoked, triggered a vehement response from the group, who launched a massive cyberoperation codenamed AnonDown to force Canadian police to reveal the identity of the shooter.

The declaration of war on Saturday was followed by a series of denial-of-service (DoS) attacks on RCMP web pages the next day, including on its national website, the Dawson Creek affiliate site and the RCMP Heritage Center page.

On Monday, hacktivists said they had stepped up the operation to gain access to government secrets. "AnonDown has accessed docs marked ‘secret’ inside Canadian government. It's not just a DDoS op anymore kiddos," the activists said in a taunting tweet.

Bron: sputniknews.com
Het artikel gaat verder.

[ Bericht 0% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 20-07-2015 22:05:48 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 22 juli 2015 @ 23:45:26 #237
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pi_154556834
quote:
quote:
During and right after the second world war, economists viewed information simply as a "public good". The US government even decreed that no profit should be made out of patents, only from the production process itself. Then we began to understand intellectual property. In 1962, Kenneth Arrow, the guru of mainstream economics, said that in a free market economy the purpose of inventing things is to create intellectual property rights. He noted: "precisely to the extent that it is successful there is an underutilisation of information."

You can observe the truth of this in every e-business model ever constructed: monopolise and protect data, capture the free social data generated by user interaction, push commercial forces into areas of data production that were non-commercial before, mine the existing data for predictive value - always and everywhere ensuring nobody but the corporation can utilise the results.

If we restate Arrow's principle in reverse, its revolutionary implications are obvious: if a free market economy plus intellectual property leads to the "underutilisation of information", then an economy based on the full utilisation of information cannot tolerate the free market or absolute intellectual property rights. The business models of all our modern digital giants are designed to prevent the abundance of information.

Yet information is abundant. Information goods are freely replicable. Once a thing is made, it can be copied/pasted infinitely. A music track or the giant database you use to build an airliner has a production cost; but its cost of reproduction falls towards zero. Therefore, if the normal price mechanism of capitalism prevails over time, its price will fall towards zero, too.

For the past 25 years economics has been wrestling with this problem: all mainstream economics proceeds from a condition of scarcity, yet the most dynamic force in our modern world is abundant and, as hippy genius Stewart Brand once put it, "wants to be free".

There is, alongside the world of monopolised information and surveillance created by corporations and governments, a different dynamic growing up around information: information as a social good, free at the point of use, incapable of being owned or exploited or priced. I've surveyed the attempts by economists and business gurus to build a framework to understand the dynamics of an economy based on abundant, socially-held information. But it was actually imagined by one 19th-century economist in the era of the telegraph and the steam engine. His name? Karl Marx.


[ Bericht 71% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 23-07-2015 13:16:24 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 23 juli 2015 @ 21:40:35 #238
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pi_154580252
quote:
Anonymous targets IS sympathisers on Twitter - BBC News

Hacktivist group Anonymous is ramping up efforts to tackle sympathisers of the Islamic State group on Twitter.


It has published a list of Twitter accounts it claims are spreading propaganda in support of the group.

Some accounts have been flooded with images of Japanese anime characters to try to influence search engine results for phrases connected to IS.

Many other accounts have been suspended or shut down as a result of the group's actions.

As well as targeting Twitter accounts, the operation also sought to take down Facebook pages, blogs, websites and web proxies used by supposed IS supporters.

The publication of the list is the latest in a series of "operations" by Anonymous and others hacktivist organisations against the IS group and its online supporters.

The list of more than 750 Twitter accounts that Anonymous has taken action against was published on the Pastebin website. Top of the list were accounts that had more than 10,000 followers, it said, but many others with smaller numbers of readers were also targeted.

Some accounts that Anonymous members won access to had their messages and images changed to show the ISIS-Chan anime character. Groups tackling IS propaganda online are starting to use images of the young girl in connection with the group's name and slogans in an attempt to dilute the results people get when they search for information about the group.

The Anonymous action comes after UK Prime Minister David Cameron unveiled a strategy to help tackle the "poison" of extremism. The package of measures included demands that ISPs and net firms do more to remove extremist material and identify who posted it.

It is not clear how much effect the action by Anonymous and others is having on the work IS does to spread its message online. One study released earlier this year estimated that the group and its sympathisers control more than 90,000 Twitter accounts.

"There is definitely utility in shutting down accounts," said JM Berger, an analyst that did the study of IS' use of social media.

"It's not going to eliminate IS's presence online, but it helps limit their ability to accomplish their goals, particularly with respect to spreading its propaganda outside of its core audience," he said.

"It also wastes their time and requires ISIS supporters to spend a lot of bandwidth rebuilding the network instead of recruiting and promoting their views," he added.

Rashad Ali, a senior fellow at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue which works on ways to counter extremism said the approach did have merit.

"The action is both positive and negative," he said.

"Practically speaking, you are getting rid of a whole host of people from the public domain," he said, adding that such a large takedown can undoubtedly have an impact.

"However," he said, "it's not a solution because what we now need to do is not just take down accounts but actually provide new narratives for people.

"This is where we are failing," he said. "We have not had a strong, thought-out counter-argument to IS's message."
Bron: www.bbc.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 3 augustus 2015 @ 21:02:11 #239
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_154877704
quote:
Anonymous hacktivists deface Donald Trump's website with a tribute to Jon Stewart

A group of Anonymous hacktivist have apparently broken into Donald Trump’s corporate website for a strange reason.

The hacktivists, known as Telecomix Canada, allegedly broke into the site, Trump.com, to leave behind a tribute to The Daily Show host Jon Stewart on a defaced page.

“Mr Stewart, we at @TelecomixCanada would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the many happy years of quality journalism and entertainment you and your team have undertaken at Comedy Central,” reads a letter on Trump's site.

“We are writing you today via Mr Trump's website because, seeming, [sic] the only way to get anyone to pay attention any more is to grease a Presidential candidate's website.”

Active for nearly a decade, Telecomix is a digital activist group not usually known for malicious hacks. “Telecomix operatives specifically do not engage in destructive operations,” the group said Monday in a statement.

“In point of fact, this represents the first time our promissory has added a message to a device not our own in some years,” the group added.

On Trump’s site, Telecomix thanked Stewart for “many happy years of quality journalism and entertainment.”

“While even we, having wired live fire ustreams out of Gaza under Mossad's gaze, are unable to get Comedy Central's website video to work—undaunted we remain your loyal and grateful fans,” they said.

Telecomix's letter to Stewart has since been removed from Trump.com.

Telecomix gained notoriety during the Arab Spring for providing dial-up Internet services to Egyptian citizens when broadband services were censored or blocked entirely by the government. In 2011, the group released roughly 54 GB of internal files from the California-based Blue Coat Systems, revealing that the company’s products were being used to censor the Syrian Internet.

In previous interviews, Telecomix members have described the group as similar to but not directly affiliated with Anonymous. In its message on Monday, Telecomix Canada identified itself specifically as an “Anonymous collective.”

“Understanding your technical interests remain unexplored you will probably be told of this by one of your most excellent producers,” Telecomix continued, once more addressing Stewart. “Know, Sir, that your steadfast dedication to the irony and power of Truth has inspired a generation which we ourselves now serve. That our collective thanks appears here will, we hope, amuse you as much as it will them.”

The message also thanked John Oliver, a former Daily Show correspondent who now hosts HBO’s Last Week Tonight. The hashtags #DataLove and #MMM2015, short for “Million Mask March 2015,” were also included.

Trump currently leads the pack of Republican presidential hopefuls with a 9.5 point lead, according to the RealClearPolitics polls average.

The Trump campaign did not yet respond to our request for comment about the apparent hack.
Bron: www.dailydot.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 4 augustus 2015 @ 16:26:12 #240
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_154898085
quote:
Anonymous attacks Taiwan govt and party websites | The Jakarta Post

Hacktivist collective Anonymous Asia attacked government and political party websites yesterday in a gesture of support for students protesting against Education Ministry plans to change curriculum guidelines.

The hacked websites, which were paralysed for over an hour, belonged to the Kuomintang, New Party and Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA).

Yesterday's denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks follow two recent operations by Anonymous Asia. The group previously used DDoS attacks to take down the official websites of the Presidential Office and Ministry of Education on July 31 and four other websites, including that of the Ministry of National Defense, on August 2.

The Information Management Center at the MOEA said that DDoS attacks can be launched from anywhere in the world at anytime, and thus are difficult to prepare for. Yesterday's attacks occurred at dawn and only prevented access to the sites, the center said, adding that no lasting damage was done or sensitive information accessed.

All government agencies have information security measures such as firewalls in place to protect their data, according to the information center. Hackers seeking classified information attack the MOEA website daily, but the ministry's 24/7 monitoring has fended them off successfully, the center added.

The latest cyberattack marks the second known instance of the MOEA suffering a DDoS-caused outage. The first instance occurred in 2013 when the Philippine Coast Guard fired on a Taiwan fishing boat, killing its skipper.

Philippine hackers attacked Taiwan government websites amid the ensuing political tension.(+++)

© 2015
PT. Niskala Media Tenggara
Bron: www.thejakartapost.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 4 augustus 2015 @ 17:17:27 #241
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_154899573
quote:
quote:
People always make the best exploits. I've never found it hard to hack most people. If you listen to them, watch them, their vulnerabilities are like a neon sign screwed into their heads.

Greetings Waller County Sheriff Department, Are you ready for August 8th? Do you think the city police is ready? Well we are ready. On July 10, 2015, unnecessary force of action was used against Sandra Bland when she was arrested over a minor traffic stop. Officer Encinia used excessive force causing injuries to Sandra which led to her death. We are distraught and angered by the careless response to our demands of arresting officer Brian Encinia and the pedaling of illegitimate and doctored evidence by the media.

Our blood is boiling with rage and on August 8th we will be hitting your servers once more. We will also take our rage to the streets across the nation. We will be protesting at courthouses, parks, police stations, and even at officers homes. We will have our moment of rage for her. We have given you plenty of warning of what is to come.

Not a single sheriff officer in your department has attempted to cross the thin blue line and hold the murderer accountable for his actions. Therefore, in the eyes of FrightSec and in the eyes of Anonymous, you all are just as guilty as he is. As your punishment we are leaking your employee list little by little. The only way to stop this is by crossing the thin blue line and uphold the oath you swore. To protect and serve the citizens and arrest Officer Encinia.

Auguest 8th will be a day to remember. That day the nation will rage. We are asking the people protesting in Waller County to consider and talk with your friends and families about protesting at the officers houses. Until the Police State of America realizes that the power belongs to the people and that their badge does not grant them extra right, they will continue to abuse their power. they will continue to murder our kids, murder our vets, murder the homeless, and continue the use of brutality. Protesting at their house will show them that you are serious and demand change.

Be the change you wish to see in the world. Link arms with groups like Anonymous, Cop Block, Cop Watch, Occupy, and Black Lives Matter and burn the oppressors down!

