Anonymous Attacks US Government

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BrownGaijin

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Jan 31, 2009
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stonethered said:
BrownGaijin said:
...and has organized actual physical demonstrations to take place tomorrow in various cities around the world.
Physical demonstrations you say? Cue the INTERPOL, MI5, FBI and/or CIA in 3... 2... 1...

(Any of my fellow Yankees know what the first two are? I'll give you a cookie the the first one who answers correctly.)
I believe Interpol is the International Police, who I assume work for either the UN or NATO. MI5 is British Intelligence, the equivalent to the American CIA if I'm not mistaken.
Here you go.

 

Okysho

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Sep 12, 2010
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Xzi said:
Well I don't particularly support what they're fighting for, but to their credit, at least Anonymous gets shit done. How many other protest groups can say the same?
OMG YOUR AVI IS SIMANT!!! I LOVE THAT GAME!!!

OT: I don't really support them either, and yes they do get it done, but at the same time, maybe there's some merit to their cause? There's some good points about the Copyright office in the article. Exploitations aren't fun... I think we can all agree on that
 

esperandote

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Feb 25, 2009
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A site was down for three hours? wow.

On the other hand it takes balls to take a swing at the US goverment.
 

Bretty

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Pilkingtube said:
Thing is they've not actually achieved anything.. all they've done is take down a website for 30 minutes, and lets be honest.. who would actually go to that website? Anonymous only seem capable of doing DDoS attacks which doesn't actually, you know, do anything. At most it's a minor irritation.
By the fact you are here talking about means that they have done 'something'. If it was nothing no one would be here commenting.

Oh and by the way, there is a big difference in taking down someones personal site to taking down a gov't one.... one requires balls.
 

Daverson

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Nov 17, 2009
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Anonymous can only exist because, despite what they might think about themselves, they're "under the radar" compared to more... shall we say "physical" groups, such as the ALF (actually, the ALF is a perfect comparison). Attacking a government institution is a great show of force, but I'm not too sure anonymous has the resources available to put up with the fallout from such actions.
 

fullbleed

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Apr 30, 2008
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Pilkingtube said:
Thing is they've not actually achieved anything.. all they've done is take down a website for 30 minutes, and lets be honest.. who would actually go to that website? Anonymous only seem capable of doing DDoS attacks which doesn't actually, you know, do anything. At most it's a minor irritation.
This, how about branching out if you seriously want to declare war on Copyright Industry. Make the front page just a giant cock or link to 2 girls or something.
I don't agree with them but it would be funny.
 

Choppaduel

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Mar 20, 2009
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Xzi said:
Well I don't particularly support what they're fighting for, but to their credit, at least Anonymous gets shit done. How many other protest groups can say the same?
an impressive feat indeed.

While pro-piracy is a bit too much of 17th century of a concept to logically get behind, I do think there needs to be more strength in the "fair use" argument. I've a lot of montages on youtube get muted because they contained (and not just explicitly featured) tracks by some publisher/producer/recordlabel with a rod up its ass.

I wish I could think of another example right now.
 

Danny Ocean

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Jun 28, 2008
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A Pious Cultist said:
Oh Anon, you're so fucked. First rule of politics: If you piss off the USA they will fuck your shit up.
Not entirely true, and, even if it was, I doubt it would be the first rule.

I should think the guys who did this will be tracked down, then hired. That'd keep them quiet and benefit the country.

BrownGaijin said:
stonethered said:
BrownGaijin said:
...and has organized actual physical demonstrations to take place tomorrow in various cities around the world.
Physical demonstrations you say? Cue the INTERPOL, MI5, FBI and/or CIA in 3... 2... 1...

(Any of my fellow Yankees know what the first two are? I'll give you a cookie the the first one who answers correctly.)
I believe Interpol is the International Police, who I assume work for either the UN or NATO. MI5 is British Intelligence, the equivalent to the American CIA if I'm not mistaken.
Here you go.
Interpol are separate from the UN and NATO.

