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US Anonymous Hacker Faces Life In Prison While Others Given Lighter Sentences

May 18, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

By   –  mintpressnews.com

This March 5, 2012 booking photo provided Tuesday, March 6 by the Cook County Sheriff’s Department in Chicago shows Jeremy Hammond. Hammond, already facing charges of computer hacking, was added to an indictment in New York, Wednesday, May 2, 2012, boosting the accusations against him by including him in much of the wider conspiracy to hack into corporations and government agencies worldwide. (AP Photo/Cook County Sheriff’s Department)

This March 5, 2012 booking photo provided Tuesday, March 6 by the Cook County Sheriff’s Department in Chicago shows Jeremy Hammond. Hammond, already facing charges of computer hacking, was added to an indictment in New York, Wednesday, May 2, 2012, boosting the accusations against him by including him in much of the wider conspiracy to hack into corporations and government agencies worldwide. (AP Photo/Cook County Sheriff’s Department)

Mint Press News Update:

The three British co-defendants who pleaded guilty to being members of the Lulzsec hacktivist group were sentenced by a U.K. court Thursday.

Ryan Ackroyd, 26, the most technically-experienced of the three, received the longest sentence; he will spend 15 months in prison.

Jake Davis, 20, will be imprisoned for one year and Mustafa al-Bassam, 18, will not see jail time, but will have to complete 300 hours of community service.

By contrast, American co-defendant Jeremy Hammond has already spent 14 months awaiting trial in a federal case that carries charges that could result in up to 42 years of prison time. Hammond has also been denied bail or access to family members, unlike his British co-defendants.

“It’s a disturbing commentary on the U.S. criminal justice system that Jeremy Hammond, a young activist who is an asset to his community, will spend longer in pre-trial detention for his alleged participation in these online protests than any of his international co-defendants will when they have fully served their sentences,” National Lawyers Guild Executive Director Heidi Boghosian said in a press release.

 

Prior Mint Press News coverage:

Accused of publishing internal emails of the private intelligence agency Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor) through the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, 28-year-old Jeremy Hammond has been in prison since March 2012 without parole or the ability to see his family.

The Chicago native faces the most extreme punishment with a possible 42-year-to-life sentence in prison and has been charged with five felony counts. Three of the felonies Hammond has been charged with fall under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). Each count carries a 10-year maximum prison sentence.

Included in the leaked emails was evidence suggesting that Stratfor spied on activists for Dow Chemical and monitored Occupy Wall Street activity for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Hammond’s trial has not been scheduled yet, but another status hearing has been scheduled for Friday, May 17. His co-defendants in the U.K., however, were scheduled to be sentenced today.

Three British Internet activists — 26-year-old Ryan Ackroyd, 20-year-old Jake Davis and 18-year-old Mustafa al-Bassam — all confessed today to being members of the hacktivist organization Anonymous’ subgroup, LulzSec, and for carrying out cyberattacks on the U.K.’s National Health Service, Sony and News International.

While the sentences the hacktivists received in England have not yet been announced, their punishments are not expected to be as severe as Hammond’s. The hacktivists co-defendants in Ireland and the U.K. have received varying degrees of reprimand for their involvement in similar cyberattacks. The two Irish Internet activists will not be charged in Ireland, which does not have an extradition treaty with the United States.

The U.K. activists could be extradited to the U.S. for prosecution, but Abi Hassen, Mass Defense Coordinator for the National Lawyers Guild, in an interview with Mint Press News, said it wouldn’t be a smart move. “U.S. attorneys were holding off until the case was resolved in the U.K.,” Hassen said, adding that prosecuting the activists may be viewed as a slap in the face to the U.K.’s judicial system.

“Jeremy is a gifted person who cares deeply about the world,” said Hammond’s twin brother, Jason Hammond. “My family is shocked at the treatment he has received by the Department of Justice. Jeremy is accused of committing a non-violent crime yet we are forbidden from seeing him or speaking to him on the phone. He has been denied bail and he’s facing what amounts to a life sentence.”

U.S. Congress has enacted legislation to protect whistleblowers from retaliation. But in cases like Hammond’s where actions by the U.S. government were highlighted, whistleblowers like Hammond are instead viewed as aiding the enemy. A similar case would be that of Bradley Manning, who released hundreds of thousands of sensitive U.S. files to WikiLeaks in 2010, hoping to generate a discussion about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

Extreme punishment in the U.S.?