This modern day genocide will soon be over America. We will soon no longer be like Iraq on the home-front. Until you stop using deadly force on unarmed citizens this movement will be here. We will be here. The Frightsec movement is here to stay. Waller County Sheriffs Department you should really keep a tighter security of your server data. To the police state of America, your police brutality will no longer go unnoticed. You are no longer exempt from the laws you swore to uphold. Do not expect us, for it is far too late.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 15 augustus 2015 @ 16:50:23 #242
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_155240711
quote:
World Trade Organization (WTO) Under Cyber Attack! Anonymous Takes Credit. | The Real Strategy

The website of World Trade Organisation was hacked by the hacker group Anonymous and leaked personal information of the thousands of World Trade Organisation personnel. The group which calls itself Anonymous and identifies itself as hacktivists led several hacks on websites of government and other important establishments.

This hacking incident is the latest in line of several such hacks in the past. One of the group member claimed on Twitter that he has been successfully able to hack into the website of World Trade Organisation twice in a day and using the simple method of SQL injection, has been able to gain access to over 53,000 user details and contact information!

The group hacked into the World Trade Organisation Elearning portal which lists courses on international laws related to trade and other similar courses. The portal which has the domain id ecampus.wto.org is vulnerable to such hacks and Anonymous was successful in hacking into this website.

The leaked data contains a large volume of information. The data pertaining to the admin user comprises of details such as the first name and the last name and other information such as phone numbers, email ids, fax numbers and designations and titles of 58 admin members. The leaked information of the various candidates include the personal information of the candidates such as their first and last names and date of birth. Information of 80 candidates was stolen. The information belonging to the staff members such as their names, titles, email ids and phone numbers was hacked into by Anonymous.

The hacking incident has impacted several countries which include China, India, Pakistan, Brazil, France, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Saudi Arabia, United States, Russia, Santo Domingo and various other nations. The growing instances of such hacks expose the vulnerabilities in the systems which require stringent security measures to be imposed.

Report from www.meethackers.com

· © 2015 The Real Strategy · Designed by Press Customizr ·
Bron: www.therealstrategy.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 19 augustus 2015 @ 17:30:53 #243
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_155357637
quote:
quote:
"The End of the Internet Dream," cyberlawyer Jennifer Granick's keynote at Black Hat, was all anyone could talk about at this year's Defcon -- Black Hat being the grown-up, buttoned-down, military-industrial cousin to Defcon's wild and exuberant anarchy.

The text of Granick's speech is now online, and I can see what they were all raving about. Granick tells the true story of "Internet Utopians" -- not people who believed the Internet would deliver a better, freer world; rather, people who believed that it could, if the rest of us fought for it.

She also tells the tale of how that dream was dashed by giving in to cybersecurity scaremongering, copyright bullying, easy answers to difficult speech, unexamined racism and sexism, and the global war on terror. How governments, companies and our complacency all but killed the dream of the Internet as a force for improving the world.

But she also provides a prescription for changing that -- hope that we can avert that future, and that therefore, we must.

If you wondered why I went back to EFF after a decade of sitting on the sidelines, this is why.
quote:


[ Bericht 7% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 19-08-2015 17:37:36 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 augustus 2015 @ 12:21:40 #244
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_155376793
quote:
B.C. man killed by RCMP identified, as Anonymous members quarrel over retaliation | National Post

The man killed by the RCMP outside a BC Hydro public meeting in Dawson Creek Thursday has been identified as James Daniel McIntyre, a 48-year-old local resident who fellow activists say was an Anonymous member who sent warnings — or threats — to BC Hydro of a potential hack attack shortly before the police shooting.

The killing of McIntyre, who is said to have been wearing the grinning Guy Fawkes mask worn by supporters of Anonymous, a global hacktivist collective, and carrying a knife at the time, has led to threats of vengeance against the RCMP and calls for public protests.

“Anonymous will not stand idly by while our own are cut down in mask,” said a statement sent Saturday to the National Post, threatening the Internet infrastructure of the RCMP and the release of personal information on the identity of the officer who pulled the trigger.

“If we do not receive justice, rest assured there will be revenge,” the statement says.

An apparent denial of service attack targeted RCMP websites over the weekend but all seemed operational Monday. The fallout from the threats, however, sparked infighting among activists under the Anonymous banner, some pushing for alternate ways of dealing with the shooting. By Monday, an Anonymous Twitter account issuing the threats first declared it was “under new management” and then, by afternoon, was deleted.

A Twitter user claims to have deactivated the account through a hostile takeover because “the drama” of the Anonymous squabble took the focus away from McIntyre’s death and the issue he was protesting. Someone identifying themselves as McIntyre’s cousin tweeted, “this nonsense will not bring my cousin back” and said McIntyre has family members in the RCMP.

McIntyre was killed at about 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the parking lot of the Fixx Urban Grill restaurant.

The RCMP said officers were called to the scene for a report of a man damaging property and disrupting the event. McIntyre was not the person who caused the initial disturbance but confronted two responding officers, said Corp. Dave Tyreman, an RCMP spokesman.

Tyreman said officers “did everything they could to de-escalate” the situation before shooting.

The death is being investigated by the Independent Investigations Office. The IIO said a knife was recovered along with other evidence and the probe is continuing. IIO investigators are “interviewing civilian witnesses; designating and interviewing officers; reviewing video from the scene and from witnesses; and meeting with the affected person’s family,” the IIO says in a written statement.

Neither the IIO nor the RCMP have identified the officer who shot McIntyre. Tyreman declined to provide even the officer’s rank, gender or years of service with the force, citing the threats against the officer by online activists. The IIO says decision on the officer’s work status is the responsibility of the RCMP.

Mike Irmen was in Dawson Creek on business and said he saw two Mounties with their guns drawn. Irmen asked what was going on.

“Just as I said that to them, bang, the cops had shot the guy. He kind of falls down and ends up laying there, bleeding, and he’s got his knife still in his hand,” Irmen said.

Irmen pulled out his phone and shot video of McIntyre as he lay on his right side, blood pooling beneath him.

“The cops are like, ‘Throw your weapon away, throw your weapon away, throw your weapon away.’ They must have said it I don’t know how many times,” he said.

McIntyre appeared to lose consciousness and the officers kicked the knife from the man’s hand and handcuffed him, Irmen said.

McIntyre died shortly after arrival at hospital, according to the coroner. The coroner has still not traced bullet trajectories and could not say how many times he was shot.

A woman who answered the phone Monday at a home believed to be a relative’s residence said she had no comment and asked for privacy for the family.

Have a good Night/Day Anon types where ever you maybe.

McIntyre worked at Le’s Family restaurant as a dishwasher and cook’s assistant, according to the Alaska Highway News. Owner Le Nguyen said McIntyre was a hard worker and a “normal guy.”

People identifying themselves as Anonymous activists, including some with a known history of hacktivist activity, say McIntyre was a First Nations Anonymous member who, using the Twitter handle @jaymack9, helped organize opposition to the Site C Dam, a massive hydroelectric project planned for the Peace River in northeastern B.C. (The coroner’s office said determining any native status was part of its investigation.)

On the day of the public hearing, he sent several tweets, most about BC Hydro’s plans.

“Anonymous splinter group (to) attend the scheduled meeting in Dawson Creek tonight starting at 6pm,” he tweeted shortly before he was shot.

Earlier, he sent a tweet to B.C. Premier Christy Clark and B.C. Hydro with what could be perceived as a threat of a computer hack: “BC Hydro check your computer systems, have real weakness in some areas,” it says.

Despite his tweeted warning of Anonymous protesters attending the meeting, Tyreman said that information did not appear to be known to police at the time.

“The only time this group Anonymous came to our attention was after the fact,” Tyreman said. The RCMP is aware of the subsequent threats coming after the shooting and “appropriate resources” are reviewing it.

One of those tagged in @jaymack9’s last two tweets was Faisal Moola, a director of the David Suzuki Foundation and an environmental scientist.

“I don’t know the individual. I am not clear why he tweeted me, the local First Nations and the David Suzuki Foundation,” Moola said in an interview. “I do not know the individual at all but I am aware of what happened to him in this altercation with police.”

Moola previously presented a study on the environmental impact of hydroelectric projects in BC to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency as part of the hearings on the Site C dam.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 augustus 2015 @ 12:24:12 #245
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_155376858
quote:
quote:
Jesse Brown: What are you trying to accomplish? Is this really about justice for James Daniel McIntyre or would you be leaking this stuff anyhow?

Anonymous: We would have leaked some of this material anyway. In our view, everything here is entirely connected, however. The atmosphere set by Stephen Harper, RCMP, CSIS and more is to treat environmental protesters as terrorists. Our goal is to protect activists on the ground, to see C-51 completely repealed, and to see how police interact with and spy on indigenous, environmental, and other protesters as well as the general public reset.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 20 augustus 2015 @ 13:14:41 #246
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_155378058
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 16 september 2015 @ 11:10:10 #247
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156136438
quote:
quote:
quote:
“What’s wrong with you guys?” Those were the last words of Lakota man Paul Castaway, uttered last Sunday night as he died from four gunshot wounds to the torso, the bullets fired by a Denver police officer. Police were on the scene at the Capitol City Mobile Home Park because Castaway, who had mental health issues, had been drinking and getting rowdy, and his mother had called them to help get him under control.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 29 september 2015 @ 15:07:29 #248
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156473427
quote:
Anonymous Targets the U.S. Banking System with Operation 'Black October'

Anonymous has announced a peaceful revolution by calling out to people to join “Black October”, a campaign which it believes will be an “easy” way for the 99% to demonstrate their collective strength and “beat” the richest 1%.

Hacktivist group Anonymous announced a new campaign called “Black October”, days after the four-year anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement.

The group is calling for ordinary masses making up for the 99% to forego credit and debit cards and use cash instead, after claiming that private banks have failed ordinary people.

quote:
Bron: hacked.com
Het artikel gaat verder.

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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 3 oktober 2015 @ 17:15:55 #249
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156573974
quote:
quote:
Anonymous, an international network of hackers, has been attacking official Saudi government websites. In an exclusive interview with DW, a group hacktivist explains why they have taken on Riyadh.

Almost as soon as Ali Mohammed al-Nimr's impending death sentence broke, Anonymous, a group of online hackers, vowed to take on the Saudi Arabian government.

The announcement was somewhat unusual for the group which is often perceived as focusing on campaigns of cyber security and espionage.

Seventeen-year-old al-Nimr, a Saudi Arabian national, was arrested in 2012 for his participation in the Arab Spring protests. A teenager at the time of his incarceration, al-Nimr claims to have been tortured during his three years of imprisonment. In May 2014, he was sentenced to death.

Appeals to two of the country's highest courts were rejected. Despite calls from Amnesty International and other rights organizations, al-Nimr's execution is now awaiting ratification by King Salman.

As al-Nimr's fate began to make headlines, Anonymous decided to take matters into their own hands and hack official Saudi Arabian government websites.

