Author Topic: The Internet War Begins  (Read 7240 times)

Offline Enemy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #120 on: February 10, 2012, 09:32:57 AM »
My password is password.

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Offline Enemy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #121 on: February 28, 2012, 10:44:58 AM »
Just cos all hackers are so awful and bad and things I thought I'd post this pertinent article

Quote
Google offers $1 million reward to hackers who exploit Chrome
By Dan Goodin | Published about 8 hours agoLast updated about 4 hours ago
Google has pledged cash prizes totaling $1 million to people who successfully hack its Chrome browser at next week's CanSecWest security conference.

Google will reward winning contestants with prizes of $60,000, $40,000, and $20,000 depending on the severity of the exploits they demonstrate on Windows 7 machines running the browser. Members of the company's security team announced the Pwnium contest on their blog on Monday. There is no splitting of winnings, and prizes will be awarded on a first-come-first-served basis until the $1 million threshold is reached.

Now in its sixth year, the Pwn2Own contest at the same CanSecWest conference awards valuable prizes to those who remotely commandeer computers by exploiting vulnerabilities in fully patched browsers and other Internet software. At last year's competition, Internet Explorer and Safari were both toppled but no one even attempted an exploit against Chrome (despite Google offering an additional $20,000 beyond the $15,000 provided by contest organizer Tipping Point).

Chrome is currently the only browser eligible for Pwn2Own never to be brought down. One reason repeatedly cited by contestants for its lack of attention is the difficulty of bypassing Google's security sandbox.

"While we’re proud of Chrome’s leading track record in past competitions, the fact is that not receiving exploits means that it’s harder to learn and improve," wrote Chris Evans and Justin Schuh, members of the Google Chrome security team. "To maximize our chances of receiving exploits this year, we’ve upped the ante. We will directly sponsor up to $1 million worth of rewards."

In the same blog post, the researchers said Google was withdrawing as a sponsor of the Pwn2Own contest after discovering rule changes allowing hackers to collect prizes without always revealing the full details of the vulnerabilities to browser makers.

"Specifically, they do not have to reveal the sandbox escape component of their exploit," a Google spokeswoman wrote in an email to Ars. "Sandbox escapes are very dangerous bugs so it is not in the best interests of user safety to have these kept secret. The whitehat community needs to fix them and study them. Our ultimate goal here is to make the web safer."

Ars will have full coverage of Pwn2Own, which commences on Wednesday, March 7.


http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2012/02/google-pledges-1-million-in-cash-to-hackers-who-exploit-chrome.ars


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Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #122 on: February 29, 2012, 11:00:07 AM »
From last year but anyway....

‘Anonymous’ Forces 40+ Child Pornography Sites Offline
By Graeme McMillan | @graemem | October 24, 2011

Anonymous has turned its attentions from corporations to pedophiles with the news that the hacktivist group has taken down multiple child pornography sites, including one of the largest known, with account details of its 1589 users being posted online as evidence.

The incident was just part of something Anonymous is calling “Operation Darknet,” a move by the group to eliminate child pornography on the Tor network. Tor, which was originally developed as a way of protecting government communications by the U.S. Navy, now describes itself as “a network of virtual tunnels that allows people and groups to improve their privacy and security on the Internet.” But the privacy and anonymity it offers has been abused by child pornographers, something that Anonymous aims to correct with its new campaign.

In its statement about the takedown, Anonymous says that the group “identified [hosting service] Freedom Hosting as the host of the largest collection of child pornography on the internet,” adding “By taking down Freedom Hosting, we are eliminating 40+ child pornography websites, among these is Lolita City, one of the largest child pornography websites to date containing more than 100GB of child pornography. We will continue to not only crash Freedom Hosting’s server, but any other server we find to contain, promote, or support child pornography.”

The group’s statement ends with the following demands:

“Remove all child pornography content from your servers. Refuse to provide hosting services to any website dealing with child pornography. This statement is not just aimed at Freedom Hosting, but everyone on the internet. It does not matter who you are, if we find you to be hosting, promoting, or supporting child pornography, you will become a target.”

source

Offline Enemy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #123 on: February 29, 2012, 11:09:42 AM »
More proof 'hackers' are immoral human beings. Thanks corkboy.
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Offline Mother.F

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #124 on: March 7, 2012, 09:26:19 PM »
The major problem I see with your argument in opposition of Anonymous is you think that they scare 'the people'. They don't. They scare the corporations and those in power. I'm certainly not 'scared' that Anonymous will take down my personal website or that my bank account will magically empty. I'm not part of the establishment (which is a minority of people, the vast majority of people are definitely not those in power or part of the establishment). Anonymous represents a backlash at the establishment, by the people. Why should that 'scare' your everyday man. People are not that stupid.