While President Obama has publicly called for the increased protection of whistleblowers, the Obama administration has prosecuted more people for leaking information than all previous presidents combined. In his first 26 months in office, civilian and military prosecutors charged five whistleblowers under the Espionage Act.

According to a press release from the Jeremy Hammond Defense Committee — a coalition of family members, activists, lawyers and other supporters who are working together to protect free speech and support Jeremy Hammond — the U.K.’s sentencing structure allows people convicted of crimes to serve out the second half of their sentences on “licence,” the equivalent of the United States’ parole, meaning that Ackroyd, Davis and al-Bassam will likely leave prison after serving a few years at most.

Hassen said the varying degrees of punishment for the same crime are interesting since the judicial system in the U.S. was modeled after European systems like those in the U.K.

Hassen said the CFAA law treats any activity on the Internet the same and allows prosecutors to dump charges on people, regardless of intent or damages.

“The CFAA criminalizes an incredible amount of activity online,” he said, giving an example of Aaron Swartz, the 26-year-old information activist who was threatened with decades in prison for downloading freely available documents from the academic database JSTOR. Swartz took his own life earlier this year.

“I think the main thing is that this law is a terrible law that [Hammond] is being charged under. It reeks of injustice and it’s just so so broad and so vague,” Hassen said.

Written in 1984, before the mainstream emergence of the Internet, Hassen told Mint Press News the CFAA was intended to protect government computers. “There were 12 computers on the Internet when the law was written and so today with the interpretation of the law, terms of service violations can affect just about anybody and make you icable for decades in prison,” he said.

“We have seen again and again the aggressive behavior of prosecutors who are exploiting the vague language in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to threaten young activists with decades in prison. Jeremy Hammond’s treatment and disproportionate sentencing is a mark of overzealous prosecutions that have destroyed young lives and continue to intimidate some of our brightest and most engaged young people,” Hassen said.

 

Hammond’s battle for freedom

As Mint Press News previously reported, concerning for Hammond supporters is that the judge presiding over his trial, Judge Loretta Preska, is married to Thomas Kavaler, a lawyer and former client of Stratfor, whose email and encrypted password were leaked in the Stratfor hack. Kavaler is a partner at Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP — where Preska was also a partner before becoming a judge — a firm that has represented more than 20 victims of the hack.

Preska maintains she can remain impartial because she says that her husband did not have his credit-card information revealed, only his email address, which was already publicly available, and called the fact that she was presiding over the same case that affected her husband “merely a coincidence.”

Hassen says it’s really hard to know what the outcome in Hammond’s trial will be, since Hammond has not been able to participate in his own defense. Hammond has been denied bail because his skills as a hacktivist are viewed as an extreme danger to society, Hassen said, something Hassen and other Hammond supporters find “extremely disturbing” since even stalkers and those who have threatened to kill people sometimes receive bail.

Hassen explained that since the nature of the alleged crime is a computer crime and involves the Internet, Hammond is being kept in jail without access to the Internet and the ability to use a computer.

Last month Hassen said that over the past couple months, Hammond had spent about 11 hours with his defense team. “How does his defense team help prepare his defense when there are no computers in jail and he is not allowed to have Internet access,” he said, adding Hammond’s lawyers are trying to comb through millions of lines of evidence code, such as chat logs.

“It’s hard to know how he can adequately prepare for trial under these circumstances. A defendant should be able to work with his attorneys. People given bail have [a] much higher success rate.”

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Like 500 years ago, geeks are becoming the last line of defense for free speech

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

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rt.com

Businesses are attacking liberties that challenge their interests, and normally powerless people are defending freedom of speech. This is a world upside down, the direct opposite of how it should be – and yet, entirely predictable when we look at history.

In the past week, the spam protection service Spamhaus was subjected to a relentless attack that gives a glimpse of things to come. The attack initially rendered the service inoperable, effectively killing many crucial spam filters around the world for the duration of the attack.

However, geeks rose to the occasion, mounted countermeasures, and dissipated the attack, restoring the functionality of the world’s spam filters in a matter of hours.

