Arresting People Associated With Anonymous Unlikely To Have The Impact The Feds Expect
from the things-don't-work-that-way dept
One of the big stories of yesterday was the wide array of raids and arrests by the FBI in order to arrest people they claimed were members of "Anonymous," who took part in various denial of service attacks. All day yesterday the number of people arrested kept growing. I first saw three, then 12 and the final tally was apparently 16. Apparently the arrests are specific to the efforts to take down Paypal after Paypal decided to stop letting payment transfers go to Wikileaks. The specific charges are "intentional damage to a protected computer" and conspiracy.Now, I've been very clear since Anonymous started this effort -- shutting down various websites using what is effectively crowdsourced distributed denial of service attacks -- that I think the strategy is really dumb. Does it get attention? Yes. But it turns parties doing questionable things into victims. It doesn't open any new eyes to the problems Anonymous should be trying to highlight. It just draws attention to the attacks themselves. It just seemed really likely to backfire -- especially as law enforcement and politicians focused in on the attacks, rather than the reasons for the attacks, and we're seeing some of that now.
But I can't deny that their efforts, combined with the slightly more sophisticated hacking efforts both from Anonymous and the spinoff group LulzSec and others, have actually had a much greater impact than I expected, especially with things like the hacking of HBGary and the release of ACS:Law files. As I noted last month when a bunch of people were arrested in Europe with claims that they were members of Anonymous, it's not clear to me that these arrests will have much of an impact, really. Will it scare off some random kid from becoming a scriptkiddie? Maybe at the margin there will be some. But the thing is, the types of folks who get involved with these things tend to overestimate their own abilities, and dramatically underestimate the likelihood of getting tracked down or caught.
And given the very distributed nature of the group (i.e., that it's not actually a group at all), it kind of makes you wonder if the arrests will only serve to get more folks jumping into the effort, perhaps for increasingly misguided reasons. As we've stated, governments and law enforcement seem to be taking a top-down approach to this, as if they were rounding up a criminal gang, not recognizing the distributed nature of this effort and how the focus is not criminal, but ideological. Arresting people just drives home their general fear of a world in which certain entities have too much power, leading more people to hit back.
I still don't think their strategy is smart. And I don't think it'll really create lasting positive change (in fact, the backlash could do the opposite). I also worry quite a bit about what happens when they suddenly rage against an innocent party or a group or an individual who really doesn't deserve their wrath. But, at the same time, I can't see how a big FBI crackdown does anything positive, either. It just serves to reinforce their general point. And, with something like the DDoS on Paypal, it seems a bit ridiculous to suggest that it really created that much "harm." It was, as many noted, a modern version of the sit-in. Yes, it probably was a nuisance and cost some people money, but it lasted for a short while and it's difficult to argue there was any lasting damage.
Defenders of law and order will insist "something" needed to be done, and will believe that these arrests will scare off people from the next round of attacks. I think those people are greatly underestimating how people who feel disenfranchised by the world, but sense power through their internet connection, react in such situations. Punishment for the sake of punishment may make sense to some people, but I prefer that the focus be on actually getting to the root of the problem, rather than trying to attack the symptoms in a way that makes the cause grow bigger.
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Filed Under: anonymous, arrests, distributed systems, fbi, hacking
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A whole 16 people!!
OR 14 people, if you believe theregister instead...
Wonder what the percentage is on that, is that 50% or (much more likely) 0.05% ?
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I feel so much safer...
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those 16 will be replaced by a hundred.
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This in time will make a difference, and if you don't believe that the technology exists to track even those that are using different means to protect themselves, then I feel real sorry for the doubters.
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You mean like how they retaliated against Sony by releasing information about its users? If they want to go after Sony, that's one thing, but to take your anger out on its users ...
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The proof of the warrent is actually much further down in the thread. I'm not sure what she was trying to show in 'Edit 3'.
Basically the FBI is busy raiding 13 year olds who other than download and install LOIC have no hacking skills and have nothing to do with anonymous.
The feds have no idea what they're doing and will accomplish literally nothing with these arrests. It's all theater. Just like DHS, TSA, etc. Security theater baby. At the end of the day they can tell their bosses "hey atleast me made some arrests" no matter how big of a waste of tax payer dollars, resources & time it is.
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Re: I feel so much safer...
The other day I saw a high speed chase on T.V. They musta had more than a dozen cop cars chasing the guy, with several helicopters. It's ridiculous.
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Re: Message
Quite a message that...
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Re:
I don't believe.