I don't know if you're being deliberately obtuse, but if you think that Middle America isn't frightened of Nasty Internet Terrorists, then you are at the very least naive.


I'm well aware what it's 'about' and I prefer not to get my information about the world from Youtube videos. My point is that fighting the first battle over Megaupload is idiotic. Most people couldn't give a fuck about Megaupload and didn't even know what it is. They do know that the FBI represents the front line in the defence against criminality and terror (you may not agree but that's the way things are). They will learn over the next few days that Megaupload was a place where people rip-off and steal stuff that most people pay for.

If I was a PR guru looking for something to deflect attention away from the blackout on the 18th, and for an opportunity to portray the opponents of SOPA as criminals, terrorists and people with no regard for the rule of law, then these DOS attacks would be like birthdays, Christmas and Easter all rolled up into one.

This I agree with.

It seems to me that it's nearly impossible to play both the Anarchist game and the PR game at the same time (especially now, in our lovely post 9/11 world), and that's where they come across as immature. Anyone who would be sympathetic to their actions is already part of the choir, and is probably well versed about the whole situation. The wider world, that might not be as knowledgeable on the topic (but who will be affected just as much) won't be convinced that internet regulation (even if draconian and cynical) is wrong because a secret group targets a Government website. To most people an action like that simply proves that there *are* dangerous elements at loose online, ditto for the individuals who will make the decision as to whether this legislation goes through or not. Add in the mainstream news programs that only spin hacking as shady lawbreaking, (no matter how many Misunderstood Geek stories appear in tech magazines), and any Hack Attack ends up playing into their hands.

Anyway, I'm happy to hear that this is stalled. And not just because I'm an avid lover of illegal file sharing. I agree with the motives of Anonymous, and I support most grass-roots anarchy, but I think a little tact would go a long way with regards to SOPA/PIPA.

And apropos of nothing much, but when will people drop that fucking Fawkes/Vendetta face? Makes them look like twats.
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Offline Alan_X

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #125 on: March 7, 2012, 10:50:44 PM »
Now I'm confused - so who was supporting/pushing SOPA? Corporations? With a laissez-faire attitude?

What's confusing? The people who backed SOPA were those who want to protect copyright - they aren't the people I referred to in my post.
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Offline Alan_X

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #126 on: March 7, 2012, 11:07:53 PM »
Ha ha, bit of a rant there.  I'm no spring chicken either.  Wales is excellent by the way, love the place, especially snowdonia.

Anyway, it's prob your view that big corporations run the net.  Personally I disagree.   If they did, then surely stopping a bunch of people from closing down key sites would have been a piece of piss.  The fact they couldn't should actually provide hope of some sorts that not all is lost to 'big business'.  Although that's prob wishfull thinking.

Not sure what you mean. It's not my view. Who maintains the backbone and the DNS servers? At some point we all connect through fibre optic cables, phone lines or satellites that are owned and maintained by big businesses.
Sid Lowe (@sidlowe)
09/03/2011 08:04
Give a man a mask and he will tell the truth, Give a man a user name and he will act like a total twat.
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Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #127 on: March 8, 2012, 05:22:52 PM »
Anonymous takes down Vatican website

The hacking group Anonymous has taken down the Vatican website, saying it was targeting the "corrupt" Catholic Church.

The cyber attack came a day after a high-profile bust of the group's alleged leaders.

"Anonymous decided today to besiege your site in response to the doctrine, to the liturgies, to the absurd and anachronistic concepts that your for-profit organisation spreads around the world," the hackers said in a statement.

"This attack is not against the Christian religion or the faithful around the world but against the corrupt Roman Apostolic Church," said the group in a statement posted on the Italian-language version of the Anonymous website.

Aside from taking down www.vatican.va, the hacking group also claimed responsibility for attacking several Vatican-related sites including that of its newspaper.

Anonymous tried and failed to attack the Vatican website last year.

Five alleged computer hackers in Britain, Ireland and the US were charged yesterday after a leader of the group became an FBI informant.

The charges against alleged members of Anonymous, Lulz Security and other international hacking groups were given in indictments at the US District Court for the Southern District of New York.