There is an escalating war on free speech happening right now. What Spamhaus does is easy to describe: it maintains a list of electronic junkmailers to the best of its ability, giving any and all e-mail services in the world the ability to sort out e-mail from known junkmailers. Publishing the list is obviously part of exercising free speech. Read the rest of this entry →

We Spoke to Barrett Brown from Prison

March 26, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Politics, Update

By Patrick McGuire.  –  vice.com

Since my initial piece on Barrett Brown—the journalist and popularly mislabeled spokesperson of Anonymous who is facing a century of hard time in a federal American prison for threatening a FBI officer, hiding evidence that obstructed his warrant, and sharing a link within an IRC chat room that contained the stolen credit card information of Stratfor customers (a security company that had 5 million of its internal emails stolen from them)—there has been a small development in his case. While Barrett is still sitting in a federal prison, waiting to see a judge, the news broke last night that Barrett Brown’s mother plead guilty to her own charge of obstructing a search warrant. She hid Barrett’s computers from the FBI and is now facing $100,000 in fines and six months of probation.

In addition, Jeremy Hammond, the hacker who is accused of actually hacking into Stratfor has been sitting in an American prison for 13 months without trial. His case has been further delayed from seeing a judge because it came out that the original judge who was appointed to try Jeremy is the wife of a man whose data was compromised by the Stratfor hack. Bit of a conflict of interest there, huh? Read the rest of this entry →

Anonymous leaks alleged data on BofA execs, surveillance

March 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics

Hacktivist group says 14GB of data includes evidence that Bank of America engaged in an effort to “spy and collect information on private citizens.

 

AnonymousIn its latest salvo against the financial industry, Anonymous claims to have leaked sensitive information related to Bank of America executives and the company’s alleged effort to “spy and collect information on private citizens.”

Par:AnoIA, a group that identifies itself as the Anonymous Intelligence Agency, said in a press release (PDF) yesterday that it had released 14 gigabytes of data on hundreds of thousands of executives at companies around the world, including Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters, and TEKSystems, which the hackvisit collective claims was hired last year to spy on hackers and social activists.

The group says the data was not acquired during a hack but rather was retrieved from an unsecured server in Israel.

“The source of this release has confirmed that the data was not acquired by a hack but because it was stored on a misconfigured server and basically open for grabs,” Par:AnoIA said. “Looking at the data it becomes clear that Bank of America, TEKSystems, and others (see origins of reports) gathered information on Anonymous and other activists’ movement on various social-media platforms and public Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channels.”

The documents leaked by Anonymous include “intelligence” reports allegedly compiled by TEKSystems on “daily cyber threats” from around the world and Internet activity related to theOccupy Wall Street movement.

The group said the data retrieved revealed research methodology that was “sloppy, random, and valueless.” Read the rest of this entry →

We Are Legion: The Story of the Hacktivists

January 27, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Documentary, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

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Behind the Mask

July 10, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective

Published on Jul 10, 2012 by chicagomultikulti in collaboration with RogueMedia.org
The concern of injustice in media leads many to wear masks.

Question answered by an anonymous independent reporter on the gears behind the deception and control over media and identifying the fault and the solution.

Roguemedia and many other independent media outlets have repeatedly had reporters that contribute content censored, arrested, in some cases beaten and their faces slammed to the concrete by police.

MegaFail: Prosecutors fall short on evidence against Kim Dotcom

June 12, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

rt.com

Prosecutors in New Zealand have been unable to provide timely evidence to extradite Kim Dotcom, the founder of cloud-sharing website MegaUpload.com, to the US. The reason: there was simply too much to sift through.

­Crown attorney Fergus Sinclair said the New Zealand prosecution is unable to produce evidence by the set deadline because it is “too big a job.

They wouldn’t get a small way through it in that time,” Sinclair was quoted by Auckland Now as saying.

Prosecutors were tasked by New Zealand Judge David Harvey with rummaging through MegaUpload’s servers for evidence so that there could be a full accounting of Dotcom’s case before a decision is made on whether he is to be extradited to the US. Judge Harvey also told the FBI to collect evidence.