In an exclusive interview with DW, a member of Anonymous outlines what motived the group to attack Riyadh.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 8 oktober 2015 @ 10:25:44 #250
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156684909
quote:
Former Reuters Journalist Matthew Keys Found Guilty of Three Counts of Hacking | Motherboard

On Wednesday, a jury in Sacramento, California, found Matthew Keys, former social media editor at Reuters and an ex-employee of KTXL Fox 40, guilty of computer hacking under the Computer Fraud & Abuse Act.

In 2010, Keys posted login credentials to the Tribune Company content management system (CMS) to a chatroom run by Anonymous, resulting in the defacement of an LA Times article online. The defacement was reversed in 40 minutes, but the government argued the attack caused nearly a million dollars in damage.

“The government wanted to send a clear message that if you want to cover a group they don’t agree with, and you’re not complicit with them [the government], they will target you,” Keys told me after the trial.

When asked about claims that the prosecution was politically motivated, Assistant US Attorney Matt Segal replied, "I don't know what Keys's political beliefs are."

Keys was found guilty on all three counts he was charged with: conspiracy to commit computer hacking, transmission of malicious code causing unauthorized damage to a protected computer, and attempting to transmit malicious code to cause unauthorized damage to a protected computer. (The specific provisions of the CFAA are listed at the end of this article.)

The statutory maximum for Keys's crimes is 25 years, but in a statement given after the trial, a spokesperson for the US Attorneys Office said Keys would likely face less than five years.

"While it has not been determined what the government will be asking the court for, it will likely be less than 5 years," the spokesperson said.

"This is not the crime of the century," Segal said, adding that nonetheless Keys should not get away with his acts. At minimum, he may receive probation. Sentencing is scheduled for January 20, 2016.

That was bullshit.

That was bullshit.

Keys said he was disappointed with the verdict, and worried about the sentence affecting his ability to work. However, he also expressed his intention to appeal the conviction, and was optimistic it would be overturned.

Keys added that a few months after his first story about Anonymous, he was approached by the FBI, but Keys refused to allow them to scan his computer. He was indicted a couple of years later.

the AUSA pointed out that Keys had committed a crime against a journalistic institution.

the AUSA pointed out that Keys had committed a crime against a journalistic institution.

In order to be convicted under the CFAA, the damage had to exceed $5,000. The government claimed that Keys caused $929,977.00 worth of damage. During the trial, the defense tried to cast doubt on the total damages, claiming that the expenditures in response to the hack were not reasonable, and Tribune employees had grossly inflated the hours spent on incident response.

“This case demonstrates the FBI’s commitment to identify and investigate those who harass former employers by using insider knowledge to intentionally exploit computer systems—whether directly or by proxy—to damage the reputation and operations of a business,” said Special Agent in Charge Monica M. Miller of the FBI’s Sacramento field office in a statement. “Individuals who use ‘bully’ tactics to attack computer networks will face justice for their actions.”

The jury was composed of 11 women and 1 man. The government was represented by Assistant US Attorneys Matthew Segal and Paul Hemesath, along with James Silver, trial attorney for the Department of Justice Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section. Matthew Keys was represented by Jay Leiderman, Tor Ekeland, and Mark Jaffe.

***

The charges against Matthew Keys:

Count 1: Conspiracy

18 USC 371

Underlying crime: § 1030(a)(5)(A) and § 1030(c)(4)(B)

Count 2: Transmission of Malicious Code

1030(a)(5)(A) & 1030(c)(4)(B)

Count 3: Attempted Transmission of Malicious Code

1030(a)(5)(A) & 1030(b)
Bron: motherboard.vice.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 9 oktober 2015 @ 19:51:54 #251
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156715646
quote:
quote:
One particularly controversial part of the provisions make it a crime to reveal corporate wrongdoing "through a computer system". Experts have pointed out that the wording is very vague, and could lead to whistleblowers being penalised for sharing important information, and lead to journalists stopping reporting on them.
quote:
As well as imposing strict rules on those on the internet, activists point out that some of the parts of the agreement could limit central parts of the internet and modern computers. A restriction on breaking “digital locks” for instance — which is meant to allow companies to control their products even after they have been bought by customers — could stop disabled people from making important changes to their computers or using different technology.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 13 oktober 2015 @ 19:30:38 #252
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156808966
quote:
Anonymous launches Operation Black October, targets banking system

How far can the ordinary people shoulder responsibility of a failed private bank?

Anonymous asks you to join the peaceful revolution from October 1 to 31, called ‘Operation Black October’. Take all your money from your bank account, don’t use your credit card, pay cash and change your future.

Show the Big Bankers that we don’t need their debit cards, we don’t need their credit cards, we don’t need their loans, and we don’t need them.

Let’s show them that we are the 99% and we can beat them.

It is that easy.


Email address:

Bron: www.hangthebankers.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 17 oktober 2015 @ 19:53:23 #253
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_156904139
quote:
quote:
NAGOYA – A tweet purporting to be from Anonymous, a diffuse international collective of online hacker activists, warned of cyberattacks on the websites of two major airports earlier this month, police sources said Saturday. A day later, the web pages of Narita and Chubu airports were struck down.

On Oct. 10, the website of Narita International Airport went down for about eight hours from around 2:30 a.m. after being overwhelmed by multiple-source traffic.

The website of Chubu Centrair International Airport also became difficult to access for 8½ hours.

Flights at the airports were unaffected.

According to investigative sources from the Chiba and Aichi prefectural police, the Twitter post on Oct. 9 said attacks would be made on two major Japanese airports.

It gave the addresses of Narita and Chubu airports.

The sources said the websites of the two facilities apparently suffered “distributed denial of service” or DDoS attacks, which are intended to paralyze a targeted website by overwhelming it with high levels of traffic sent from multiple network sources.

The website of the town of Taiji in Wakayama Prefecture experienced a similar cyberattack in September, which police suspect was made by Anonymous in protest of the town’s longtime practice of hunting of dolphins whereby the mammals are killed or captured after being herded into a cove. The slaughter has become a cause celebre for animal rights activists and others.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 24 oktober 2015 @ 21:35:36 #254
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157070877
quote:
#OpSingleGateway

Greetings citizens of the world, we are anonymous.

Government of the Kingdom of Thailand, it has come to our attention that you have decided to disregard your citizens, the people of this country, and have persisted to project an unique Gateway to the Internet, in running a system which only benefits yourselves and the giant corporate bodies operating.

We saw the situation in Thailand for the past months going too far, restricting basic access to freedom of speech, protests and basic human rights against anyone who criticized the Thai Junta.

The latest project of the Thai military government is to deploy a single gateway in order to control, intercept and arrest any persons not willing to follow the Junta orders and your so called moral.

No interception systems ever stopped any terrorist attacks, neither any national security threats in Asia or any western countries. It only allows greedy governments and large corporations to get more profits and less freedom of speech for the people of this country.

The land of smile will soon be similar to China, North Korea or any tyranic country providing intrusive electronic systems to spy and prosecute their own citizens having different ways of thinking.

It is unacceptable that you promote your own people, army executives at the Head of the largest Telecommunication operator: CAT Telecom. Any Corporations or individuals helping to deploy this single gateway will be targeted by any electronic means.

We will not only fight against the single gateway project but will expose your incompetence to the world, where depravity and personal interests prevail.

More than 6,000 people died and 10,000 injured in south of Thailand you have no budget to end this daily terrorist genocide killing innocents, but find 15 million USD budget to censor your own citizens. Our Thai brothers will understand what ความไม่สงบในชายแดนภาคใต้ของประเทศไทย means.

Together we stand against the injustice of your Government, tomorrow you will pay the price of your oppression against your own people.

You can arrest us, but you can't arrest an idea.

We are anonymous.
We are Legion.
United as ONE.
Divided by zero.
We do not forgive Censorship.
We do not forget Oppression.
Expect us.


Anonymous
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 25 oktober 2015 @ 02:12:57 #255
73683 leolinedance
Voor Rood-Wit gezongen
pi_157076515
Knal jij dit hele topic nou in je eentje PV? Het interesseert blijkbaar niemand iets, maar jij gaat maar door. Volhouder! :P
pi_157076834
Ik volg alle posts hier wel, ook al post ik niet. Maar zeker wel interesse dus :)
There are only 151 Pokémon.
  zondag 25 oktober 2015 @ 03:16:30 #257
73683 leolinedance
Voor Rood-Wit gezongen
pi_157077315
quote:
0s.gif Op zondag 25 oktober 2015 02:52 schreef Eenskijken het volgende:
Ik volg alle posts hier wel, ook al post ik niet. Maar zeker wel interesse dus :)
aha :)
  vrijdag 30 oktober 2015 @ 14:56:04 #258
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157204485
quote:
.
quote:
Anonymous wil de namen op 24 november publiceren, precies een jaar na onrust in Ferguson. Toen de overwegend zwarte bevolking van de stad in opstand kwam tegen de politie na de dood van Michael Brown, dreigde de KKK met geweld tegen demonstranten.

Anonymous reageerde hierop door het belangrijkste twitteraccount van de KKK over te nemen. Het was het begin van de anti-klanoperatie Operation KKK, ofwel #OpKKK, van het hackerscollectief. Anonymous maakte al eerder enkele namen bekend van KKK-leden en voerde DDoS-aanvallen uit op sites van de KKK.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_157205977
quote:
7s.gif Op vrijdag 30 oktober 2015 14:56 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

.

[..]

:') Anonymous stelletje sukkeltjes die niets kunnen.
  vrijdag 30 oktober 2015 @ 16:39:30 #260
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157206359
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 30 oktober 2015 16:18 schreef vigen98 het volgende:

[..]

:') Anonymous stelletje sukkeltjes die niets kunnen.
Ze hebben jou uit je tent gelokt.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 2 november 2015 @ 16:03:56 #261
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157270973
quote:
quote:
Hacktivist group Anonymous has begun publishing the personal details of members of the Ku Klux Klan as its campaign of cyberwar against the white supremacist group escalates.

Anonymous, the amorphous online activist collective, last week promised to reveal the identity of 1,000 members of the KKK after coming into possession of the private information through a compromised Twitter account associated with the group.

The details published on Sunday and Monday are only a small portion of the total information, and include email addresses and phone numbers which the hacktivist group claims belong to members of the KKK. Anonymous hackers have so far published four separate listings on text-sharing website Pastebin, including 57 phone numbers and 23 email addresses.

There has been no verification of the details so far, but Anonymous has vowed to reveal the full identities of up to 1,000 members of the KKK Thursday, Nov. 5 to coincide with the group’s global protest movement, called the Million Mask March. International Business Times has attempted to call several of the numbers on the list, but none have connected so far.