The indictments cover some of the most notorious hacking incidents of the past several years, including those against Sony Pictures Entertainment, private intelligence firm Stratfor and computer security firm HBGary.

source

Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #128 on: March 16, 2012, 10:24:26 AM »
Anonymous takes down ‘God Hates Fags’ church websites
by Staff Writer, PinkNews.co.uk
25 February 2011


Anonymous, the online activist movement, has taken down the website of the Westboro Baptist Church, home of the ‘God Hates Fags’ campaign group that pickets the funerals of US soldiers whose death the group blames on an acceptance of homosexuality by the USA.

It is alleged that the church made up previous threats to crash their websites by the group.

Anonymous has taken down the main website of the church together with their other websites, including the charmingly named PriestsRapeBoys.com as well as GodHatesAmerica.com, GodHatesTheWorld.com, JewsKilledJesus.com and AmericaIsDoomed.com.

The one page of the website that does resolve contains a letter from the Anonymous group that says the church’s website has been “seized by Anonymous under section #14 of the rules of the Internet.”

The church had begun a hate campaign against Anonymous and claimed that it was under threat, something that Anonymous said was a lie and a publicity stunt.

In their posting announcing the hack, Anonymous said: “Your continued biting of the Anonymous hand, however, has earned you a swift and emotionless bitchslap, in the form of this very message. Despite having had the capability to hack your sites previously, we chose not to and instead responded maturely to your threats, but you have not respected this.

“For this unremitting display of overzealousness, we award you no points. Take this defacement as a simple
warning: go away. The world (including Anonymous) disagrees with your hateful messages, but you have the right to voice them. This does not mean you can jump onto Anonymous for attention.”

The message ends with the statement: “God hates fags: assumption. Anonymous hates leeches: fact.”

source

Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #129 on: April 4, 2012, 12:55:56 PM »
Anonymous China: Hundreds of Beijing's Government Websites Defaced

The Anonymous hacking collective has landed in China, home of some of the most tightly controlled internet access in the world, and defaced hundreds of government websites in what appears to be a massive online operation against Beijing.

Anonymous listed its intended institutional targets on Pastebin and has now attacked them.

Anonymous Kroll claimed that hundreds of websites had been defaced or taken offline by the collective. "#China: Several hundred websites #defacedand 4659 Vhosts #hacked by #Anonymous.cdcbd.gov.cn & bbdj.gov.cn" read the tweet.

The defaced homepages carry a statement against the Chinese government along with the traditional Anonymous banner and the generational anthem Baba O'Riley by The Who played in background.

"All these years, the Chinese communist government has subjected its people to unfair laws and unhealthy processes," reads the statement. "Dear Chinese government, you are not infallible, today websites are hacked, tomorrow it will be your vile regime that will fall."

It contains also a message directed at the Chinese people: "Each of you suffers from the tyranny of that regime which knows nothing about you," reads the message. "We are with you. [...]The silence of all other countries highlights the lack of democracy and justice in China. It's unbearable."

The defacements also provide a link with tips on how to bypass state censorship.

The latest development came after China's state media announced an extensive crackdown on dozens of websites, penalising two popular social media sites and detaining six people for spreading rumours of a coup d'état.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/ReMmXbzOqmM" target="_blank" class="new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/ReMmXbzOqmM</a>

source





Offline danwms

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #130 on: April 25, 2012, 12:36:06 PM »
Its mental what they are doing.


Offline Mouth

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #131 on: April 25, 2012, 11:53:54 PM »
Oh thats wise, its not like the chinese arent involved in a huge cyber war already. They are going to wake up under an tank, but no one will ever know because they are anon.
Paranoia is a very comforting state of mind. If you think they're out to get you, it means you think you matter.

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Offline Das Liverpool

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #132 on: April 26, 2012, 12:31:20 AM »
Its mental what they are doing.

It is on the scale they're doing it but actually hacking into a website and temporarily changing it's content is not brain surgery but it does create a huge spectacle.

Offline Trada

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #133 on: May 8, 2012, 09:12:18 AM »
More Than 55,000 Twitter Account Usernames & Passwords Are Hacked And Leaked

Today, some anonymous hackers leaked more than 55,000 hacked twitter accounts username and password through Pastebin. It was very shocking to see such a massive number of Twitter accounts hacked easily besides the celebrity account hacks that happens time to time and it’s just yesterday I reported that, Mark Ruffalo, who played The Hulk in the blockbuster movie “Avangers”, Twitter account Hacked.

“The micro blogging platform is aware of this hack and was taking necessary actions to save those people’s account from malicious activity”, I’m told by a source, who is supposed to be a Twitter insider.

It was huge, I mean 55,000+ accounts has been hacked and it wasn’t possible to share such a huge pile of usernames and passwords in a single paste, so it took hackers 5 Pastebin pastes/pages to leak those data. This hack is just an alert to other millions of Twitter users that you could be hacked anytime and So, it’s important to use a strong password to keep your account safe.