Dotcom’s case has been stirring controversy on both sides of the Pacific. His attorneys say the US illegally poached evidence from New Zealand, taking 18 copies of evidence despite an agreement with Kiwi prosecutors that it would remain in the country. That charge was deflected by prosecutors, who said that the clause only pertains to original data, and not copies of it, Radio New Zealand reported. Those prosecutors also said it would take another two and a half months to comb through the site’s archive before sufficient evidence is produced. Read the rest of this entry →

Commander X: Anonymous infiltrated by the FBI

May 27, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

Published on May 16, 2012 by

As a preface to this post, we would like to point out that this man clearly says that “this is a war”, a civil war that the governments, corporations and banks that run them, and the media they control have declared on their own people.  In the United States, the right to bear arms does not make any distinction as to if that right to bear arms applies to the only effective weapon left available to the people of the world [computers and information tech.].  As it stands in the current world we live in,  we are sure that most people can recognize that your right to own a handgun or other firearm is null and void if you recognize that the armies of the world now use drones and satellites to target and kill people from afar, before you would ever have a chance…. like the constitution clearly allows,  to stand your ground and fight for a revolution.


Whether you love them or hate them, you’ve without a doubt heard of the hacktivist collective Anonymous. Government officials have claimed that the next major terrorist attack will be carried out over cyberspace, and the feds have all but called Anonymous the next al-Qaeda. Recently an alleged member of the group made claims that Anonymous is perhaps the most powerful organizations in the world. That person, a hacktivist using the handle Commander X, joins us to explain his allegations and discuss the future of Anonymous.

Anonymous – Sabu, Anon, Lulzsec, Assange

May 26, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

cryptome.org

Roguemedia editor preface

This is an excerpt from a book it looks like will be released sometime this summer, the excerpt here details what looks like is mostly allegorical evidence from interviews with members of the group LulzSec.  This information is being shared in the form that we found it in, unedited, so that people can form their own opinions.  It should be noted that during the timeframe that this excerpt is talking about Sabu has been working as an FBI informant for months already.  As some readers have pointed out, this entire article could be a further attempt to implicate Assange…  and until the full book is released, or we are able to obtain further information about the sources of information, it remains unclear how factually accurate this information is.  At this time we do know that several members of LulzSec have been arrested, and that at least Sabu has been trying to work with authorities in an attempt to reduce his sentence.  Meanwhile the US and Sweden, whose intelligence agencies have been shown to work closely together, have both been trying to arrange Assange’s extradition so that they can bring him to trial.

Thanks for reading, and remember to keep an open mind.

Read the rest of this entry →

Anonymous: CIA, Interpol websites ‘tango down’

May 8, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

rt.com

The global hacktivst group known as Anonymous claims to have brought down the CIA and Interpol websites on Sunday.

­The attack is attributed to @AnonsTurkey, with the group using the twitter handle to say they are “hacking the world to save the planet”.

Earlier this year, Anomymous launched an offensive against government and private sites in protest against the content industry.

Just last month, Brazilian hacktivist Havittaja claimed responsibility for a DDoS attack on the websites of the US Department of Justice and the CIA. Other Anonymous hacktivists later joined their “Brazilian brother” and brought down two MI6 websites.

The CIA website was also downed by Anonymous on two occasions before that, in February 2012 and back in June 2011.

The February attack was part of Anonymous’ action against US law enforcement agencies and copyright holders. Other targeted websites included the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI. Anonymous was quick to claim responsibility then.

The CIA website took several hours to get back online, while the Department of Homeland Security went back up online in a matter of minutes.

Following the attack an alleged Anonymous hacktivist uploaded a video explaining how the community had crushed the agency’s online presence and why the CIA should have been ready.

DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks are a concentrated effort by multiple individuals to make a network overly busy. As a result, the website gets overloaded and goes down. DDoS attacks breach the Internet Architecture Board’s proper use policy.

