Cyber Wars (Anonymous) Archive


Since I have gotten such great feedback from my 1st video, and it has been mirrored, tweeted, and shared all over, I made this one. I’m not a hacker, cracker or coder, yet, I am Anonymous. It’s about embracing the idea, it’s about standing strong for your rights, it’s about being active. I do these, to show my support for Anonymous, and to show all of you…that you too can be part of the solution, no matter what role you play. I deleted my other Youtube channels, and social media accounts, regardless of views or subs, and made this one. How come you haven’t seen any of my videos? ….maybe….you have! ;) I too, can, and will, use media as a tool of perpetuation. Any video I create, feel free to download, cut, edit, or distribute in any way you desire. All I ask, is that you be decent enough to credit (link) this channel. I will be watching! Thanks. I love you all. You are Anonymous. You are Legion. You should not forgive. You will not forget. We’ve been expecting you. *creator’s note* I’m aware I misspelled ‘oppression’. Merely a typo. I work extremely fast, so…it happens. This shit takes so long to render out, you must understand why I say “fuck it.” thx²to Support4Anons www.youtube.com
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A blizzard of hacks and leaks hit the internet today, with the hacktivist group Anonymous claiming responsibility for most, but not all, of the damage. The press channel for Anonymous has announced that it has begun its hacking spree for November 5th, in commemoration of Guy Fawkes Day. Numerous claims of hacked sites, some affiliated with Anonymous, and some not, include PayPal, Symantec, VMware, as well as defacement of NBC-affiliated sites and Lady Gaga’s fan page. Although PayPal has stated there’s no evidence that they were hacked, AnonymousPress posted a tweet with a file link containing five pages of PayPal user data, including names, email addresses, encrypted passwords and phone numbers. The file has since been removed. The credit for Symantec goes to @Doxbin, and they have stated that “HTP is not affiliated with Anonymous.” Anonymous is also allegedly responsible for leaking VMWare ESX Server Kernel source code. Other affected websites include ImageShack, in which claims of a zero-day vulnerability were used, numerous Australian sites, and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. The theme for today seems to be another anti-surveillance protest, targeting surveillance systems, such as Trapwire and INDECT. According to SiliconANGLE contributing editor, John Casaretto, “They feel that there’s a number of human rights violations being executed here. Surveillance systems, in their perception, are direct threats to privacy and civil freedoms.” However
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Against NEW WORLD ORDER Slavery www.new-world-order-plan.org Today, [we have released] 1.7GB of data that USED to belong to the United States Bureau of Justice, until now. Within the booty you may find lots of shiny things such as internal emails, and the entire database dump. We Lulzed as…

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List of sites was hacked on 17.Nov.2012: mail.axis-consultants.co.nz linh.co.nz www.idoidoido.co.nz inmysecretlife.com www.pujcovna-hortenzie.cz www.bravo.co.tz eagleelectrical.co.uk Big thnaks to: @LIberoamericaMu!!! Follow him: twitter.com ? twitter.com ? www.facebook.com ? TRANSCRIPT: \ ? Skype: AnonymousOpNews (for question)

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Anonymous: Ep.10 NASA Source Code Leaked

Posted November 30, 2012 By


NASA CODE Link 1: uppit.com NASA CODE Link 2: www.sendspace.com NASA CODE Link 3: ca.isohunt.com Official Email: ChannelZeroYT1@Gmail.com Official Facebook: www.facebook.com Official Twitter: twitter.com Google Hangout: plus.google.com YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com

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Philadelphia police supervisor shown on video striking woman at Puerto Rican Day Parade


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Anonymous: Ep.3 TYLER (The New WikiLeaks)

Posted November 30, 2012 By


Official Email: ChannelZeroYT1@Gmail.com Official Facebook: www.facebook.com Official Twitter: twitter.com Google Hangout: plus.google.com YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com

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PIC: #Anons fill seats inside fascist political party’s Astoria office. What happens next? 

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How e-voting machines compare to Vegas slot machines 

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Msp Hacker Anonymous

Posted November 30, 2012 By

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Mars Curiosity under hacker attack?

Posted November 30, 2012 By


The hacker group Anonymous has reportedly threatened to hack NASA’s Mars rover “Curiosity.” The device is currently on the red planet trying to find out if conditions there ever allowed for life, and some so-called security experts have suggested that hacktivists are on a mission to disrupt it. Is Anonymous actually interested in taking own Curiosity or does it have bigger fish to fry? RT web producer Andrew Blake brings us the latest on TrapWire, a global surveillance system brought to the spotlight last week thanks to WikiLeaks, and what some Anons think should be done to bring it down. Like us and/or follow us: twitter.com www.facebook.com

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One man’s crusade to end the hysteria over cyberwar

Posted November 30, 2012 By NewsRoom

 

One man’s crusade to end the hysteria over cyberwar

By Christopher Mims

 

