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Hacktivism, modern protest
To effect great change, you need a critical mass of people and power, acting in a manner that if does not at least incite popular support, must not inflame popular anger. It helps to have reasoned arguments, clear-cut examples of what things you consider wrong and how they can be fixed, and it helps to make your opinions known to and have good relations with legislators, media and those in power. Finding other groups with similar ends and sharing resources with them can advance an effort, but the key is that your support must exceed your opposition. Acting in an unlawful, destructive manner or the appearance of such is a sure way to strengthen the opposition to your goals.
A hacktivist can get a critical mass of power by rooting several thousand popular, high profile web servers and displaying their message simultaneously on all at once. This may lead to public discussion of the message, but almost everyone is assured to be prejudiced against the hacktivist's viewpoint because of the uncivil way that the message was transmitted. Because of this public disdain, I wouldn't be surprised to see "hacktivist" ratfucking in the near future, people and corporations defacing websites and replacing with messages of support for their opponents in order to turn popular support against the target.
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Re: Hacktivism, modern protest
So I assume you think terrorism is ultimately self-defeating. I'm inclined to agree, but the difference between bombings and web-page-grafitti is that usually no one gets physically injured in web page defacements. So how much public disdain could be incurred really? If the only point is to get a message across, then I advocate hacktivism over real terrorist actions...
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