It is customary for tweets referring to Anonymous DDoS attacks to be accompanied by a “Tango Down” hash tag. Originally the term was used by special forces to say that an enemy had been eliminated.

http://rt.com/news/anonymous-cia-interpol-down-702/

Anonymous: Revolution 2012

April 13, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Editorial, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

Published on Mar 29, 2012 by

The time has come…

 

Swedish researchers uncover key to China ‘s Tor-blocking system

April 3, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, World News

anonymouslegionops.blogspot.com

Swedish researchers have discovered that Chinese officials have updated the country’s ‘Great Firewall’ to make it harder for citizens to use the Tor network that provides a means of surfing the web anonymously.
It has been long-known that the ‘Great Firewall Wall of China’ has attempted to block citizens from using the Tor network, by blocking access to some IP addresses or using HTTP header filters to weed out suspect traffic.

But Philipp Winter and Stefan Lindskog of Karlstad University in Sweden have discovered that Chinese authorities have recently increased the sophistication of their filtering tools, making it more difficult for citizens to browse the web freely, by blocking so-called Tor bridges.
Tor bridges serve as entry points to the Tor network – if these are unreachable, a user cannot access the Tor network. While many of these bridges were once published, making it relatively simple to block, users had started to use unpublished bridges. Read the rest of this entry →

FBI: ‘We are losing to hackers’ Hacktivists Win

March 30, 2012 in Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

rt.com

if you thought hacktivists only messed with the FBI on Fridays, think again.

On Wednesday the Federal Bureau of Investigation admitted they are fighting a losing battle in cyberspace.

Shawn Henry, the FBI executive assistant director said fighting on the future “battleground” has been harder than initially thought.

I don’t see how we ever come out of this without changes in technology or changes in behavior, because with the status quo, it’s an unsustainable model,” Henry told The Wall Street Journal.

Unsustainable in that you never get ahead, never become secure; never have a reasonable expectation of privacy or security,” he added

Henry has gone on record saying he believes “the cyber threat is an existential one, meaning that a major cyber-attack could potentially wipe out whole companies,” said Henry on the FBI news website. Read the rest of this entry →

Anonymous, Infiltrated as we all knew, Has Revealed their 1st Wave of Spies and Informants

March 7, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

LulzSec Leader Was Snitch Who Helped Snag Fellow Hackers – wired.com/threatlevel
Jeremy Hammond Accused In AntiSec Bust – freehammond.com

 

I have to start this article with a preface, just to make sure everyone that does not know becomes intimately aware.  The government, in any country, as the world is now, is not your friend.  They are spying on you, monitoring what you do, possibly even enticing you to commit criminal acts so they can keep you detained away from the population and fueling the prison state.  Many people have assumed that Anonymous either was, is,  or are heavily infiltrated by the CIA and other intel communities for a long time.  The running joke I have heard was,  ” If the CIA owns facebook,  then who runs Anonymous, Israeli Mossad?  What about wikileaks that’s the Swedish/Russian  version of it, right ?  ”

The jokes run thin when real people involved in what amounts to heroism get arrested, and under current law might face indefinite detention without trial.  If you are involved or would like to be, REALIZE THIS RIGHT HERE AND NOW,  anyone you do not personally know would probably rat you out for a nickle, and YOU DO NOT KNOW anyone on the internet.

There has been a recent crackdown on anonymous operations, and it is much broader than this article can describe.  There are numerous unconfirmed reports I have been getting about individual hacktivists being shot in their homes in several locations, by local police SNIPERS.  Many people have known the danger of infiltration and stayed away from all things anonymous since it’s advent as global hacktivist hero.  For some, they were already talking to the wrong “friends.”

Another joke I have heard that might lighten the mood, “How do you get a top paying govt. job?  – Get busted after a long stint of hacking their chit.”

Read the rest of this entry →

AntiSec dumps Monsanto data on the Web

March 4, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

by

Hackers affiliated with Anonymous go after the biotech giant, stating, “Your continued attack on the worlds food supply…has earned you our full attention.” Read the rest of this entry →

Wikileaks: The global intelligence files

March 1, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Wikileaks: Today, Monday 27 February, WikiLeaks began publishing The Global Intelligence Files – more than five million emails from the Texas-headquartered “global intelligence” company Stratfor. The emails date from between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal’s Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defense Intelligence Agency. The emails show Stratfor’s web of informers, pay-off structure, payment-laundering techniques and psychological methods, for example : Read the rest of this entry →

Anonymous takes on prison industrial complex with latest hack

February 25, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

The prison industrial complex is the latest victim of Anonymous’ #FuckFBIFriday campaign. Hacktivists have compromised data from a massive correctional facility management firm and have defaced their website.