I cannot believe that the Twitter isn’t taking any necessary steps to keep its users safe even after encountering a huge number of hacks in the past including celebrities from Lady Gaga to Mark Ruffalo. All they need to do is to add a password strength checker during signup and while changing passwords and guide the users to create a strong password. That could save a lot of users frustration and of course will keep the hackers frustrated.

To check if your account is hacked, go through this five Pastebin pages ( page 1 | page 2 | page 3 | page 4 | page 5 ) and to find your account easily just by using the find feature in your browser (CTRL+F) and type your email id. Wait, before that I recommend you to change your password (here is a simple guide to create a strong password) to make sure you are safe no matter your account is hacked. I also recommend you to change your passwords often as possible and don’t reuse a single passwords to multiple accounts. As yourself seen here in this hack that the hacker have both the victim email and password, so it’s a piece of cake for him to dig up his Facebook and other accounts and try login with his twitter password. So, stop reusing passwords and try to find a better password manager instead.

http://paintsthefuture.com/more-than-55000-twitter-accounts-usernames-passwords-are-hacked-and-leaked/
http://twitter.com/redtrada

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Offline GBF

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #134 on: May 8, 2012, 10:23:43 AM »
you dont want to mess with Hulk
01111001 01101111 01110101 00100111 01101100 01101100 00100000 01101110 01100101 01110110 01100101 01110010 00100000 01110111 01100001 01101100 01101011 00100000 01100001 01101100 01101111 01101110 01100101

Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #135 on: June 8, 2012, 12:59:17 PM »
Anonymous hacks Aryan Front white supremacists.

*LINK REMOVED*


HACKED BY ANONYMOUS #OpBlitzkrieg
HACKED BY ANONYMOUS . FUCK OFF NAZI SCUM.

YOU SHOULD HAVE

EXPECTED US
« Last Edit: June 8, 2012, 02:05:58 PM by MichaelA »

Offline MichaelA

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #136 on: June 8, 2012, 02:06:58 PM »
Deleted the URL, don't want them to have any hits from here. If anyone is arsed to look they can put it in their own browser history and google it. :wave
Strip Bettison of his knighthood - http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/47770

Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #137 on: June 11, 2012, 11:10:09 AM »
And now Scientology Austria, an email dump this time.

http://pastebin.com/ByA0DV5R

Offline The Gulleysucker

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #138 on: June 11, 2012, 11:17:10 AM »

They look a bit hefty. Before I try and download any to have a gander, do you know if they are in German?
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.  - Sagan
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
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Offline corkboy

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #139 on: June 11, 2012, 11:21:55 AM »
They look a bit hefty. Before I try and download any to have a gander, do you know if they are in German?

No idea, sorry.

Offline The Gulleysucker

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #140 on: June 11, 2012, 11:25:23 AM »
No idea, sorry.
I'll try one and let you know.
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Offline oojason

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #141 on: June 29, 2012, 09:13:30 PM »
Probably mentioned elsewhere, though my hayfever is kicking in and my eyes are streaming, so apologies if it's a repeat...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/jun/29/richard-odwyer-160000


A petition launched by Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales to halt the extradition to the US of Sheffield Hallam University student Richard O'Dwyer has garnered 160,000 signatures in less than five days.

O'Dwyer, 24, faces up to 10 years in US prison for alleged copyright offences relating to TVShack.net, a website that provided links to places where users could watch TV shows and films online.

Wales's petition, which calls on the home secretary, Theresa May, to revoke her permission to extradite O'Dwyer, has picked up more than 75,000 signatures in the last 24 hours alone after being circulated among US supporters of Change.org.

The petition is now the fastest-growing Change.org petition in the UK. In the Guardian article that launched the campaign, Wales said the extradition represented a battle between the film industry and general public.

"Given the thin case against him, it is an outrage that he is being extradited to the US to face felony charges for something that he is not being prosecuted for here," Wales said. "No US citizen has ever been brought to the UK for alleged criminal activity that took place on US soil."

O'Dwyer's extradition has been opposed by figures from all three political parties, including members of the culture, media and sports select committee, Louise Mensch and Tom Watson, the Liberal Democrat president, Tim Farron, and the chair of the home affairs committee, Keith Vaz.

Graham Linehan, the writer of sitcoms The IT Crowd, Black Books and Father Ted, also signed the petition. He said: "It just seems to me that people like Richard are being punished for being able to navigate the modern world. The internet has changed everything. They're doing what comes naturally in these new uncharted waters and suddenly they're getting their collars felt by people who still have Hotmail addresses.