 
If you’re afraid of cyberwar, Bruce Schneier has some other long words for you to think about. AFP/Getty Images /Attila Kisbenedek

Bruce Schneier, a legend among hackers and security experts, is having trouble convincing the world that the threat of cyberwar is overstated. In 2010, the year after the US launched a Cyber Command division of its military, he lost a public debate on the subject. And in October, US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said that the US should gird itself for a cyber Pearl Harbor. Yet Schneier is undeterred. Through countless essays, speeches and debates, he has tirelessly argued that what we should really be paying attention to is how we establish trust online, and failing that, what are the basic security measures which will help us cope with both cyberwar and the countless acts of cybercrime, cyberhooliganism, cyberterrorism, and cyberespionage that happen every day.

Data on just how much damage cybercrime occurs is patchy, but data on cyberwar is even worse because “there’s been no cyberwar, so the data does not exist,” Schneier says.

It’s an arresting assertion. Is it really possible, given all we’ve heard about the coming cyber 9/11, cyber Armageddon—and even a cyber Katrina requiring a cyber FEMA—that cyberwar remains a mere hypothetical? And yet that seems to be the case.

As Thomas Rid explained in Foreign Policy:

Indeed, there is no known cyberattack that has caused the loss of human life. No cyberoffense has ever injured a person or damaged a building. And if an act is not at least potentially violent, it’s not an act of war.

Separating cyberwar from cybercrime

That’s not to say that our connected world isn’t increasingly beset by attacks over the internet. Recently, an attack originating in Iran interfered with the office computers of Qatari and Saudi Arabian oil and gas production firms, wiping out files on 30,000 computers. US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta called it the most destructive attack ever in the private sector.

Other attacks originating in Iran have targeted US banks. In 2007, the websites of banks, newspapers, and some divisions of government in Estonia were jammed up by an attack that flooded those sites with traffic, rendering them inaccessible. And some are describing Iran’s attempts at interference with energy companies and banks as a low-grade cyberwar.

But Schneier, who has been writing about the issue for nearly a decade, contends that defining every act of cybercrime as some variety of cyberwar is a rhetorical trap that could lead to escalation and worse. As he explained in 2007:

Although the goals are different, many tactics used by armies, terrorists and criminals are the same. Just as they use guns and bombs, they can use cyberattacks. And just as every shooting is not necessarily an act of war, every successful Internet attack, no matter how deadly, is not necessarily an act of cyberwar. A cyberattack that shuts down the power grid might be part of a cyberwar campaign, but it also might be an act of cyberterrorism, cybercrime or even–if done by some 14-year-old who doesn’t really understand what he’s doing–cyberhooliganism. Which it is depends on the attacker’s motivations and the surrounding circumstances–just as in the real world.

The world’s most sophisticated and invasive attack over the internet was an act of the US and Israel: the Stuxnet worm that caused Iran’s uranium-enriching centrifuges to spin so quickly that one in five was destroyed.

Aside from Iran’s rather sloppy virus attack on energy companies and the Stuxnet worm, almost all cyber attacks are waged with armies of “zombie PCs” that clog target websites with requests. These zombie botnets are accessible and dirt cheap—they can be rented for as little as $2 an hour—and there is ample evidence that most attacks employing them are carried out not by state actors but, especially in China, private citizens.

Framing every attack as a kind of cyberwar means leads to irrational responses, including pre-emptive cyber-attacks on US enemies. The problem with that policy, Schneier argued in 2007, is that you often don’t know where a cyber attack originated, raising the stakes for any counterattack, and what you’re experiencing is almost certainly not an act of war but a crime:

A cyber-security policy that condones both active deterrence and retaliation — without any judicial determination of wrongdoing — is attractive, but it’s wrongheaded, not least because it ignores the line between war, where those involved are permitted to determine when counterattack is required, and crime, where only impartial third parties (judges and juries) can impose punishment.

The ignored threats: cyber-everything else

While cyberwar get all the attention, with its imagined threats of attacks on our electrical and transportation grid, consumers alone are losing an estimated $110 billion to cybercrime every year. Those numbers may be overblown, but even Schneier agrees that cybercrime is bad and getting worse.

“This is a big problem for individuals, small and medium size businesses,” says Schneier. In China, one sting netted a cybercrime gang accused of pilfering $48 million from small businesses; the money was then laundered through online games. Impersonating someone online is an easy way to defeat bank security measures–convincing a bank you’re a particular customer doesn’t require attacking the bank itself–and creative criminals have even discovered that they can steal money by synthesizing fake people who don’t exist in real life.

Cyberespionage is also an important and overshadowed issue: Lockheed Martin, the Pentagon’s top supplier, recently said that attacks on its networks and suppliers have increased dramatically and that 20% of them are considered “advanced persistent threats” aimed at stealing data or interfering with operations. On the whole, businesses are riddled with known threats and security holes that have yet to be closed.

