HBGary is a security firm that went too far to win contracts and gain publicity. I have no sympathy for a security vendor that fails to protect itself.
You should pay more attention to the news:h264 said:I have no idea what you're talking about here. Just because someone doesn't leave there name - it is considered 'anonymous'. And now you're trying to say its this same group? I supposed the death threats from anonymous phone calls to Assange and BBC journalists are also this group /sarcasmnightwolf667 said:I hardly consider the death threats made against one of the Swedish prosecutors who was working on the Julian Assange/Wikileaks case to be nonviolent, I hardly consider the death threats and erroneous intimidating phone calls to Aaron Barr's home to be non-violent.
As for Anonymous not being blamed (which they should be, they childishly released the personal information which led to this) you and the group have previously said that anyone who acts under the banner of anonymity is themselves part of Anonymous. It's likely that only Anon members in this particular case would have the grudge necessary to commit to something like this, but also do it in death threats and prank calls. (Anonymous has made death threats before in similar cases to people who have crossed them, you do not simply throw off the shackles of an old name with a long cruel history by saying "it wasn't us that did it".)?Do I regret it now? Sure,? he says, with a short laugh. ?I?m getting personal threats from people, and I have two kids. I have two four-year old kids. Nothing is worth that.?
The threats have come through Facebook including one commenter who wrote: ?I?m gonna find out all the people that you know and cause them pain. Death is too good for you.? Last night Barr also received about half a dozen phone calls to his cell. He only answered one of them ? a woman who quickly hung up. The rest were voicemails: ?They didn?t actually speak,? he says. ?One was singing something. Some of them just hung up. One guy just had weird noises in the background.?
http://anonnews.org/?p=press&a=item&i=304h264 said:I do my part in forums and future press releases so anons do not come off as terrorist. U.K. is much like a nanny state now so this doesn't surprise me considering many anons are libertarians or even anarchist. I haven't heard of the deceleration you mentioned, do you have a link?nightwolf667 said:I don't think the U.K considers Anon's declaration of war against their government to be a particularly nonviolent action done by peaceful protesters. If everyone is involved with the press releases, than anyone who's idea it was to release such a stupid release is culpable.
Declaring war and threatening action if those demands are not met? I'm sure the U.K took that as a terrorist threat on 1/27/2011.Not only does it reveal the fact that you do not seem to understand the present-day political and technological reality, we also take this as a serious declaration of war from yourself, the UK government, to us, Anonymous, the people.
We are united by a common objective and we can and WILL cross any borders to achieve that. So our advice to you, the UK government, is to take this statement as a serious warning from the citizens of the world. We will not rest until our fellow anon protesters have been released.
The goal isn't to get news coverage. You seem to have misinterpreted that press release. There is no declaration of war from anonymous. The main future actions to be taken would be protests or possibly legal action. I'll admit that the press release could have been worded better.nightwolf667 said:The declaration of war is laughable to most, but can lead to serious penalties faced under the law. Why? It's barely covered by the news, and no one I know who is not active online even knows you exist.
Aaron Barr childishly released personal information of supposed anonymous leaders who are now being harassed by the FBI and others. All of this to gain attention and bring in more money for his company. I don't condone these phone calls to Aaron Barr but I don't sympathize with him.nightwolf667 said:As for Anonymous not being blamed (which they should be, they childishly released the personal information which led to this).
Okay, I'm not your lawyer, and I'm not a lawyer, so this isn't legal advice. What you need to do, right now, at this moment as you read this is turn off the computer, go down stairs, and talk to your parents. You need to tell them you need to talk with your family's lawyer, and if your family doesn't have a lawyer, then find one out of the yellow pages.h264 said:The goal isn't to get news coverage. You seem to have misinterpreted that press release. There is no declaration of war from anonymous. The main future actions to be taken would be protests or possibly legal action. I'll admit that the press release could have been worded better.nightwolf667 said:The declaration of war is laughable to most, but can lead to serious penalties faced under the law. Why? It's barely covered by the news, and no one I know who is not active online even knows you exist.
Except he hadn't released anything yet. Even if he had, there is no affirmative defense of "he did it first."h264 said:Aaron Barr childishly released personal information of supposed anonymous leaders who are now being harassed by the FBI and others. All of this to gain attention and bring in more money for his company. I don't condone these phone calls to Aaron Barr but I don't sympathize with him.nightwolf667 said:As for Anonymous not being blamed (which they should be, they childishly released the personal information which led to this).
If they're in the Ukraine and piss of the Ukrainian government, a trial under American law would be a dream vacation. Even the ones in the UK are in a pretty shitty situation relatively.rapidoud said:Assuming that all anonymous members are American was your first mistake. Your second was assuming that all countries have extradition treaties with American countries (hint: If they live in Ukraine, then whoops America can't touch them without serious implications.) But I wouldn't put it above America, after all they hold other country's citizens hostage because they claim they did something they didn't do. Where's our part of the extradition treaty?