Let's assume that the DOS attacks are fired from several "zombie" computers that are under a hackers control. To initiate the attack, the hacker must instruct that "botnet" to fire at a specific target. This is where he is more vulnerable, because his "order" can be intercepted, and his location can be "traced" (more like deduced) through his IP address.
But the hacker can make that tracing job unbearably hard. He can tunnel his connection through a proxy. Or rather, through several proxies, located across several countries.
This will make the job of law enforcement very, very hard, if not impossible, because it will require the cooperation of many countries and ISPs.
It is "easy" to remain hidden if you know what you are doing. Problem is, probably most of these "anonymous" that were caught were just script kiddies that had no clue of what they were doing.
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Re: Re:
How are you going to trace me now?
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If they are catching some people who ran the stupid program, it has the core of the group laughing and getting encouraged to do more.
If they leverage their core catches they could bring the rest of the group down and have a new set of tools (and botnet) to do what they want with.
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This in time will make a difference, and if you don't believe that the technology exists to track even those that are using different means to protect themselves, then I feel real sorry for the doubters."
Lol, shows how out of the loop you are.
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Re:
Obviously it does, that is why they have captured all of the thousands of people it would take to DDOS paypal and not just a bunch of 13yr old kids who don't know how to protect themselves and downloaded and ran a script when twitter told them too while doing nothing else to protect themselves.
Thank god these dangerous thugs have been stopped, Ill rest safer knowing the combined efforts of police forces across the world have managed to catch a handful of little kids running scripts.
I'm sure these suspects will give up valuable information that will lead to the end of anonymous like maybe their website, twitter accounts or possibly the IRC chat rooms that are full of feds already.
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Re:
Overall, I think these groups have done more overall good than harm, but I do not think the ends justify the means. and some of their actions have been unacceptable, causing more harm than good with little indication that they're intended to be done for a good cause either.
and I agree the government will probably completely overact and over-punish the heck out of them, and that can very well backfire on the government industrial complex. But these groups are no angels either.
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Re: Re:
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Arrests
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Where does your reasoning end? They just murdered 8 people but they were just bums so it really doesn't matter in then long run. We should really just be focusing on the root of the problem and not the symptom.
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But hey, all this will be about 'control' soon.
Soon enough - there will be a bunch of new laws regarding the internet.
They've been wanting control of the web for a long time. Here's their excuse.
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Re: Re:
Those who don't do this are really an insignificant threat.
Those who do do this are not going to be caught.
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Re: Re: Re:
"smash up the laptop at home"
there are drive erasing methods that make data unrecoverable(basically write random data to the whole drive and erase it a bunch of times), nuke the drive and start over no need to buy a new laptop every attack
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This in time will make a difference, and if you don't believe that the technology exists to track even those that are using different means to protect themselves, then I feel real sorry for the doubters.
Yes, this same strategy is working so well for fighting P2P filesharing.
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Re:
Get whom they can??
Really? What you're saying is - "since we can't do anything sensible about this we'll just lash out wildly.."
Sounds like Llap Goch to me
"No longer need you feel WEAK, helpless, INDECISIVE, NOT fascinating and ASHAMED of your genital dimensions. No more need you be out-manoeuvred in political debate!! GOOD BYE HUMILIATION, wisecracking bullies," anonymous hackers "... will melt to pulp as you master every situation without INADEQUACY. PROTECT YOUR LOVED ONES. You will no longer look pitiful and spotty to your GIRL FRIENDS when you leave some unsuspecting passer-by looking like four tins of cat food! "
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Trying something new...
Anonymous, like Wikileaks, represent new ideas/movements that haven't figured out how to best fit themselves into the world. Julian Assange had originally planned on wikileaks being a massive crowd-sourced investigative outfit but that strategy failed. Instead of pursuing a losing strategy they changed course and instead focused on working with media partners. This has proven to be much more effective strategy.
Making mistakes and utilizing misguided strategies is part-in-parcel with trying something new. There's no previous data to fall back on for guidance...so the dartboard strategy will continue until more metrics on success are produced.
The one area that the authorities are going to struggle with for the foreseeable future is that by definition Anons don't know who other Anons are and therefore can't easily "flip" on higher-ups and/or co-conspirators. The cops are going to find that it's much more expensive to investigate Anons as you have to essentially get each one individually and not as a group like they do with the mafia or gangs.
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All this nonsense about the government using them as an excuse to crack down on the internet is bogus, they are already cracking down on the internet, but the internet will always stay 10 steps ahead of the fed.