Some official KKK Twitter accounts have reacted angrily to publication of members’ details, with one suggesting the white supremacist group carry out its own rally on Nov. 5 alongside Anonymous' Million Mask March.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 4 november 2015 @ 14:15:01 #262
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157313342
quote:
Police clamp down on feared unrest on Million Mask march | UK news | The Guardian

Thousands of extra officers and tough public order restrictions to be deployed amid fears of repeat of violence on Bonfire night protest

Scotland Yard is to deploy thousands of extra police officers and impose tough public order restrictions over fears that a Bonfire night protest in London against austerity and increased state surveillance will turn violent.

The Million Mask march planned for Thursday night is part of a global protest movement organised by the internet activist group Anonymous.

In what has become an annual event, police fear a repeat of the unrest that occurred at last year’s demonstration, when scuffles broke out between riot police and protesters – many wearing Guy Fawkes masks.

The Metropolitan police believes protesters plan to damage public monuments, attack police officers and try to occupy buildings. The owners of buildings identified as possible targets have been briefed by the police.

Ch Supt Pippa Mills said: “Over the last few years this event has seen high levels of antisocial behaviour, crime and disorder.” She cited harassment of commuters, including buses being rocked and protesters jumping on car bonnets.

Mills added: “This year we have strong reason to believe that peaceful protest is the last thing on the minds of many of the people who will come along.”

A statement from the Met said a “significant policing operation” would be in place for the protest, including “dedicated teams of highly flexible officers on standby at key locations in capital”.

Restrictions under the Public Order Act will also be imposed to confine the demonstration to Whitehall, Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square, and ban any protest after 9pm.

Thursday’s demonstration is expected to focus on proposals to increase powers of the security services. It will come a day after the government is due to publish legislation seen as a revived snooper’s charter. Under the plans, internet companies will be required to store details of every website visited by their customers for 12 months.

The organisers of the demonstration have urged supporters to descend on London in response to the “abuses and malpractice” of the government and the “profit and greed of the few”.

In a Facebook posting, they urged followers to gather at Trafalgar Square from 6pm. It said: “We have seen the abuses and malpractice of this government, and governments before it, we have seen the encroaching destruction of many civil liberties we hold dear, we have seen the pushes to make the internet yet another part of the surveillance state, we have seen the government’s disregard for migrants, for the poor, the elderly and the disabled, we have seen the capital, profit and greed of the few put before the well-being of the many and we say enough is enough.”

Bron: www.theguardian.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 november 2015 @ 14:19:48 #263
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157335206
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 5 november 2015 @ 21:45:54 #264
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157347354
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 6 november 2015 @ 13:36:53 #265
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157358407
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 15 november 2015 @ 22:58:25 #266
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157586532
quote:
Anonymous Announces Payback for ISIS Paris Attacks

It didn't take long for Anonymous members to rally and swear payback for the recent ISIS terror attacks that took place in Paris, France, on Friday, November 13, 2015.

Having run #OpISIS back at the beginning of the year, after the Charlie Hebdo massacre in January, various smaller branches of the Anonymous hacktivism group are now vowing to retake arms against their old foe.

In its previous campaign, the hackers tracked, hacked, unmasked, and reported thousands of Twitter accounts that were run or associated with the Islamic State's members.

Expect the same thing to happen again, especially since ISIS doesn't have any other kind of online presence that Anonymous can attack outside their Twitter accounts.

Yesterday, Belgium's Internal Affairs Minister said that ISIS members might have used the built-in PlayStation 4 chat system to coordinate attacks. If this information is confirmed by French investigators, expect the group to take aim at Sony's service in the coming months.

Anonymous has a long history of championing social causes, taking aim at Ku Klux Klan members, Monsanto's GMO business, and multiple oppressive regimes.

Here are two videos put out by Anonymous' Italian and French branches. Below them, there's also the group's statement. You can track the current campaign on Twitter using the #OpParis hashtag.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 17 november 2015 @ 20:13:35 #267
445752 broodjepindakaashagelslag
Ik blaf niet maar ik bijt
pi_157631602
quote:
quote:
The online collective Anonymous "is at war" with the Islamic State following the attacks in Paris, in a continuation of its "#OpISIS" campaign.

One major Anonymous twitter account, @GroupAnon, announced the operation on 15 November, writing that "we won't stop opposing #IslamicState. We're also better hackers."

-- Anonymous (@GroupAnon)
November 15, 2015

Make no mistake: #Anonymous is at war with #Daesh. We won't stop opposing #IslamicState. We're also better hackers. #OpISIS

In a video, originally released in French, a figure wearing Anonymous' iconic Guy Fawkes mask addresses the terror group directly. "You, the vermin who kill innocent victims, we will hunt you down like we did those who carried out the attacks on Charlie Hebdo," they say in computer-generated speech.

A loosely related group of hackivists, BinarySec, has also confirmed that it will start acting against Isis in the online sphere. In a statement posted on ghostbin, the group wrote:

"We as a collective will bring an end to your reign of terror. We will no longer turn a blind eye to your cruel and inhumane acts of terrorism towards all other religions that are not Islam. We've watched you behead innocent people, kidnap and murder children, and then launch terrorist attacks in France. This will NOT BE TOLERATED ANY LONGER.

"We here at BinarySec live for the sole purpose of bringing down All ISIS Propaganda ONE website and/or person at a time. ISIS ... Your Jihad is coming to an abrupt end . We here at BinarySec will be one of the driving forces to your end and that's a promise. ISIS... The War Is On."
Live Paris attacks: suspicious suitcase prompts evacuation at German stadium - live
Follow our live coverage of the fallout from the Paris attacks, as France steps up airstrikes in Syria and some US states refuse to take Syrian refugees
Read more

The opposition to Isis isn't new amongst hacktivist communities, and both BinarySec and Anonymous, more broadly, have been disrupting jihadi online communications for a while. The operation began in January, as #OpCharlieHebdo, when members of Anonymous devoted themselves to rooting out the social media accounts of Isis supporters.

Anonymous declared a partial victory in #OpISIS back in February, after seizing control of almost 100 Twitter accounts associated with the group. Since then, they have made use of a varied set of tools to hinder Isis online. Social media accounts have been seized, by guessing passwords or abusing reset emails, and when that isn't possible, they have been flagged to either Twitter or Facebook to be shut down.

Additionally, Anonymous has been using hacking techniques such as distributed denial of service attacks, which overwhelm a website with traffic, to bring down public Islamic State websites.

According to a report in Foreign Policy, Anonymous has had success, bringing down 149 websites, flagging more than 100,000 Twitter accounts and reporting a further 5,000 propaganda videos.


[ Bericht 4% gewijzigd door broodjepindakaashagelslag op 17-11-2015 20:30:24 ]
Its hard to win an argument against a smart person, but it's damn near impossible to win an argument against a stupid person
  woensdag 18 november 2015 @ 15:00:02 #268
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157648390
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 21 november 2015 @ 11:08:34 #269
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157712365
ergoproxy1111 twitterde op vrijdag 20-11-2015 om 13:42:12 South Koren Government Decides to Ban The Anon Mask Due To The Fight Of Education #anon #anons #Anonymous #AnonOps @AnonymousPress reageer retweet
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 21 november 2015 @ 19:03:54 #270
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157721672
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 21 november 2015 @ 19:46:21 #271
423984 defokkingfoker
Holy fucking shit
pi_157722882
TVP _O_
Ik ben geil
  zaterdag 28 november 2015 @ 18:14:08 #272
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_157883102
quote:
'Anonymous' claimt hacken IJslandse sites om walvisjacht

Activisten van het hackerscollectief Anonymous hebben de verantwoordelijkheid geclaimd voor het neerhalen van vijf overheidswebsites in IJsland. De cyberaanval werd uitgevoerd uit protest tegen de walvisjacht door dit land.

De sites, waaronder de officiële website van de premier en van de ministeries van Milieu en Binnenlandse Zaken, gingen vrijdag plat en bleven tot zaterdagmiddag offline. De regering heeft geen commentaar gegeven op storing.

In een video gepost op sociale media, riepen de activisten iedereen op om websites die zijn gelinkt aan IJsland te hacken uit protest tegen de aanhoudende commerciële jacht op walvissen, ondanks een internationaal moratorium.

IJsland is lid van de Internationale Walvisvaart Commissie (IWC), een intergouvernementeel orgaan dat commerciële walsvisvangst sinds 1986 verbiedt. Maar zowel IJsland als Noorwegen blijft op walvissen jagen.

Bron: www.volkskrant.nl
Het artikel gaat verder

[ Bericht 2% gewijzigd door Papierversnipperaar op 28-11-2015 19:46:30 ]
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 11 december 2015 @ 09:54:40 #273
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158167532
quote:
quote:
TOKYO — The Japanese authorities said they were investigating whether the hacking group Anonymous was behind a computer attack that shut down Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s personal website on Thursday.

A person claiming to be part of the group of activist hackers claimed responsibility for disrupting access to the site, saying in a message posted on Twitter that the attack was carried out in retaliation for Japan’s resumption of whale hunting in the Antarctic.

Hackers linked to Anonymous have targeted websites related to whale and dolphin hunting before. The group claimed responsibility last month for the shutdown of several government sites in Iceland, another nation that practices whaling.

Two Japanese whaling ships departed for the Antarctic last week, drawing condemnation from anti-whaling groups as well as governments that oppose the practice, including those of Australia, New Zealand and the United States.
Het artikel gaat verder.
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158168634
Ik wacht nog steeds op gelekte documenten over buitenaards leven. Beter hacken ze zoiets een keer.
  vrijdag 11 december 2015 @ 21:54:19 #275
445752 broodjepindakaashagelslag
Ik blaf niet maar ik bijt
pi_158182028
quote:
quote:
In een bericht op file-sharing website Ghostbin roept Anonymous iedereen op om vandaag mee te helpen om het leven van Islamitische Staat zo zuur mogelijk te maken. 'Je hoeft geen deel uit te maken van Anonymous. Iedereen kan dit en je hebt er geen speciale vaardigheden voor nodig. We vragen je om mee te doen op Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube en in de echte wereld.'
Its hard to win an argument against a smart person, but it's damn near impossible to win an argument against a stupid person
  dinsdag 15 december 2015 @ 15:12:59 #276
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158260066
quote:
ISIS Twitter Accounts Linked Back To UK Government Department | Your News Wire

A group of Anonymous hackers have discovered that a number of ISIS supporters’ social media accounts are being run from UK government departments, in an embarrassing exposure.

Hacking group VandaSec say they have discovered evidence that links three ISIS accounts to the Department of Work and Pensions’ London offices.

Mirror.co.uk reports:

Every computer and mobile phone logs onto the internet using an IP address, which is a type of identification number.

The hacking collective showed Mirror Online details of the IP addresses used by a trio of separate digital jihadis to access Twitter accounts, which were then used to carry out online recruitment and propaganda campaigns.

At first glance, the IP addresses seem to be based in Saudi Arabia, but upon further inspection using specialist tools they appeared to link back to the DWP.

“Don’t you think that’s strange?” one of the hackers asked Mirror Online. “We traced these accounts back to London, the home of the British intelligence services.”