No I am not affiliated with anonymous but your legal advice sucks.
What the **** man. I'm not some kid living with my parents. I'm an I.T. professional with over 5 years work experience. I did not participate in anything illegal, helping with a press release is not illegal, chatting in an IRC room is not illegal. I support most of what these guys are doing and will continue to try clarify the actions taken.Starke said:Okay, I'm not your lawyer, and I'm not a lawyer, so this isn't legal advice. What you need to do, right now, at this moment as you read this is turn off the computer, go down stairs, and talk to your parents.
Starke said:Except he hadn't released anything yet. Even if he had, there is no affirmative defense of "he did it first."
I have been contacted by law enforecment and I have shared with them some of the information I have.
"The research I have done on the Anonymous groups is getting a lot of notice. I have meetings with FBI, OSD, USG, and DNI next week starting monday. "
I just tweeted a few posts on research and talk. This is the angle I want to stick with. If anyone asks about using this information for law enforcement I think we should say, well of course if law enforcement wants to discuss with me my research I will, its all open source, thats the thing, its all there. But my intent is not to do this work to put people in jail, my intent is to clearly demonstrate how this can be effectively used to gather significant intelligence and potentially exploit targets of interest (the other customers will read between the lines).
Aaron Barr
CEO
HBGary Federal, LLC
719.510.8478
Then stop writing like you're 14 and live with your parents. Think for yourself.AnonOperations said:What the **** man. I'm not some kid living with my parents. I'm an I.T. professional with over 5 years work experience.
Because in order to work in the IT field you first had to pass the state bar? No, there are two participants in this conversation, one has a marginal grasp on what you can and cannot be charged with, the other doesn't understand that normally legal acts in support of a crime is a crime.AnonOperations said:I did not participate in anything illegal, helping with a press release is not illegal, chatting in an IRC room is not illegal.
As an IT professional I can tell you you don't know what you're talking about when it comes to the law.AnonOperations said:I support most of what these guys are doing and will continue to try clarify the actions taken.
You can't refute the points I brought up and have now resorted to ad hominem attacks and bringing up U.S. law. Nice.Starke said:As an IT professional I can tell you you don't know what you're talking about when it comes to the law.
What points? That you're an IT professional? I can tell you from actual practical work experience that that doesn't say a damn thing about your knowledge of the law.AnonOperations said:You can't refute the points I brought up and have now resorted to ad hominem attacks and bringing up U.S. law. Nice.Starke said:As an IT professional I can tell you you don't know what you're talking about when it comes to the law.
I have spoken to a lawyer and this is not the topic of discussion here. Lets leave forum members personal lives, ad hominem attacks and threats of prosecution out of this. The points I am talking about have already been posted on this page. If you want to discuss someones personal life or give them advice, PM them.AnonOperations said:That talking in an IRC room isn't illegal? Because it can be.
If their advice didn't include "don't talk about this" then clearly you didn't get your money's worth.AnonOperations said:I have spoken to a lawyer and this is not the topic of discussion here. Lets leave forum members personal lives, ad hominem attacks and threats of prosecution out of this. The points I am talking about have already been posted on this page.AnonOperations said:That talking in an IRC room isn't illegal? Because it can be.
My innocent question is: was that before or after Anonymous decided to DDoS Iran?AnonOperations said:I have spoken to a lawyerAnonOperations said:That talking in an IRC room isn't illegal? Because it can be.
I think it's kinda cute that you think an account created 6 days ago and posted to by an Anon who rather knows what he's talking about is traceable to him personally. It's a clean forum account, being posted to from behind a safe proxy or some other effective means of masking the IP - you're an IT professional, you ought to know that. Despite your claims, this guy ain't stupid, he's a world away from the /b/tard stereotype.Starke said:scarewords
This sounds awfully like "When the government (or corporations working for them) does it, it can't be illegal". Wasn't that Nixon's defence? And didn't the public at large despise him for it?nightwolf667 said:On the subject of "FBI harrassments", as I've pointed out before, Anonymous knowingly committed criminal actions that crossed state lines. This brings them under the FBI's jurisdiction. If they want to protest, then they must accept that sometimes protests come with harsh penalties and that sometimes that's also the point. To say now "Oh no! The FBI is taking our stuff and breaking into our houses at 7 AM!" seems fairly naive, since that's the cost of doing business. If they did not want to be arrested then they should not have committed the crime in the first place (nor should they have been hanging around with those intending to commit a crime). I don't know what's going on in that Grand Jury investigation, I find the need for a Grand Jury unusual, but I'm sure we'll know what's handed out in the next couple of days.
