Hacking

Anonymous Acts Out Over ACTA

The hacker group Anonymous has struck again — this time taking down the U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection business center website as well as one touting National Consumer Protection Week.

In their place was a German language video mocking ACTA, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.

The FTC promptly removed the video, which has been described as violent and bloody: A man in a ski mask guns down people for downloading copyrighted music. In a profanity-ridden statement, Anonymous threatened to “rain torrential hellfire down on all enemies of free speech, privacy and internet freedom” if ACTA is approved.

Hating on ACTA

ACTA, a global agreement targeted at curbing online piracy, has plenty of opponents who believe it will restrict freedom to download movies and music from the Internet and possibly lead to surveillance. That some government officials have signed the agreement in secret — or attempted to — is not sitting well with the public. As protests over the trade agreement grow, a number of countries in Europe are refusing to sign or ratify it.

Such rejection is nothing, though, compared to the language that Anonymous reportedly used in its statement accompanying the video:

“Even more bothersome than your complete lack of competence in maintaining your own f— websites and serving the citizens you are supposed to be protecting, is the US federal government’s support of ACTA. You really want to empower copyright holders to demand that users who violate IP rights (with no legal process) have their Internet connections terminated? You really want to allow a country with an oppressive Internet censorship regime to demand under the treaty that an ISP in another country remove site content?”

A Step Beyond

Anonymous managed to crash other government websites — most notably that of the CIA and the Justice Department. However, the group did not replace content on those sites as it did on the FTC’s.

What is puzzling is that the FTC is not involved with ACTA at all. Trade agreements are handled by other agencies, including the Commerce Department and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

Much about Anonymous, however, is puzzling, said Maurice Ross, a partner with Barton.

“It is hard to characterize them from an ideological standpoint,” he told TechNewsWorld. “It seems to me that they view themselves as global crusaders for First Amendment-type issues. The problem is, even for people who share those values, the tactics that Anonymous uses are very troubling.”

Its goals seem to be focused on equality, Robert Siciliano, online security evangelist, told TechNewsWorld.

“Anonymous is a movement upset with the 1 percent and what it perceives are the 1 percent’s underlying motivations,” he said.

Still, for a loosely organized group with airy-fairy goals, Anonymous has caused some significant financial damage, Siciliano said. “There are dollars associated with each breach that has surely exceeded millions in losses. Also, individuals whose data was exposed have suffered losses of reputation in numerous ways based on the information exposed.”

Anonymous refers to the latter as “the truth,” Siciliano added.

Taking Down the Internet

The group is also threatening to bring down the Internet — a claim that Siciliano finds laughable despite Anonymous’ technical feats to date.

“The fact Anonymous was kind enough to give notice means they have no intention or may lack the ability to do so. There’s too much redundancy in the system,” he said.

Making the threat, though, “is a great PR move,” Siciliano added.

“The Internet is nearly impossible to black out completely,” Tim Keanini, CTO for nCircle, told TechNewsWorld.

More to the point, why would the hackers want to bring down the Internet in the first place?

“The Internet is Anonymous’ primary means of communication and their targets depend on a working Internet,” Keanini pointed out. “If, hypothetically, Anonymous was able to create an Internet blackout for any substantial period of time, it would effectively put them out of business.”

Website Operating Costs on the Rise

Anonymous can’t bring down the Internet, Ross acknowledged, but it surely can bring down sites that it targets — especially poorly secured sites run by smaller companies or nonprofits.

“Most companies have not invested in the security that is required to combat this type of assault,” he said. “And for those that have, it is driving up companies’ costs of operating their websites.”

1 Comment

  • No one would be objecting to these things if they included clauses like, "None of these provisions should be interpreted to undermine fair use, or public domain." But, those phrases will *never* appear in such documents, because the intent is to either undermine those things, or obfuscate the intent sufficiently that they can. Heck, we already have the bloody supreme court in the US dropping feces on the process, by actually suggesting that someone can take public domain content and re-copyright it. How the #@$$@# is that supposed to work exactly? And, if the same clowns couldn’t get taken to court for the number of cases of their own secretaries, etc., using copyrighted material on their own websites, and the like, while totally blind to it, they would be pushing to have fair use denied too. After all, its all about the money changing hands, not what is best for civilization.

    Ancient world – One idiot decides the Library of Alexandria isn’t worth anything, since anything in it can also be found in their magic book, so has it burned down.

    Modern world – One nut buys up the whole library of congress, under the, "its no longer public domain, I copyrighted it", and has its contents burned, because, "Its my property, I can do what I want with it."

    Same bloody difference, same result to the public well being. And, the only reason it won’t happen, is purely because you can’t overcharge someone for the "ashes" of things that they want to read, or need to understand their jobs. If you could, most of our civilization could go up in smoke, with the first crazy that managed to buy it.

    Strangely, at one time, both sides of the political spectrum thought that ordinary people having access to free, and presumably accurate, information was "important". Now, if money isn’t changing hands, its not "real", and no one cares of the "primary" source for it is 12 different web sites, by 12 different groups of people, with 12 different interpretations of reality, of which only one is accurate at all, and it *might be*, depending on the subject, the least popular source on the subject. I mean.. How many people likely look up medical information on quack websites, self help sites, the website of their favorite magazine, or even Wikipedia, which is not always accurate, instead of even **knowing** about Pubmed? A site that publishers of medical/scientific journals would like to see end, because they give out, to doctors, and researchers, for free, what they want them to use research money, and money used to treat patients, to *buy* through their expensive journals, instead. If it wasn’t necessary to have them, as a means to show that one’s research was actually reviewed, and found at least plausible, by other professionals, no one in their right mind would want the journals to exist.

    Frankly, though, they might be outliving their usefulness, purely due to the number of cases of bad information making it through the filters on some of the lower end ones, and the fact that anti-science groups have been playing "cargo cult" journalism, and inventing various fake journals for themselves, to be published in.

    And, that is what it is, really, cargo cultism. The act to replicating the surface, the "appearance" of science, or science journalism, using similar words, and gestures, etc., to "conjure" legitimacy. Just like the islander cargo cultists couldn’t make planes, or build radios, etc., but imagined that those things would all reappear, after WWII, if they just build runways, and constructed towers, and produced the "appearance" of the things that existed, when those places where landing points for aircraft, military personnel and the things they brought with them. And, sadly, when it comes to glossy magazines, most people can’t tell the difference, any more than the natives of those islands did.

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