VandaSec’s work has sparked wild rumours suggesting someone inside the DWP is running ISIS-supporting accounts, or they were created by intelligence services as a honeypot to trap wannabe jihadis.

However, when Mirror Online traced the IP addresses obtained by VandaSec, we found they actually pointed to a series of unpublicised transactions between Britain and Saudi Arabia.

We learned that the British government sold on a large number of IP addresses to two Saudi Arabian firms.

After the sale completed in October of this year, they were used by extremists to spread their message of hate.

Although the DWP denied owning the IP addresses at first, Jamie Turner, an expert from a firm called PCA Predict, discovered a record of the sale of IP addresses, and found a large number were transferred to Saudi Arabia in October of this year.

He told us it was likely the IP addresses could still be traced back to the DWP because records of the addresses had not yet been fully updated.

The Cabinet Office has now admitted to selling the IP addresses on to Saudi Telecom and the Saudi-based Mobile Telecommunications Company earlier this year as part of a wider drive to get rid of a large number of the DWP’s IP addresses.

It said the British government can have no control over how these addresses are used after the sale.

A Cabinet Office spokesperson said: “The government owns millions of unused IP addresses which we are selling to get a good return for hardworking taxpayers.

“We have sold a number of these addresses to telecoms companies both in the UK and internationally to allow their customers to connect to the internet.

“We think carefully about which companies we sell addresses to, but how their customers use this internet connection is beyond our control.”

The government did not reveal how much money was made from selling the IP addresses to the pair of Saudi firms, because it regards this information as commercially sensitive.
Bron: yournewswire.com
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158260083
quote:
Thefuck
  donderdag 17 december 2015 @ 18:01:17 #278
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158311542
quote:
Anonymous Shuts Down Almost All Icelandic Gov't Websites For 13 Hours - The Reykjavik Grapevine

Download Prins Póló’s “París Norðursins”

Late last night, hacktivist group Anonymous launched another DDOS attack in their #OpWhales campaign. The group effectively shut down every ministry’s website, with the exception of the Ministry of Welfare. RÚV reports these sites were offline for about 13 hours.

Although the sites are back online, Anonymous posted a video, which you can see below, promising that this latest attack is only the beginning.

The #OpWhales tag on Twitter also backs this up, as their official count vows to continue operations until whaling is ceased:

— Anonymous (@TeamRektIT) November 27, 2015

In addition to government websites, Anonymous also hit HB Grandi, the company which conducts fin whale hunting in Iceland:

— Anonymous (@_RektFaggot_) November 8, 2015

Anonymous is also apparently reaching out to individual members of parliament, as Social Democrat MP Katrín Júlíusdóttir – who opposes whale hunting – took to Twitter to express her frustration, saying, “Getting endless spam-tweets against whaling. Tiresome. I have only one thing to say: You are preaching to the choir, people!”:

— Katrín Júlíusdóttir (@katrinjul) November 28, 2015

While the campaign targets the hunting of any whales, Anonymous objects in particular to the hunting of fin whales. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has classified fin whales as endangered, with a moratorium put in place on the breed by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in 1986.

Gunnar Hrafn Infiltrated ISIS: “I’m Going To Get Beheaded For This”

Rescue Squad Frustrated With Tourists Who Do Not Abide Traffic Signs

Akureyri In The Midst Of Super-Winter

Statement From Reykjavík Grapevine’s HR Department Regarding Offensive Facebook Post

Rogue Merchants Opening Gates On Laugavegur

Americans On Pinterest Sure Love Iceland

Stunning Geothermal Area To Be Ruined For Geothermal Drilling

As the year draws to a close, the tourism industry in Iceland is expecting a great many visitors to the

As the year draws to a close, the tourism industry in Iceland is expecting a great many visitors to the

There is no need to worry about political correctness taking away the simple pleasure of the “Man of the Year” award as

There is no need to worry about political correctness taking away the simple pleasure of the “Man of the Year” award as

News has surfaced that a group of private investors are looking into the possibilities of building a high-speed rail link

News has surfaced that a group of private investors are looking into the possibilities of building a high-speed rail link

Over the past eight years, Iceland has dropped from #1 to #16 on the Human Development Index, conducted by the

Over the past eight years, Iceland has dropped from #1 to #16 on the Human Development Index, conducted by the

A decision was finally been made on what to name the lava field wrought by the Holuhraun eruption: Holuhraun. Vísir

A decision was finally been made on what to name the lava field wrought by the Holuhraun eruption: Holuhraun. Vísir

Just when you were getting used to the mild weather, another storm is expected to hit Iceland tomorrow. The Icelandic

Just when you were getting used to the mild weather, another storm is expected to hit Iceland tomorrow. The Icelandic

Every happy hour in town in your pocket.

What should you eat in Reykjavík? Shake your phone, and we will recommend you something.
Bron: grapevine.is
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 25 december 2015 @ 20:08:25 #279
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158525242
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 december 2015 @ 01:49:23 #280
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158559020
quote:
Anonymous Hacks Asia Pacific Telecommunity Against Internet Censorship in Asia

Anonymous hacker collective has attacked the official website of Asia Pacific telecommunity and defaced it in protest against growing plans for internet censorship in Asia.

The hackers gained access of the website’s admin panel (running Drupal) and from there, leaked all the data stored on the website along with defacing the site with one of their own pages.

quote:
Recently, China's president (Xi Jinping), in a World Internet conference, emphasized on censorship being the right of every country.

In the same conference, the organization responsible for managing domain names, ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) promised full support in working on the new internet plan in which Chinese officials will have stronger say on how the organization works.

ICANN will be taking over IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) which is currently run by the US government and with that move Chinese government will be able to monitor the internet all around the world. This move will certainly make internet users nervous.


Bron: www.hackread.com
Het artikel gaat verder.
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De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 december 2015 @ 01:59:10 #281
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158559321
quote:
Anonymous celebrates as cyberattacks hit Turkey's banks

A new wave of cyberattacks slammed into Turkey's leading financial institutions this week, as the country's Internet continues to buckle under the pressure of a massive DDoS attack.

Anonymous has claimed responsibility for the massive DDoS attack that took down the Turkish Domain Name System—its address book for the Internet—last week. The hacktivist collective had also threatened the government with further attacks, though it is believed that another group is responsible.

Turkish leftist hacker group RedHack claimed responsibility for the attack on Turkey's banks. RedHack's brief message had a reference to the popular series Mr. Robot.

Translation: “Anyone has a credit debt? ;)

On Thursday afternoon, Turkish time, worried customers filled up call centers and social media accounts of Turkish banks, including the country's leading private bank Garanti, when they were unable to access online banking services:


An unnamed banking executive told daily Habertürk: “We are looking into the issues with access. We will make a statement as soon as possible.” The support accounts of Garanti, İş Bank, and Ak Bank did not respond for a comment.

Earlier on Thursday, an unnamed ministry official told daily Sözcü that the Communication Ministry website was down because of “broken cables,” however, the ministry later released a statement rejecting reports of a cyber attack, claiming that the downtime was due to a “planned network upgrade:”

Drop us your email and our editors will hand-deliver the best news, analysis, opinion, and hilarity from the Daily Dot and around the web. No shipping and handling fees required.

Bron: www.dailydot.com
Het artikel op de site is langer.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zondag 27 december 2015 @ 19:16:33 #282
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158576676
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  dinsdag 29 december 2015 @ 22:10:22 #283
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158652208
quote:
Recently Bought a Windows Computer? Microsoft Probably Has Your Encryption Key

One of the excellent features of new Windows devices is that disk encryption is built-in and turned on by default, protecting your data in case your device is lost or stolen. But what is less well-known is that, if you are like most users and login to Windows 10 using your Microsoft account, your computer automatically uploaded a copy of your recovery key – which can be used to unlock your encrypted disk – to Microsoft’s servers, probably without your knowledge and without an option to opt-out.

During the “crypto wars” of the nineties, the National Security Agency developed an encryption backdoor technology – endorsed and promoted by the Clinton administration – called the Clipper chip, which they hoped telecom companies would use to sell backdoored crypto phones. Essentially, every phone with a Clipper chip would come with an encryption key, but the government would also get a copy of that key – this is known as key escrow – with the promise to only use it in response to a valid warrant. But due to public outcry and the availability of encryption tools like PGP, which the government didn’t control, the Clipper chip program ceased to be relevant by 1996. (Today, most phone calls still aren’t encrypted. You can use the free, open source, backdoorless Signal app to make encrypted calls.)

The fact that new Windows devices require users to backup their recovery key on Microsoft’s servers is remarkably similar to a key escrow system, but with an important difference. Users can choose to delete recovery keys from their Microsoft accounts (you can skip to the bottom of this article to learn how) – something that people never had the option to do with the Clipper chip system. But they can only delete it after they’ve already uploaded it to the cloud.

Bron: theintercept.com
Het artikel gaat verder.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158680909
quote:
7s.gif Op dinsdag 29 december 2015 22:10 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

One of the excellent features of new Windows devices is that disk encryption is built-in and turned on by default, protecting your data in case your device is lost or stolen. But what is less well-known is that, if you are like most users and login to Windows 10 using your Microsoft account, your computer automatically uploaded a copy of your recovery key – which can be used to unlock your encrypted disk – to Microsoft’s servers, probably without your knowledge and without an option to opt-out.
Dat is niet best maar je bent als gebruiker wel erg onnozel als je je Microsoft-account hiervoor gebruikt en tegelijkertijd er problemen mee hebt dat Microsoft die data heeft. ;)
quote:
But they can only delete it after they’ve already uploaded it to the cloud.
Waarbij het de vraag is of dat het daadwerkelijk verwijderd is. Welke onafhankelijke partij kan dit controleren? :?

Terzijde, blijf vooral doorgaan met ons op de hoogte te houden. Er wordt niet veel op gereageerd maar het wordt wel met interesse gelezen.
ING en ABN investeerden honderden miljoenen euro in DAPL.
#NoDAPL
  donderdag 31 december 2015 @ 20:38:35 #285
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158723721
quote:
Ian Murdock, father of Debian, dead at 42 | Ars Technica

Ian Murdock, founder of the Debian GNU/Linux distribution project, has died at the age of 42. His death, announced in a blog post by Docker CEO Ben Golub, came after an apparent encounter with police and a statement posted on Murdock's Twitter feed that he was going to commit suicide, though no cause of his death has been given.

Paul Tagliamonte, a Debian developer and member of the Debian FTP Team who contributed to a Debian Project memorial post to Murdock, told Ars:

Debian was one of the first operating systems I've ever used, starting with Debian 2.2 ("woody") in middle school. Debian has shaped, in the most literal and direct way, the course of my life. Ian was a figure I looked up to, a central figure in defining the Debian Community, Social Contract, the Debian Free Software Guidelines, and the Open Source Initiative.With his passing, I can only hope he's found peace, reflect on the things he was able to do for the world, and think about the ways in which he's touched my life.