Since cyber attacks can be carried out by such a wide variety of people with equally diverse motives, the way to defend against all of them is to concentrate on security—rather than an imagined war—and leave management of networks to the professionals, says Schneier.

“In general, businesses hand over specialized areas of infrastructure to specialists,” he says. “Food service, cleaning, tax preparation, and IT infrastructure and security are just like that. It makes no sense to do it yourself… Computing is a utility, and we need to start treating it that way.”

Everyone, even Schneier, agrees that cyberwar will someday be a component of warfare. It may even be a way for states like China to compete with the US without matching America’s enormous defense budget. But by touting threats that have yet to materialize, we’re not just missing out on more immediate threats; we may also be ignoring the basic security measures that all businesses should be taking to defend themselves against any cyber attack–whatever its origin and meaning.

Source: http://qz.com/32536/why-greece-could-be-a-spectacular-investment-right-now/

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Stuxnet and the New Era of Cyber-Warfare

Posted November 30, 2012 By NewsRoom

Stuxnet and the New Era of Cyber-Warfare

Not so long ago, talk about cyber-warfare fell somewhere between hype and science fiction. Killer robots have been wreaking havoc on the big screen for generations, but in the real world it all seemed a bit abstract. Then along came Stuxnet, showing that cyber-weapons could indeed wreak physical destruction.

The information security community, including IT at midsize firms, is still catching up to the new – and fast-evolving – realities of cyber-warfare. A variety of factors are making the challenges more difficult. But the one piece of good news for IT managers is that basic security precautions can still help, even in the age of cyber-war.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Commanded to Self-Destruct

Up until a couple of years ago, warnings of a cyber Pearl Harbor or cyber 9/11 were likely to fall on fairly deaf ears. Yes, we knew that important – even critical – information could be stolen by hackers. Or it could be destroyed, by wiping files. But true physical destruction, breaking stuff, seemed like a different matter.

Then, as Roberft L. Mitchell notes at InfoWorld, along came the Stuxnet worm. Apparently developed and deployed by US covert agencies, it took over the control systems of perhaps a thousand Iranian centrifuges used for nuclear materials refinement. They were commanded to overspeed, causing them to disintegrate. Not only could cyber-weapons cause physical destruction, but their use had been legitimized.

Subsequent cyber-weapons have been aimed at espionage or disruption rather than outright destruction. Just last month Iran evidently launched distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against US banks and financial firms. But the risk of physical damage remains.

And cyber-security measures have been slow to catch up. According to Melissa Hathaway of Hathaway Global Strategies, “a lot of critical infrastructure is not even protected from basic hacking.”

Self-Protection

What are IT managers at midsize firms supposed to do in this expanding threat environment? Midsize firms cannot simply rely on either government agencies or security vendors to shield them from cyber-attacks.

But while firms can do very little to protect against physical attacks, they have significant scope to self-protect against cyber-attacks. According to Gartner analyst John Pescatore, attacks target specific vulnerabilities. Says Pescatore, “By closing that vulnerability, you stop the teenage kid, the criminal and the cyber warrior.”

And in spite of sophisticated new weapons, many attacks remain simple, exploiting vulnerabilities that could readily be closed. Others, such as “spear phishing,” exploit the human factor. Spear phishing attacks mimic emails from persons known to the target. We need to train people to ask themselves, why is this friend sending me an email attachment out of the blue?

IT departments at midsize firms can do much to protect themselves. And the time to start taking those measures is now.

 

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www.facebook.com ** Anyone welcome to add me! CREEP TROLL THAT TERRORIZED AMANDA TODD IDENTIFIED BY AWESOME HACKER GROUP ANONYMOUS Amanda Todd’s alleged tormentor named by hacker group ‘Anonymous’ names man it claims bullied BC teen who took her own life CBC News Posted: Oct 15, 2012 6:01 PM PT Last Updated: Oct 15, 2012 8:48 PM PT Suicide investigation2:32 Facebook BC teen’s suicide nets hundreds of tips to police MPs to debate NDP anti-bullying motion Cyber-bullying3:32 The tragic story of BC teen suicide victim Amanda Todd has taken another bizarre twist as the internet hacking and activist group Anonymous has named a man the group says was the girl’s primary tormentor. Todd, 15, of Port Coquitlam, died last Wednesday, a month after posting a haunting video on YouTube that cited the sexualized attack that set her down a path of anxiety, depression and drug and alcohol abuse. During her nine-minute video, the teen explains in hand-written notes that she was in Grade 7 when she was lured by an unidentified male to expose her breasts via webcam. She says that a year later she received a message from a man on Facebook threatening that if she didn’t give him a show, he would send the webcam picture to her friends and family. She says police later told her the man followed through with his threat. Anonymous published the name and address of a Vancouver-area man that the group claims was bullying and preying on Todd via the internet. The activist group, which often uses a

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