The men in the suits can't keep up with it, so they call in swat teams to kick down scriptkiddie doors while the real deal sit back and laugh as hundreds of thousands of people flock to their banners.
good luck controlling the internet gov'ment, you'll need it
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Re:
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Intentions
And what would the root of the problem be?
Once you've got that... what do you think Anon's intentions are?
You might find that the two are very similar.
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Re: Arrests
A DDOS attack is not hacking. Legally no individual involved is doing anything wrong (just accessing a webpage) - only the coincidence of lots of people doing the same thing causes a problem - you might as well arrest everyone for putting the kettle on simultaneously at the end of the Wimbledon final...
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Law of unintended consequences
No computer is 100% safe from being hacked if it is plugged into power and turned on. These groups really didn't do any serious hacking, they ran scripts for DDoS attacks and exploited known security issues.
BUT the long term impact is yet to be seen. Their actions will cause an outcry of the mental midgets for protection from these hackers. That outcry will cause laws to be passed forcing companies to spend thousands on hardware specifically designed to do nothing more than meet some unachievable goal. Industries will be created to specifically give yet another false feeling of security.
Can we say 9-11 and TSA here? This is exactly how 9-11's 26 criminals impacted the world. And now look at what the TSA is doing, every day they increase their assaults to make the mental midgets feel safer.
Soon you will see laws in congress that will force website owners to meet minimum requirements for security, and then you will see hardware specifically overpriced to meet the minimums, and in the end you will see a negligible impact on the hacking and a major increase in the costs of doing business which will then be passed on to the end users and customers.
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Re:
But by your reasoning:
Jews that refused to wear the star of David in Nazi Germany committed a crime and should pay. Just because it didn't directly affect you and you think it was just a "nuisance" doesn't matter in the least.
That's a very good point you make.
The African American college students that sat at the lunch counter in Greensboro, NC have committed a crime and should pay. Just because it didn't directly affect you and you think it was just a "nuisance" doesn't matter in the least.
Can't argue with that line of thinking at all.
Gandhi and Mandela caused civil unrest in their counties and committed a crime and should pay. Just because it didn't directly affect you and you think it was just a "nuisance" doesn't matter in the least.
You've certainly backed me into a logical corner there. I don't see any way to assail your iron-clad premise. Kudos to you, sir!
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Re: Re: Arrests
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Re:
A little rebellion now and then is actually a good thing.
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Re:
Did you even read the post or just the headline? I addressed that very point in the post, so I don't see how we "missed" the point.
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Re: Trying something new...
I do not think the hierarchical government can really comprehend the nautre of anonymous, we are all anonymous, there will always be anonymous.
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Re: Re: Re: Arrests
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The release of that info was proof. The companies involved couldn't hide it from the public as they may have done. Had it not be publicly released, would those customers know how insecure - to those who AREN'T looking for publicity or ideological statements but pure criminal intent - their info really is/was?
I hate the idea of personal info being released, for true. But at least those people didn't have to depend or wait on those companies for disclosure or better security that might never have happened had it been kept quiet.
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Re:
Or the message that people you don't know have been arrested.
Stirring stuff.
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Re: Re: Re: Arrests
I don't know if that's really 'hacking', or just pointing up how lax HBGary was about their own security.
[note: I may be misremembering details from the ArsTechnica articles about the HBGary scandal. I recommend them, interesting reading.]
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Anonymous reminds me of the protestors of the 60's and 70's. Occasionally doing damage but mostly just freeing test animals.
Anonymous is breaking the law I agree. But there are worse laws being broken by worse people.
When was the last time you saw an arrest of a mafia or gang member hit the press.
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Re: Re:
wars-
drugs
terror
p2p
information control
poor folks
anonymous humans
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Re: Law of unintended consequences
In the GWOH, it will be even more difficult. The few really good hackers will surround themselves with thousands of "innocents" - not that they're really innocent, but they're not the real hackers. They're just the script kiddies who download LOIC. Then the FBI will proceed to arrest script kiddies who didn't really do much damage, because they're more visible and easier to track than real hackers. And the Internetz will feel like it is under attack, and the feds will merely spawn more script kiddies and motivate some to learn how real hacking is done.
Once we have a digital Pearl Harbor, there will be a digital Patriot Act. The white hats, who are probably more easily identified, will likely be targeted despite the fact that they're not dangerous. This will undoubtedly chase them underground, and many will likely change to gray hats, or even black hats. Once again, the very actions taken to stop the "enemy" will instead make that enemy stronger.