Murdock, born in Germany in 1973, founded Debian in 1993 while studying computer science at Purdue University. The distribution gets its name from the combination of his name and that of his then-girlfriend Deborah Lynn. The pair married and had two children; they divorced in 2007.

Murdock's Debian Manifesto railed at the poor software maintenance of other Linux distributions of the time—and that of Softlanding Linux System (SLS) in particular, bemoaning the lack of attention developers gave to distributions and what he saw as the big cash grabs being made by would-be commercial Linux developers. He outlined Debian's modular architecture approach as well as its adherence to free software philosophy.

"The time has come to concentrate on the future of Linux rather than on the destructive goal of enriching oneself at the expense of the entire Linux community and its future," Murdock wrote in the Manifesto. "The development and distribution of Debian may not be the answer to the problems that I have outlined in the Manifesto, but I hope that it will at least attract enough attention to these problems to allow them to be solved."

After earning his bachelor of science from Purdue in 1996, Murdock became chief technology officer of the Linux Foundation. In 2003, he brought his experience with Debian to Sun, where he was vice president of emerging platforms. He led Project Indiana, the effort that created the OpenSolaris operating system, which he described in a 2007 interview as "taking the lesson that Linux has brought to the operating system and providing that for Solaris as well." But three years later, after Sun was acquired by Oracle, the plug was pulled on OpenSolaris in favor of a new proprietary version.

Simon Phipps, who led the open source effort at Sun alongside Murdock and worked (though at separate times from Murdock) at the Open Source Initiative, where Murdock was founding secretary, told Ars Murdock "was always energetic, enthusiastic, pragmatic and charming. I and my team [at Sun] appreciated his insight and activity as well as enjoying his company. I've been contacting them, and we are all devastated by his untimely loss."

After the Oracle acquisition, Murdock resigned his position at Sun. In 2011, he went back to Indiana to join the cloud software company ExactTarget as its vice president of platform and developer community. The company was acquired by Salesforce in 2013 and became Salesforce Marketing Cloud. In November, he left the company to join Docker in San Francisco.

On Monday at 2:13pm Eastern Time, Murdock apparently posted that he was going to kill himself:

I'm committing suicide tonight…do not intervene as I have many stories to tell and do not want them to die with me #debian #runnerkrysty67

Also on Monday, Murdock wrote a string of posts that indicate he had a confrontation with police. Inquiries to the San Francisco Police Department by Ars went unanswered. Update: Public records indicate Murdock was arrested on December 27 and released on bail by the San Francisco County Sheriff's Department, but no details were available on the charges.

Golub wrote in his post that "Ian’s family has requested that well-wishers and press respect their privacy and direct all inquiries through Docker."

Ars will update this story with further details as they become available.

Expand full story

Sean Gallagher / Sean is Ars Technica's IT Editor. A former Navy officer, systems administrator, and network systems integrator with 20 years of IT journalism experience, he lives and works in Baltimore, Maryland.

Bron: arstechnica.com
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158739206
Hopelijk wordt nog duidelijk waarom hij zelfmoord pleegde. We moeten als maatschappij meer eraan doen om te voorkomen dat mensen ongelukkig worden.
ING en ABN investeerden honderden miljoenen euro in DAPL.
#NoDAPL
  vrijdag 1 januari 2016 @ 21:58:49 #287
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158746896
quote:
0s.gif Op vrijdag 1 januari 2016 17:02 schreef Bram_van_Loon het volgende:
Hopelijk wordt nog duidelijk waarom hij zelfmoord pleegde. We moeten als maatschappij meer eraan doen om te voorkomen dat mensen ongelukkig worden.
Als je iets dieper graaft is zelfmoord twijfelachtig. Hij zou vlak er voor door de politie zijn opgepakt, mishandelt, naar het ziekenhuis gebracht en weer gearresteerd zijn.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158759738
quote:
7s.gif Op vrijdag 1 januari 2016 21:58 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Als je iets dieper graaft is zelfmoord twijfelachtig. Hij zou vlak er voor door de politie zijn opgepakt, mishandelt, naar het ziekenhuis gebracht en weer gearresteerd zijn.
Dat is nog te dun om ervan uit te gaan dat hij is uitgeschakeld, het geeft wel voldoende aanleiding om het kritisch te volgen. Een mix zou ook mogelijk zijn: ze hebben hem het leven zuur gemaakt omdat hij het een en ander wou onthullen of iets dergelijks en hierdoor heeft hij er zelf een einde aan gemaakt.
ING en ABN investeerden honderden miljoenen euro in DAPL.
#NoDAPL
  zaterdag 2 januari 2016 @ 15:46:20 #289
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158761844
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 2 januari 2016 14:29 schreef Bram_van_Loon het volgende:

[..]

Dat is nog te dun om ervan uit te gaan dat hij is uitgeschakeld, het geeft wel voldoende aanleiding om het kritisch te volgen. Een mix zou ook mogelijk zijn: ze hebben hem het leven zuur gemaakt omdat hij het een en ander wou onthullen of iets dergelijks en hierdoor heeft hij er zelf een einde aan gemaakt.
Wat met Aaron Swartz gebeurd is

quote:
quote:
Aaron Hillel Swartz (November 8, 1986 – January 11, 2013) was an American computer programmer, entrepreneur, writer, political organizer and Internet hacktivist. He was involved in the development of the web feed format RSS[3] and the Markdown publishing format,[4] the organization Creative Commons,[5] the website framework web.py[6] and the social news site, Reddit, in which he became a partner after its merger with his company, Infogami.[i] He committed suicide while under federal indictment for data-theft, a prosecution that was characterized by his family as being "the product of a criminal-justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach".[7].
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
pi_158761957
quote:
7s.gif Op zaterdag 2 januari 2016 15:46 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:

[..]

Wat met Aaron Swartz gebeurd is

[..]

[..]

Ik geloof direct dat ze paardenmiddelen inzetten voor iets kleins (als het al strafbaar was) omdat ze hem in het vizier hadden maar waarom?
ING en ABN investeerden honderden miljoenen euro in DAPL.
#NoDAPL
  zaterdag 2 januari 2016 @ 15:56:41 #291
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158762076
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 2 januari 2016 15:51 schreef Bram_van_Loon het volgende:

[..]

Ik geloof direct dat ze paardenmiddelen inzetten voor iets kleins (als het al strafbaar was) omdat ze hem in het vizier hadden maar waarom?
Macht en geld. Of in 1 woord: politiek. Maar in deze reeks is al het e.e.a. gepost over Swartz. Als je precies wilt weten wat er aan de hand is moet je er zelf een beetje induiken.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  zaterdag 2 januari 2016 @ 16:53:35 #292
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158763405
quote:
Anonymous Nailed 2015

In 2015, the hackers collective Anonymous probably garnered maximum headlines and initiated an array of top trending hashtags, so it can be said that the group had a pretty enjoyable yet hectic year.

It was this year that Anonymous showed its disapproval of various personalities, policies and trends including the militant terrorist group Daesh or ISIS.

Careful analysis suggests that Anonymous’ strategy was shifted from satisfying personal grudges to targeting universal issues of public interest.

Anonymous used the Internet and social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook quite convincingly to compel people around the world to rally against a particular issue.

Such as, when Charlie Hebdo magazine was attacked and the Paris attack in November, Anonymous staged social media war to disrupt and outdo the ISIS via “Ops.”

Let’s find out more about the most prominent campaigns of Anonymous:

Anonymous released a video on YouTube soon after the attack on Charlie Hebdo in which 12 people were killed. The masked man warned ISIS with this statement:

“We are fighting in memory of those innocent people who fought for freedom of expression.”

And, post the Paris attack that shocked the world and deprived over 130 innocent people of their lives, Anonymous launched another assault online with hashtags like #OpISIS and #OpParis.

A “war” of sorts was officially declared by the group against ISIS and as per the group’s claim, they were able to successfully take down around 20,000 Twitter accounts that were under use of ISIS for recruitment and propaganda purposes.

However, social-media users weren’t much satisfied with these efforts because it was always possible to open new accounts or communicate with potential targets through secure apps.

One such dissatisfied social media watcher is Gabrielle Coleman, Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy at McGill University in Montreal, who gave the following statement after the Paris attacks:

“You look at what is happening with this current iteration (of Anonymous’s operations) and you see that it doesn’t have much of an effect, which has nothing to do with Anonymous, per se, and more to do with the fact that ISIS has grabbed and secured global media attention in so many channels #OpISIS (which followed ‘Charlie Hebdo’) had a better track record as opposed to #OpParis because they had been at it longer and that was a smaller team of people.”

In December 2015, Anonymous continued its efforts to dethrone ISIS from social media by declaring Dec 11 as the “Troll ISIS Day,” and urged users to post mocking content saying: “Do not think you have to be a part of Anonymous, anyone can do this and does not require any special skills.”

Anonymous was also able to deface ISIS’s official website and place a viagra advert on its main page.

However, this strategy backfired as the campaign wasn’t as effective and all it could produce was some culturally insensitive posts that were down right derogatory for some communities.

Coleman acknowledged this fact as well by saying:

“You know there are a lot of people within Anonymous who were excited about and also dreading it (Troll ISIS Day). They were dreading it knowing that a lot of material would be offensive to Muslims. One of the things I’m looking out for is memes and images that set out to truly offend ISIS itself and not Muslims as a whole.”

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was also not spared for being so outspoken.

This came as no surprise since historically, Anonymous goes after larger-than-life organizations and popular personalities who it deems offensive to its philosophy in any way.

An example would be the group’s overwhelmingly strong dislike for the Church of Scientology, which compelled the group to conduct a spam campaign and rigging search engine results to show Evil Cult when Scientology was searched.

And who else could be as controversial and provocative than Donald Trump in 2015?

Therefore, when Trump proposed a ban on Muslims from entering the US, the war was declared again on him by Anonymous and the hashtag #OpTrump was generated to critique the candidate openly.

Soon after, Reuters reported that the website of Trump Tower New York was hacked and temporarily down.

The much-reviled group Ku Klux Klan also received hammering from ISIS this year.

The group hacked KKK’s twitter account and released the names of around a thousand potential members of the KKK citing that some members of the white supremacist group fed this information to Anonymous.

Post the information dump, another leak followed but this time, it prompted a backlash since the list of names included baseless accusations against various individuals including Mayor Jim Gray and Kentucky.

The final list also contained a message from Anonymous that read:

“Operation KKK will, in part, spark a bit of constructive dialogue about race, racism, racial terror, and freedom of expression, across group lines.”

“We consider this data dump as a form of resistance against the violence and intimidation tactics leveraged against the public by various members of the Ku Klux Klan group throughout history.”

Anonymous conducted several cyber attacks on Iceland and Japanese government websites in order to raise awareness against the ongoing Dolphin and Whale killings.

The hacktivist group conducted DDoS attacks on websites belong to the Iceland government and forced each and every government owned site to stay offline for at least 13 hours. The operation is still underway with #OpWhales.