My issue with Anonymous is that when it comes time to pay the piper and face the consequences, they always hide behind childish claims of "we didn't do anything wrong!" and "they did it first!" I don't care if Aaron Barr invaded your privacy or intended to reveal details of his discovery to the FBI, what he did was part of his job and he behaved as most companies do. So he sought to take advantage of the situation, so what? Again, Anons were participating in illegal activities. This is what called attention to them in the first place. The response against HBGary was still a childish action, the actions against the individual specifically were also childish.
I'd be substantially more concerned about how many people *other than the relatively benign* WikiLeaks had access to this data.EOD Tech said:If there had been no war in the first place then millions of Arabs would still be living in a state of constant terror of their own government. I gladly fought the Iraq war and continue to do so, and none of the reasons I went to war have turned out to be lies.
And there's no "theoretically" in danger--my old Iraqi platoon has about half of them living inside the wire on their FOB since their names were made public, and a couple have had to move their families out of the city in the middle of the night. You simply don't know the truth on the ground in Iraq, which is understandable but also means you have zero standing to analyze the situation there.
You know, there was a story that was posted on this website about a month back. It talked about how the FBI had gone to a judge with evidence supporting that 40 people had engaged in illegal activities and they wanted to search them. Those 40 warrants were acted on. They were obtained through legal channels in view of the public and if more people actually cared about the Anonymous case then there would be more reports about it. It's a little late for Anons to complain about "being harassed" by the FBI in the U.S when they chose to engage in an activity that was illegal. The FBI has done nothing outside their legal authority here. They got their warrants and they executed them.FluxCapacitor said:This sounds awfully like "When the government (or corporations working for them) does it, it can't be illegal". Wasn't that Nixon's defence? And didn't the public at large despise him for it?nightwolf667 said:On the subject of "FBI harrassments", as I've pointed out before, Anonymous knowingly committed criminal actions that crossed state lines. This brings them under the FBI's jurisdiction. If they want to protest, then they must accept that sometimes protests come with harsh penalties and that sometimes that's also the point. To say now "Oh no! The FBI is taking our stuff and breaking into our houses at 7 AM!" seems fairly naive, since that's the cost of doing business. If they did not want to be arrested then they should not have committed the crime in the first place (nor should they have been hanging around with those intending to commit a crime). I don't know what's going on in that Grand Jury investigation, I find the need for a Grand Jury unusual, but I'm sure we'll know what's handed out in the next couple of days.
My issue with Anonymous is that when it comes time to pay the piper and face the consequences, they always hide behind childish claims of "we didn't do anything wrong!" and "they did it first!" I don't care if Aaron Barr invaded your privacy or intended to reveal details of his discovery to the FBI, what he did was part of his job and he behaved as most companies do. So he sought to take advantage of the situation, so what? Again, Anons were participating in illegal activities. This is what called attention to them in the first place. The response against HBGary was still a childish action, the actions against the individual specifically were also childish.
Your founding fathers wanted checks and balances on power for exactly this reason - because they knew that governments couldn't be taken at their word, that they had to prove themselves worthy of the power we invest in them. Why can the FBI tap phones, or examine data traces, or for that matter burst into someone's home in the middle of the night, if 'you the people' can't trust them to be acting legally at all times?
I also know that if no one ever did anything stupid, the criminal court system would be alot emptier than it is.FluxCapacitor said:I think it's kinda cute that you think an account created 6 days ago and posted to by an Anon who rather knows what he's talking about is traceable to him personally. It's a clean forum account, being posted to from behind a safe proxy or some other effective means of masking the IP - you're an IT professional, you ought to know that.Starke said:scarewords
I'm not so sure. The FBI has issued warrants against anon members. There's at least one grand jury impaneled at this moment getting ready to pass down indictments. And we have our friend here claiming that the truth will set him free. Now, I'm not going to call people stupid (and neither should you), but he comes on a forum board to inarticulately defend Anonymous, and seems to genuinely believe his movement isn't about to be hit with a hammer from on high? That speaks to a certain degree of... situational obliviousness, that could use with a piece of advice like, "hey, be careful what you say in public, there's no expectation of privacy here."FluxCapacitor said:Despite your claims, this guy ain't stupid, he's a world away from the /b/tard stereotype.
When you typed "scare words" you missed the part where I said I am not a lawyer. I have, most likely, had more in depth classes on the subject than you have had, however.FluxCapacitor said:Also, you say that he didn't have to take a state bar - but what state? What country, even? This is almost like the republicans who have accused Assange of treason, despite him not being American. It's called jurisdiction, and I bet your state bar has none wherever this guy is.