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Re: Re: Message
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Arrests
This^. Also, I do not believe that the above arrests pertain to HBGary...the above arrests were for the PayPal DDOS...so...no...not hacking.
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Re: Re:
For instance, the other day I was reading about a worm that receives orders through Kad (the public p2p network) and allows the controller to actually tunnel through to any infected computer in the botnet and use it as a proxy. That's virtually impossible to trace.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Arrests
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1 you can bring in any law you want with copyright it wont work more people will bypass it.
2 Any tracking can be bypassed
3 you can remove any domain name the site is still their and easily found.
4 You can raid the unfortunate members of Anonymous and il be generous and say you got 30 world wide out of hundreds of thousands of supporters.
Good luck what next more laws only to be bypassed LOSERS.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
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I'm Certain This Will Be Effective
Number of 13 Year-Olds Running LOIC Caught: 16
Good job, FBI. Keep spending millions of taxpayer's money to catch the low-hanging fruit because you can't do anything else. I'm sure the 984 other LOIC script-kiddies are shaking in their boots right now.
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Further, the anonymous people (who aren't all that anonymous with each other) could be crapping their pants as the kids play back their chat logs for authorities, which could lead them up the ladder.
Anonymous isn't any more anonymous than posting on Techdirt.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
And whole-drive encryption is your friend.
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@ several ACs:
Moreover, the notion that valiant hackers are stemming the tide of gov't oppression is just out to lunch. Look at the real world, kids: those violent video game playing steroid-munchers have been trained in Iraq to murder people without regard for laws, you can read such stories nearly every day; they are the epsilon-minus enforcers of tyranny who obey orders without question.
IF you really wish to fight tyranny, rather than just slink around on the edges of it pretending that you're "free", then you need to call for gov't to follow laws and the will of the people, to control The Rich and corporations. -- In a word: POPULISM!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
I know alot of people wipe the drive and assume everything is gone, but if nothing has overwritten the data it is all still available. I didnt know one pass would do on modern drives to prevent recovering or Gutmann's recovery method was outdated, and never even practiced as far as I can tell.
http://blogs.computerworld.com/node/5687
http://www.nber.org/sys-admin/overwritten-data-guttman .html
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Re: Re:
just like the plant world we gotta burn every now and then so better and new stuff can grow
http://www.sarracenia.com/faq/faq4180.html
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Re: @ several ACs:
so, who is your favorite fiction author?
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Re: Re:
track that jerks
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Re: Re: I feel so much safer...
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Re:
PLEASE won't someone think of the CHILDREN!?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
"wiping", although not really a technical term, has been taken to mean overwriting all sectors on a hard drive. It is true that using your OS to "delete" files, normally only deletes the directory entries and leaves the files contents intact. I use PGP software on my Windows machine which hooks into the delete command and actually wipes the file.
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Re: Re: Re: I feel so much safer...
Pretty sure they just call it "405" in Washington, not "the 405."
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Whether Anons do it or someone else, I need to know ASAP.
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Re: I'm Certain This Will Be Effective
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Re:
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Re:
And another 150,000 non-'would be hackers' will get excited over the idea of having real g-men kick their doors down and will eagerly jump on board just for the thrill.
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um... are you taking your meds?
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Re: Re:
a irc: http://anonnet.org/
they kinda are open about that stuff
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Re: I'm Certain This Will Be Effective
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Re: A whole 16 people!!
I'm sure there are hundreds more who covered their tracks well enough to not be caught this time.
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Re: Re:
perhaps u mean backtrack? http://www.backtrack-linux.org/
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White Hat -vs- Black hat cookbook
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Hack Attack
My real worry is that continued efforts by the Gummints of the world against these kids will have the effect of pissing off people that are WAY smarter and WAY more talented. These people will then turn on the government sites, and their corporate sponsors and do some real damage. At least I hope so. This has gone far enough.
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Re: Re: Re:
I am not saying that I agree with Anonymous or their tactics. But, what they are doing is a modern form of civil disobedience plain and simple. Comparing them to other instances in history involving civil disobedience is justified whether you agree with them or not.
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War on ideology?
Our government is busy fighting a war on ideas. It's that simple. If you round up enough people, and cause a "deterrent" effect, it's likely that you won't slow down the progress of who is the terrorist/hobo/pirate/criminal, but you will get enough people to just follow the rules.