Anonymous also carried out a series of cyber attacks against the Japanese government and defaced the Japanese PM’s site to register protest against whale hunt. The hacktivists also shut down the websites for two major Japanese airports for operation OpKillingBay.

Operation OpBeast was one of the highly praised operations Anonymous conducted in 2015. The operation’s main purpose was to raise awareness against x-rated animal abuse sites and shut them down. Anonymous was successful in deleting several such forums and websites. The operation forced some countries to put a ban on animal abuse sites.

Want to know more about Anonymous operations? Here is a list of 11 ongoing operations we suggest everyone should know about.

Waqas Amir is a Dubai based cybersecurity journalist with a passion for covering latest happenings in cyber security and tech world. In addition to being the founder of this website, Waqas is also into gaming, reading and investigative journalism.


Bron: www.hackread.com
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 4 januari 2016 @ 21:17:40 #293
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158829441
quote:
0s.gif Op zaterdag 2 januari 2016 15:51 schreef Bram_van_Loon het volgende:

[..]

Ik geloof direct dat ze paardenmiddelen inzetten voor iets kleins (als het al strafbaar was) omdat ze hem in het vizier hadden maar waarom?
quote:
quote:
Aaron Swartz was an outspoken computer genius with a strong streak for justice until the US government hounded him to his death. Bittersweet and "impossibly brilliant," The Boy Who Could Change the World collects more than a decade of Swartz's essays on topics from intellectual property and politics to media and pop culture. Order your copy of the book today by making a donation to Truthout!

The following is an interview with Mako Hill, one of the editors of the writings of the late Aaron Swartz. Hill was also Swartz's colleague and friend.
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  woensdag 6 januari 2016 @ 13:16:12 #294
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158870564
quote:
Anonymous hacks Thai police sites over Burmese jailings for British backpacker murders | World news | The Guardian

International cyber activists call for tourists to boycott Thailand following widely condemned police investigation

The hacking collective Anonymous has declared war on the Thai police, taking down multiple websites in protest against what it said was the scapegoating of two Burmese men convicting of killing two British backpackers on Koh Tao island.

The cyber activist group posted links to 15 Thai police websites, including the Bangkok Metropolitan Police Bureau, and published several Thai police email addresses, asking its members to hack them.

On Wednesday, seven of the websites were down and two links showed a black screen with “Failed Law. We want Justice. #BoycottThailand” written in white text.

The links also showed Anonymous’s signature mask, a white stylised Guy Fawkes face, under text saying “Blink hacker group”. Anonymous is a loose international network and works with multiple hacking organisations.

Related: British backpacker murder case that put Thailand on trial

Migrant bar workers Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo were sentenced to death on 24 December for the rape and murder of Hannah Witheridge, 23, from Norfolk, and the murder of 24-year-old David Miller, from Jersey, in September 2014.

The case drew the attention of rights groups who warned that migrants had previously been falsely accused of crimes in Thailand. The pair initially confessed to the murder but later rescinded their statements, saying they had been tortured by police to admit to the brutal beach attack.

The police, who deny any wrongdoing, were also accused by the defence team of mishandling crucial DNA evidence.

In a 37-minute video posted on its Facebook page, Anonymous said the Thai police “would rather blame foreigners or migrants for such crimes so as to protect their tourism industry than accuse their own Thai locals, that may deter tourists from choosing Thailand as their holiday destination”.

It cited past murder cases in Thailand involving foreigners in which Thai police first accused non-Thais who were later acquitted.

“Anonymous has found that Thai police, lie, fabricate evidence, do poor police investigating, contaminate crime scenes, loose DNA and evidence, accuse non-Thai nationals” and “refuse to believe that their own Thai locals are responsible for any wrongdoing”, a masked figure said in the video.

“We do not like the facts in this recent Koh Tao case and we do not believe the Thai court has convicted the actual murderers,” the figure said, speaking in a digitised voice.

It added that Anonymous dissuades foreigners from visiting the south-east Asian nation until “Thai police make many changes in the way they handle rape and murder cases involving foreigners or migrants and show more respect to deceased victims.”

Police spokesman Dechnarong Suticharnbancha told the local Khaosod news website that the police were working to track down the hackers.

“Even if the source of attack was from abroad, they will be convicted eventually,” he said. “It’s not a problem. Thai police are excellent.”

The defence team plans to apply to the appeals court to commute the sentence and, if they are unsuccessful, can take their case to the supreme court. The verdict sparked protests outside the Thai embassy in the Myanmar city of Yangon.

Miller’s family said after the sentencing they believed the police investigation and forensic work “was not the so-called shambles it was made out to be” and said justice was delivered.

The Witheridge family neither supported nor condemned the sentencing. They said in a statement at the time: “We have had to endure a lot of painful and confusing information. We now need time, as a family, to digest the outcome of the trial and figure out the most appropriate way to tell our story.”
Bron: www.theguardian.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 7 januari 2016 @ 22:41:59 #295
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_158915575
Free Assange! Hack the Planet
[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 14 januari 2016 @ 17:36:59 #296
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159102318
quote:
Thai court to sue anonymous hackers who shut down government websites | Prachatai English

The Thai Court of Justice plans to press charges against anonymous hackers who took down hundreds of websites of the Thai courts in protest against the conviction of two Burmese migrant workers for the murder of two British backpackers on Ko Tao Island.

On Wednesday, 13 January 2016, Suebpong Sripongkul, spokesperson of Thailand’s Court of Justice (CoJ), announced that the Thai authorities will carry out an investigation and press charges against a group of anonymous hackers who on Tuesday night downed at least 297 sites, including Appeal and Criminal Court websites.

Once hacked, the well-known white mask of the anonymous group appeared on the attacked sites along with messages saying “BLINK HACKER GROUP”, and “Failed Law We Want Justice ! # Boycott Thailand”.

The Blink Hacker Group is believed to be associated with a hacker group called Anonymous Myanmar Hacker.

Members of the Facebook group called We are Anonymous on Wednesday posted a message saying that ‪#‎Anonymous was shutting down all Thai Court of Justice websites in protest over the ‪#‎KohTao murder verdict. #Anonymous was supporting the campaign to ask tourists to boycott Thailand "until such time changes are made with the way Thai police handle investigations involving foreign tourists."

The group also claimed that they are planning to release “a huge leak of all Thai officials involved in corruption in Thai Courts.”

Previously, on January 4, the same group of anonymous hackers took credit for carrying out similar online attacks on at least 14 websites associated with the Royal Thai Police.

Despite the attack which caused the CoJ websites to go blank, the main functions of the CoJ agencies are still intact.

According to Suebpong, the Technology Crime Suppression Division (TCSD) has tracked down about 10 IP addresses of the alleged attackers which belong to overseas internet users.

He said that the anonymous attackers might face charges under Articles 10 and 12 of the 2007 Computer Crime Act (CCA) for causing disturbances in the computer systems of public agencies.

Article 10 of the CCA sets five years’ imprisonment, a fine of up to 100,000 baht or both as the penalty for causing online disturbances while Article 12 of the CCA stipulates that those who attack the computer systems of state agencies face up to 15 years of jail term, a fine of up to 300,000 baht or both.

On 14 December 2015, Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo, two Burmese migrants, were convicted of rape and murder and were handed death sentences.

The Thai court cited DNA evidence as the primary evidence in the case. However, the ruling was much criticised by those who believe the two migrant workers are scapegoats.

Earlier this week, Laura Witheridge, sister of one of the the Ko Tao murder victims, Hannah Witheridge, posted a message on her Facebook profile saying that the Thai police are corrupt and that their investigation leading to the conviction of the two Burmese migrants was “bungled.”

After the message was posted, Pol Gen Chakthip Chaijinda, the Royal Thai Police Chief, threatened to file lawsuits against Laura for defaming the Thai police.

Bron: prachatai.org
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 14 januari 2016 @ 18:17:33 #297
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159103167
quote:
Anonymous Releases Court Data as Police Vow to Catch Hackers

By Sasiwan Mokkhasen
Staff Reporter
.


BANGKOK — Police said today they would go after the hacker collective known as Anonymous after its members took down hundreds of court websites and released sensitive data it claimed to have obtained.


Following Wednesday’s massive Anonymous attack in protest of the outcome of the Koh Tao murders trial, police spokesman Dechnarong Suticharnbancha said the Technology Crime Suppression Division would track down the self-described hacktivists for prosecution.

He acknowledged police still have no clue where the attacks originated from.

Courts spokesman Suebpong Sripongkul said Wednesday that at least 10 IP addresses linked to the attacks from outside the country were identified.

Statements posted online to accounts used by members of Anonymous indicated the attacks were part of a campaign to call attention to corruption in Thailand’s justice system after two Myanmar men were found guilty and sentenced to die for the deaths of two Britons on Koh Tao in September 2014.

Some sites were accessible while others remained offline Thursday. Suebpong said such attacks would be ineffective.

“The Court of Justice would like to say that the computer attack cannot change the judgment, and the lawful verdict issued by the court,” he said.

Those participating in Anonymous campaigns are more sympathetic volunteers than “members,” and typically employ sophisticated methods to cover their tracks. It was unclear how police intended to bring them to justice.



Data Dump

The Blink Hacker Group associated with Anonymous last night leaked a large, 1GB data file said to contain internal information stolen during the attack including personal details about court officials.

“We hacked in Thai Justice Net in order to find some of confidential files after police sites attacked,” they wrote “Pages can be restored by any mins...our target is just to take down their Justice Net and get their information.”

A brief review of the database found what appears to be genuine records and telephone numbers for personnel and judges.

Dechnarong said they believe the hackers were the same who previously brought down a number of police websites on Jan. 4.

Junta deputy chairman Pravit Wongsuwan reportedly ordered the Royal Thai Police to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Asked this morning whether more money should be budgeted for securing government websites, Pravit said, “Sure.”



Bron: www.khaosodenglish.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  donderdag 14 januari 2016 @ 21:43:43 #298
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159109614
quote:
Breaking: Anonymous Just Announced Who They Support For President…It’s NOT Who You’d Expect! – USA Newsflash

The hacker group Anonymous just announced their choice for the next president of the United States and it is not Donald Trump! The hacker group is supporting Bernie Sanders!

In their article, the group gives out 10 reasons why Bernie Sanders deserves more coverage from the mainstream media and, ultimately, your vote:

1) He supports a new Glass Steagall act- hell he even detailed 5 reasons explaining why it’s important; passed over 80 years ago, it had prevented commercial banks from participating in investment banking. It was repealed in 1999, and banks used this new-found ability to plunder the savings of their depositors by making extremely risky “investments” for their own profit. This is the primary reason for the 2008 financial crisis, and the reason why the big banks had to be bailed out by taxpayers. Hillary Clinton doesn’t want to reinstate Glass-Steagall while Trump wants regulations on Wall Street to be weakened.

2) He wants to break up the big banks; no more of this “too big to fail” nonsense- he also voted against the bailout of Wall Street. Hillary, on the other hand, receives money and support from Wall Street. She has also voted multiple times for the bailout despite “evolving” on the issue. Trump wants to maintain the size of the big banks. He also wanted to bail out the banks.