The website for The GEO Group, Inc., a Florida-based management firm with clients worldwide, has been targeted by operatives with the online collective Anonymous. Friday’s hack from the group is the most recent release related to the #FFF campaign that has in past weeks targeted and successfully taken down the sites of the CIA, FBI and US Department of Justice. Read the rest of this entry →

US court covering all bases: Charges spiraling for Megaupload

February 20, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Update, World News

File-sharing website Megaupload and its founder Kim Dotcom, along with several of the company’s other executives, are now facing new charges added by an American grand jury to those previously brought against them.

­ Read the rest of this entry →

‘Lay down your arms!’ Anonymous attacks US tear-gas maker

February 16, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Hackers have sent a sweet Valentine to an American weapons manufacturer, knocking out its website. The group says it was an act of retaliation for the company’s arming of security forces against pro-democracy protests in Egypt, Bahrain, and the US.

The one-year anniversary of the Arab Spring uprising in Bahrain seems to have ignited pro-protest feelings in the hackers’ hearts. The Anonymous-aligned activists have accused Combined Systems, a tear-gas maker located in the US, of selling “mad chemical weapons to military and cop shops around the world.

Putting out the company’s website, the hackers slammed the producer over alleged war profiteering on demonstrations in Egypt and elsewhere.

You shot and gassed protesters, running them off public parks in the US. Several dozen died because of your tear gas used in Egypt. Did you think we forgot? Why did you not expect us?” read the statement.

It is unclear if the hackers accuse Combined Systems of selling tear gas to Mubarak’s government or the country’s current ruling Supreme Council of the Armed Forces. However, they accuse the company of working for governments and armies, and as they see it, that is a good enough reason for an attack.

Combined Systems, lay down your arms: you just lost the game. In the past we have marched on your offices in Jamestown, Pennsylvania: now it is time to march on your websites.”

The website for Combined Systems Inc. was down on Tuesday. Messages to the site’s administrative staff were not immediately returned ahead of business hours.

In addition to defacing the website, the hackers say they have stolen and published personal information belonging to clients and employees of the company.

The latest attack has been credited by the shady collective as part of both the HackVDay Valentine’s Day rampage and protests commemorating the Bahrain uprising’s first anniversary.

Bahraini activists have called for demonstrations on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday to commemorate the Shiite-dominated protest that erupted last year. At least 40 people have been killed during months of unprecedented political unrest in Bahrain, inspired by the Arab Spring uprisings.

from  — rt.com

Anonymous says attack put CIA website offline

February 12, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update

Hackers have claimed responsibility for making the CIA website inaccessible on Friday – the latest attack on a US federal agency.

A Twitter post on a feed used by hackers’ collective Anonymous said “CIA Tango down”, a phrase used by the US Special Forces after killing an enemy.

Anonymous said in another tweet that just because it reported a hack, that did not mean it carried out the attack.

This would not be the first time the CIA website has been put offline.

In June 2011, a group affiliated with Anonymous, Lulz Security, temporarily brought down the agency’s homepage.

The CIA site remained offline on Friday evening after several hours, and a spokeswoman said the agency was looking into the reports.

Hackers usually target such websites through a denial-of-service attack, which involves bombarding the site with traffic until its servers are overwhelmed.

There is no suggestion that the security of the CIA’s actual computer systems have been compromised.

Earlier this month, Anonymous managed to intercept a conference call between the FBI and British police as they discussed legal action against hackers.

And following the shutdown of the Megaupload file-sharing website last month, a statement attributed to Anonymous claimed responsibility for shutting down the websites of the Department of Justice and FBI, among others.   from  –  bbc.co.uk

Anonymous releases Symantec code

February 7, 2012 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Update, World News

Torrents available now **

By Dave Neal    –   theinquirer.net

HACKTIVIST GROUP Anonymous has lived up to its promise and released Symantec source code.

The group has danced with Symantec for some time, but now that dance is over. “Symantec source code #Anonymous #AntiSec #OhIthinkSymantecGotButtraepd” says a tweet from the @AnonymousIRC account that links to Pirate Bay and Pastebin releases.