MI5 is one branch of British intelligence. It's closer to the FBI in the sense that it operates internally. MI6 is the branch that operates abroad, and so is closer to the CIA.
 

The Bandit

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Feb 5, 2008
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Arec Balrin said:
Verlander said:
Bet Firefox is regretting putting that refresh button on their browser now...

Seriously though, what's wrong with copyright law? This isn't a question to goad people, but I don't understand what they actually want
It infringes on already existing rights; so-called 'natural rights'. These are ideas that go back to the Magna Carta and were given distinct form in the Enlightenment, which is reflected in the constitution of the United States. You have the right for example to write stuff and pass it around; by what right does anyone else have to physically stop you putting a pen to paper? The First Amendment forbids the US government from making any law that infringes on this. But a special exception is made for copyright.

The original justification for copyright laws in light of the rights they infringe on was that they were there to protect public access to information; so supporting the principle of free expression rather than interfering with it. The argument was that if authors had some limited copyrights over their work then they would get a return on their investment in it, encouraging them to make more original work. It would all eventually be freely available in the public domain once the exclusive copyrights expired.

A far cry from modern copyright law; which exists for and serves the polar opposite purpose.
What is it's modern purpose, then?
 

Legendsmith

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Mar 9, 2010
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*sigh*
remember everyone, this is only one part of anonymous doing this, not all. There are parts of anonymous is anti-piracy.
Quite a bit of anon was against this.
Finally, anon does not comprise of idiot teenagers. I have seen members ranging from 15 (underage b&) to over 30.
 

Kill100577

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Nov 25, 2009
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-11695416

There you go. Mabye not directly but the UKIPO and FACTUK were both taken down.
 

Dogstile

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Jan 17, 2009
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Verlander said:
dogstile said:
Verlander said:
My two cents. Cheers!
Your two cents fail to realise that anonymous is not just one group of people. Anonymous is everyone on the internet.

Which is why everyone thinks Anonymous is this weird, strange group of people who do everything for "teh lolz". There are multiple Anonymous groups all pushing for different things, but the news lumps them all together >.>
Yeah, but it isn't everyone on the internet is it? It's a minority on the internet. I mean, anyone COULD be anonymous, but chances are, they aren't.

The anonymous nature of, erm, anonymous, is it's biggest downfall, as well as its strongest asset. It's far too easy to imitate them, etc. Let me put it this way (as my two cents failed to impress you... not surprising, American cents aren't exactly worth much), I support the protest group that don masks in aid of the families of Scientologist "disconnect" programmes, I do not support the pointless spammers that want stuff for free. Pretty soon someone is going to get pissed off, and people who have appeared under an "anonymous" identity are gonna get fined, sued or jailed. Stay well away from it
But the way the government works is that they (typically) need actual proof before you can get fined, sued or jailed for something. Just because my hacker friend uses the same mask as me to steal stuff, doesn't mean i've stolen it. If you get my meaning.
 

strum4h

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Jan 3, 2009
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Talvrae said:
I had thought that Annonymous was an organisation against the church of Scientology since when does they attack things about copyrights?
They are not really an "organization" more like a disorganized group of anonymous people on 4chan. A quick google search could clear up a lot of questions about them.
 

Sporky111

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Dec 17, 2008
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"Anonymous will keep up the attacks until it stops being angry..."

That made me laugh, because it's completely true. They're not out for any grand justice, they're not out to change the world, they're just introducing a bit of chaos into the system. And why shouldn't they? We have a right to protest, and maybe acts like these will bring the public's displeasure to a spot where the politicians' blinders can't hide it.
 

endnuen

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Sep 20, 2010
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The thing is.. You can't really take down Anonymous. There is no body to target so to speak. No leadership, no organization. Only the idea and the hoard of anonymous who supports it.

Good luck to whom ever Anonymous chose to target.
 

Aptspire

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Mar 13, 2008
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Xzi said:
Well I don't particularly support what they're fighting for, but to their credit, at least Anonymous gets shit done. How many other protest groups can say the same?
true that :)
also, "When it stops being angry"? that might take a while :p