3) Sanders opposed NAFTA and the TPP: two “trade” agreements, the first causing the loss of up to a million jobs in America and the second a formerly-top-secret agreement which would hand sweeping powers to corporations. Hillary was for the TPP and supported it a dozen times- only recently has she “evolved” on the matter. Trump hates the TPP too… but only because he thinks China would somehowbenefit from it.

4) For his entire political career Sanders has stood against the for-profit prison industrial complex and the practice of over-criminalization. This issue has had Clinton “evolving” towards prison reform since… a few months back… but before entering her higher form, she lobbied in 1994 for a crime law that had increasedprison funding and sentences. Trump wants to “get a lot tougher” on crime, despite police killings being the highest in two decades and despite the fact that violent crime is also down.

5) Sanders voted against the Iraq War, and is against a war with Russia. Clinton voted for the Iraq War- she also has a neoconservative war-mongering foreign policy. Most Republican candidates, besides Rand Paul, do not seem averse to war. Trump’s claim that he opposed Iraq’s invasion at the time it was debated is baseless, though he too is against conflict with Russia; China’s his whipping boy.

6) Sanders voted twice against the Patriot Act, which allowed widespread mass surveillance to be used against the American public. Hillary voted for it twice and Trump is all for reauthorizing it.

7) Sanders doesn’t degrade racial and religious minorities, nor does he inflame the majority- he comes right out and tells us that the elite are to blame. He said this at a rally: “they’re always playing one group against another. Rich got richer — everybody else was fighting each other. Our job is to build a nation in which we all stand together”. Hillary has an “abysmal” racial justice record and Trump… well, he’s said enough about that topic to fill a phone book.

8) Sanders wants to decriminalize the use of marijuana. Clinton is against decriminalizing it and Trump seems to favor legalizing it for medical uses.

9) Bernie refuses to take money from the super rich… or the corporations. Hillary receives money from everyone who has it- bankers, corporations… she doesn’t discriminate. Trump is already one of the super richand admitted that he has manipulated the system for his own benefit.

10) The corporate mainstream media hates Bernie and censors him, attempting to make it look like he endorses Hillary. Trump gets WAY more mainstream coverage than Bernie despite both polling similarly. If you want to choose someone who wasn’t handpicked for you, then Bernie is your best best.
Bonus!) Whenever someone tries to come up with a top ten list NOT to vote for Bernie… it comes out convincing MORE people to vote for him- just read those top comments. On the other hand, one of the most popular search result for the top ten reasons TO vote for Trump is satirical.

Source: anonhq.com

Credits to CoNN for writing the original article.

Image source: hdnux.com

comments

why would you support a man that has a strong stance on mandatory (forced) vaccinations? Sanders is a fucking pharma rat and idgaf who goes against me… none of those worthless people up there are going to change the country….. Sanders was stated as saying Children and infants that are not vaccinated are killers…. so fuck him

Well you’re an idiot.

People who don’t vaccinate allow defeated diseases to come roaring back, endangering the small percentage of people who either can’t be vaccinated or for who vaccines are ineffective. In short: by not vaccinating their children they are effectively culpable for the deaths they cause. If not legally, then morally. We live in a plural society and while rugged individualism may sound keen in theory it doesn’t work in a world where we’re all so interconnected. In fact it never has for our species since our social nature has been an integral part of our evolution.

yes, but even this liberal democrat who fully agrees with you doesn’t believe in forced inoculations. We are not a Cuba or the soviet union or Nazi Germany. There are some children who should not be inoculated.
My problem with Bernie is his position on gun control and immigration. Voting to allow gun manufacturers and dealers to be protected from lawsuits is just heinous. Voting to send Maine and Vermont’s nuclear waste to a small Spanish speaking town on the Mexican border in TX is also heinous.

Becoming inoculated against commonly spread social bacteria and disease is GOOD FOR EVERYBODY. It protects the greatest number of people when the greatest number of people are protected. See? It is a BENEFIT TO SOCIETY – keeps everybody healthier so SOCIETY DOESN’T SPEND AS MANY RESOURCES CARING FOR THE ILL!

Bernie Sanders has integrity. He has not taken one single cent from corporations for his campaign coffers. He will be the people’s President and even more importantly, his intelligence and experience make him the most viable candidate!

I beg to differ, Sanders has taken big bucks from the NRA, FOR YEARS . HE HAS HIS HAND DIRTY FROM BIG OIL AND DEFENSE CONTRACTORS LIKE THOSE PRODUCING THE F35 jet in his backyard. This man filters campaign finace money into illegal payments. The only reason for his going on the dem ticket is to steal the funding tat xemocrats raised to support our candidates!

you do know that campaign finance is public record right? Show me the filings!

I mistakenly tried to comment on different comments. to comment on the article would only to tell the author that it is agreeable. I’ll remit my opinions.

Immunization is not necessarily a communistic concept. Grow up fool.

anonymous is a group of highly intelligent individuals. this should not come as a surprise to anyone…

Absurdly dumb clickbait article. It’s exactly who I’d expect and to suggest they’d ever support a racist fascist like Trump shows a complete lack of understanding in what Anonymous is about.

Anonymous is a Communist activist group! I never knew that before. Thanks for the information.

It all makes sense now, why they talk and talk, but never really do anything that matters. Typical communist “community organizing”. Incite others to do your dirty work with incendiary propaganda so you can remain unscathed by the repercussions.

Yea and sanders supports socialism, which is a prettier way of saying communism. It’s just the first step into transitioning this society into communism by putting sanders in office….pfff mandatory vaccines yea…a lot of free thinking there. Let’s raise taxes and turn all healthcare and education over to the government…you know consididering the government doesn’t have enough control over us already..

uhm…the only people who think socialism is a nicer way of saying communism are the ignorant and intellectually challenged. It’s called a dictionary. Look into it. Don’t go through life showing the work how ignorant and lazy you are.

Read your bible, Nick. Jesus was a socialist before communis
ion was ever heard of.

I assure you Anonymous does not support Donald Trump. If you need any further proof, look up #OpTrump. You are spreading false videos with no association to Anonymous, as anyone can make videos, to further your own agenda. This article is nothing more than clickbait.

Read the article. “The hacker group Anonymous just announced their choice for the next president of the United States and it is NOT Donald Trump! The hacker group is supporting Bernie Sanders!”

Everyone scared of socialism needs to stop calling the police dept, the fire dept, and stop sending their kids to public schools.

True ideological socialism isnt horrible.
But the socialism most people relate to are very poor examples. Cuba was not a socialist society regardless of what their government said.
The ussr never made it to a true socialist or even a true communist society.
Communism is about community first not under government control the people yield all the power and decide everything equally.
Socialism is an ideology that the society and government have equal say in everything and both must fully agree on any steps taken.
Socialism and communism is not about ultimate government control but it is extremely hard to accomplish because its biggest barricade is getting the government to give up all control of how the country is run.
Corruption is the biggest obstacle that socialism and communism has always encountered and in my opinion always will. Power hungry and corrupt politicians are not simply going to yield their powers to rule for the sake of an equality based society which is why it is a very slippery slope to try to convert the United States into a socialist government. A few do it with some success France Canada in fact most European countries are socialist country with a capitalist economy. It is possible but very difficult to achieve.

Pingback: While a left leaning liberal, I Cannot Support Hillary! |

Bron: usanewsflash.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 15 januari 2016 @ 16:51:44 #299
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159126744
quote:
BREAKING: Oregon Militia Teams Up With Anonymous. 1/15/16 Burns,OR Meeting Information | Press Releases

In a previous article titled ”Oregon Breaking News: Anonymous Supports. The US Government Doesn’t“, I discussed the basics of what is happening at the Malheur Wildlife Refuge in Oregon. In that article, I also shared an Anonymous video that was posted to a YouTube Account that has since been removed. In the video the collective discussed their support for the uprising while not wholeheartedly agreeing with all of the tactics used to implement the uprising.

While they were generally critical of the upriser’s techniques, the Anonymous collective primarily tackled the major looming issue of the overreaching actions being taken by the federal agency known as the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

Their claims are that the BLM has given the ranchers no option but to take these drastic measures because of their bully tactics and downright illegal unconstitutional activity that, as a catalyst, is crippling and economically suffocating small towns and families throughout the west.

As promised, we were able to secure an interview with folks that have been on the ground in Oregon during these intense last two weeks. Through my new platform ”The All Rights Matter (#ARM) Show” hosted by Anon Radio Live we were able to interview with the now internationally famous Brandon Curtiss. As head of the well established III%ers of Idaho, Curtiss’ main mission, in cooperation with other patriot groups, is to provide critical perimeter security and serve as a buffer between the occupation of the Malheur Wildlife Refuge and the FBI/Law Enforcement. The armed militia supporting the occupation are practicing nonaggression and transparency while not skimping out on standing their ground on the rights provided to us all under the Constitution of the United States of America. “No More Free Waco’s” is becoming the mantra of all of the individuals participating in what is shaping up to be one of the most interesting and crucial conflicts in 2016.

While we may all know the basics of the Hammond Ranch Trial that led to all of this, there are many questions that have gone unanswered simply because main stream media refuses to ask them. That’s where Anon Radio Live steps in. That’s where #ARM takes a united stand with the Anonymous community to create a piece of history that will not soon be forgotten…

Listen to The #ARM Show below to hear the truth directly from the leader of the militia on the ground. Again, the narrative of the main stream media isn’t fitting what the ladies and gentlemen on the ground are really experiencing. Considering the joint motives of those that run corporate media and our government, the aforementioned is not really a surprise at all.

If you want answers, you go to those who have the solutions. Not the morally corrupt corporate media world. Never trust corruption to lead you to truth. That’s also why Anon Radio Live is so important… No censorship, but still respecting the real definition of truth, justice, and liberty in America. ~Sincere #ARM

Bron: meeting-information.beforeitsnews.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  vrijdag 22 januari 2016 @ 14:41:15 #300
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159305808
quote:
Anonymous taking action on Flint water crisis | News, Weather, Sports, Breaking News | WEYI

The international hacking group known as "Anonymous" is taking on the Flint water crisis.

In a video posted on Youtube the group blames the government, specifically Gov. Rick Snyder.

The group which describes itself as a faction of Anonymous has launched a campaign called #OpFlint.

The group in the Youtube video calls for Gov. Snyder to be charged with "voluntary or involuntary" manslaughter.

The video shows the Anonymous style of a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask sitting at a desk and delivering a threat.

Bron: nbc25news.com
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
  maandag 25 januari 2016 @ 17:57:38 #301
172669 Papierversnipperaar
Cafeïne is ook maar een drug.
pi_159386999
Vol
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[b]Op dinsdag 6 januari 2009 19:59 schreef Papierversnipperaar het volgende:[/b]
De gevolgen van de argumenten van de anti-rook maffia
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