This is still a somewhat severe form of the ostrich effect. It's costing us a lot of money, that the US can ill afford to lose, to enforce these types of laws. How much does it cost for ICE to raid a NY server? How much more would it be to license products in another country? As it stands, it's cost us our economic prosperity for terrorism. In order to fight the War on Drugs, we lose $70 billion annually. The budget of DHS for copyright enforcement stands at ~$10 billion IIRC. And the war on poverty has been lost since the inception.
The fact is, we have a lot of wars on a lot of fronts. We've needed to end a few of them to find new ways to prosper.
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The idea that maybe anonymous (or a significant portion of it) would turn out to be a bunch of police officers spying on each other would be such a great end.
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I am more bothered by Sonys incompetence than some hackers. There will always be hackers. Fortunately, Anonymous went public instead of trying to leech money off the accounts.
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Re: Re: Re:
He just showed why the "its the LAW!" argument is fatally flawed, and that other arguments are required to convincingly argue the wrongness of an action.
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Re: Re:
Oh, maybe that was not what you had in mind? Report to the nearest correction facility, citizen.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/20/technology/16-arrested-as-fbi-hits-the-hacking-group-anonymou s.html?_r=1&smid=tw-nytimestech&seid=auto
It's amazing how Sony can get away with doing something much worse by selling PlayStations under the fraudulent claim that they support Linux and later removing that support (and our legal system even approves of this), yet these (wanna be) hackers do something (that should be punished, no doubt) that isn't nearly as bad as Sony's fraudulent behavior, and they can face jail time. Why isn't anyone at Sony facing jail time for fraud?
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Re: Re: I'm Certain This Will Be Effective
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Free wifi hotspot.
'Nuff said. ;)
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1. Many (most?) have video surveillance.
2. Pattern analysis can help, whether the actor uses the same spot again and again, or keep changing spots. (Pattern analysis might not be so effective if someone lives in an RV and travels randomly around the country.)
3. As others have pointed out, there are ways to either spoof MAC address or keep replacing wireless NICs and dban-ing the drive. But any method that involves repeatedly replacing hardware or lots of heavy travel gets expensive. We're talking about disenfranchised people who are not generally known for being well-financed.
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Anonymous is a government shill....
Stop and think about things for a minute.... There can only be a "War on Something" if there is someone visible to go to "War" with... It didn't stop things, but how much public flack was there when we were looking for the "WMD's" that we just knew had to be there? Wouldn't it have been much easier to justify the war publicly if there were actual weapons of mass destruction found?
Now shift back to the internet... Who is the 'bad guy' that our government is going after? In reality it is going after it's own citizens by making them criminals for watching or sharing entertainment.... How well is that 'war' going to go over with the public? BUT now throw in an Anonymous group of 'evil-doing' individuals causing disruption to government, media, and corporate sponsors (of government and media), and suddenly there is a "BAD GUY" that the government can target and complain about in public, without having to say that they are at war with their own citizens.
The end result is the same, the government gets to 'attack' the rights of their citizens in the name of protecting them from the evil Anonymous... As someone else has pointed out, only in the USA do we see violating citizens civil rights as a means of 'protecting' those rights.
In the intelligence field (aka spys) this would be a double-double agent and is a known tactic for infiltrating organizations (which is even easier when using this tactic to setup the organization in the first place).
I can't prove that this is true, but can anyone prove that it isn't? Just because it's a conspiracy theory doesn't mean it couldn't have some basis in reality.
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Re: Re: Re: Message
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A simple thought ...
This would do two things, 1) increase the ranks of people willing to use LOIC. 2) It would make governments less likely to arrest people.
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Lulzsec
And for your information, a lot of them ARE a group. Their posts are proof of it. They have leaders, and followers. One leader even threatened to kill some other members if they didn't do what he asked (from a chat log posted).
You can't just expect them to do nothing to stop this. I can guarantee you if this keeps up, it will get to the point that big brother takes over the internet, congress will have meetings over this also and pass all kinds of ridiculous laws, all thanks to these stupid idiotic script kiddies who have no brains.
They have already released logins and passwords for hundreds of thousands of citizens, not to mention police officers putting their families lives at risk, and our own military (how low can they get).
Sorry, but I have aboslutely zero sympathy for any of them.
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Lulzsec
FACT is, many of them arrested were in their 20's... not 16 like so many here are posting.
Go ahead, and wish for more of this crap. I can guarantee you things will be FAR worse for everyone in the future. You can mark my words on that.
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Re: Re: Re: I'm Certain This Will Be Effective
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