Symantec source code thepiratebay.se/torrent/7014253 #Anonymous #AntiSec #OhIthinkSymantecGotButtraepd pastebin.com/GJEKf1T9

— AnonymousIRC (@AnonymousIRC) February 7, 2012

The Bittorrent link takes users to a download of PCanywhere source code for remote login software from Symantec, and the statement, “Symantec has been lying to its customers. We exposed this point thus spreading the world that ppl need” – #AntiSec #Anonymous. Spread and share!”

Read the rest of this entry →

Bail denied: MegaUpload founder’s funds frozen, says he has no choice but to fight

February 6, 2012 in Finance, Headline, Politics, Update, World News

from  heraldsun.com.au

Megaupload founder "Kim Dotcom" said all his funds have been frozen and he will fight the piracy charges. Picture: AFP

MEGAUPLOAD founder Kim Dotcom had his bid for bail turned down after a court hearing in Auckland, New Zealand.

The 38-year-old founder of the file-sharing website at the heart of a global internet piracy case was refused bail last week because the judge considered him a flight risk, with today’s High Court hearing an appeal against that ruling.

After hearing evidence, the High Court rejected his appeal, TVNZ reported, with Dotcom, who legally changed his name from Kim Schmitz, to remain behind bars until February 22 when US authorities are expected to file extradition papers.

Read the rest of this entry →

Megaupload update – the Mega Echelon Option

February 4, 2012 in Editorial, Politics, Update, World News

email text taken from  here cryptome.org   Click on the photos for high rez versions

It seems more than a few people see the use of military force and intelligence gathering techniques in the takedown of Megaupload should be questioned.  In other reports it is indicated that Megaupload is involved in legal actions to get data back to customers that were legally storing files with the site.

An entrance to Megaupload's office at a hotel in Hong Kong is seen in this Hong Kong government handout photo released late January 20, 2012. The Hong Kong government said on Friday over HK$300 million ($38.4 million) worth of proceeds from Megaupload were seized in the country in joint operations by Hong Kong customs and U.S. authorities. The U.S. government shut down the Megaupload.com content sharing website, charging its founders and several employees with massive copyright infringement, the latest skirmish in a high-profile battle against piracy of movies and music. Reuters

At 02:12 PM 1/20/2012 +0100, Eugen Leitl wrote:

>On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 01:52:01AM +1300, Peter Gutmann wrote:
Kim Schmitz ([Kim Dotcom] or whatever he’s calling himself this week) is a survivor.
He’ll be back, even if Megaupload isn’t.

If the charges stick he’ll be out of circulation for a while. Read the rest of this entry →

Hacked Emails Show Closer Ties Between Ron Paul And Neo-Nazis

February 2, 2012 in Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics

Posted by JacobSloan  -  taken from disinfo.com

The hackers group Anonymous has hacked and defaced the website of the American Third Position Party, a Neo-Nazi organization attempting to foment a “white revolution”. Anonymous says emails reveal that Ron Paul regularly holds conference calls with A3P’s board of directors, and that members hold key posts in Ron Paul’s campaign. Is this a smear job based on guilt by association, or outright lies? Or an ugly side of Ron Paul revealed? Read the rest of this entry →

Big Win Following Internet Strike Against SOPA/PIPA

January 20, 2012 in Headline, Politics, Update

Latest news about the largest online protest ever, against SOPA/PIPA is bills have been shelved, for now, 18+ supporters in the legislature dropped their support the day of the protest with more supporters backing down until the bills were both shelved today. Reports show that a major online file sharing site, megaupload hosted in New Zealand, was shut down by US FBI and dept. of justice, 4 people were arrested and a total of 7 people have been sited. Minutes after word of the arrests global chat channels picked up news and a counter attack began. Numerous US govt. websites and several large media firms had their websites shut down by denial of service attacks on a global scale.

The following are excerpts from an email rogue media received from Fight for the Future after numbers were in — “”On January 18th, 13 million of us took the time to tell Congress to protect free speech rights on the internet. Hundreds of millions, maybe a billion, people all around the world saw what we did on Wednesday.  See the amazing numbers here and tell everyone what you did. This was unprecedented. Your activism may have changed the way people fight for the public interest and basic rights forever.

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