"The internet means that commerce and communication and culture and morality is changing, and changing so fast that we struggle to keep up."

Richard's mother, Julia O'Dwyer, who has campaigned for her son online and at protests for much of the last year, has welcomed the efforts to date and called on the Home Office to take note. She said: "I'm blown away by the response to Jimmy's petition. It's been a tough year campaigning for my son, but this outpouring of support from around the world has really made politicians sit up and take note of Richard's case. Now it's time for Theresa May to do the right thing by Richard."

In a statement issued earlier this week, the Home Office stood by its decision to give permission to extradite O'Dwyer.

"Richard O'Dwyer is wanted in the US for offences related to copyright infringement," it said. "The UK courts found there were no statutory bars to his surrender under the Extradition Act 2003 and, on 9 March, the home secretary, having carefully considered all relevant matters, signed an order for his extradition to the US.

"Mr O'Dwyer has appealed against the decision of the district judge and an appeal hearing will be held in due course."



http://www.change.org/petitions/ukhomeoffice-stop-the-extradition-of-richard-o-dwyer-to-the-usa-saverichard#share


Richard O'Dwyer is a 24 year old British student at Sheffield Hallam University in the UK. He is facing extradition to the USA and up to ten years in prison, for creating a website – TVShack.net – which linked (similar to a search-engine) to places to watch TV and movies online.

O'Dwyer is not a US citizen, he's lived in the UK all his life, his site was not hosted there, and most of his users were not from the US. America is trying to prosecute a UK citizen for an alleged crime which took place on UK soil.

The internet as a whole must not tolerate censorship in response to mere allegations of copyright infringement. As citizens we must stand up for our rights online.

When operating his site, Richard O'Dwyer always did his best to play by the rules: on the few occasions he received requests to remove content from copyright holders, he complied. His site hosted links, not copyrighted content, and these were submitted by users.

Copyright is an important institution, serving a beneficial moral and economic purpose. But that does not mean that copyright can or should be unlimited. It does not mean that we should abandon time-honoured moral and legal principles to allow endless encroachments on our civil liberties in the interests of the moguls of Hollywood.

Richard O'Dwyer is the human face of the battle between the content industry and the interests of the general public. Earlier this year, in the fight against the anti-copyright bills SOPA and PIPA, the public won its first big victory. This could be our second.

This is why I am petitioning the UK's Home Secretary Theresa May to stop the extradition of Richard O'Dwyer. I hope you will join me.

- Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder



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Offline RojoLeón

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #142 on: July 9, 2012, 04:27:27 PM »
http://www.buzzfeed.com/rosiegray/the-pauls-new-crusade-internet-freedom

The Pauls' New Crusade: “Internet Freedom”

Defending the Internet — and the corporations that invest in it — from government regulation is the new “End the Fed,” Paul advisors tell BuzzFeed exclusively. A new Paul manifesto: “This is our revolution.”   :lmao

Ron and Rand Paul are set today to shift the central focus of their family's long libertarian crusade to a new cause: Internet Freedom.

Kentucky senator Rand and his father Ron Paul, who has not yet formally conceded the Republican presidential nomination, will throw their weight behind a new online manifesto set to be released today by the Paul-founded Campaign for Liberty. The new push, Paul aides say, will in some ways displace what has been their movement's long-running top priority, shutting down the Federal Reserve Bank. The move is an attempt to stake a libertarian claim to a central public issue of the next decade, and to move from the esoteric terrain of high finance to the everyday world of cable modems and Facebook.

The manifesto, obtained yesterday by BuzzFeed, is titled "The Technology Revolution" and lays out an argument — in doomsday tones —for keeping the government entirely out of regulating anything online, and for leaving the private sector to shape the new online space.

"The revolution is occurring around the world," it reads. "It is occurring in the private sector, not the public sector. It is occurring despite wrongheaded attempts by governments to micromanage markets through disastrous industrial policy. And it is driven by the Internet, the single greatest catalyst in history for individual liberty and free markets."

The manifesto quotes Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises and attacks not just the federal government, but also progressive groups that have called for similar measures to keep the Internet largely unregulated: "Today, the road to tyranny is being paved by a collectivist-Industrial complex -- a dangerous brew of wealthy, international NGO's, progressive do-gooders, corporate cronies and sympathetic political elites."  :lmao Fucking clowns

The manifesto lays out five specific battles with government regulation and with liberals who state their goal of online liberty in similar terms, but who view corporate encroachment as a more immediate risk. The Paul manifesto seeks to rein in anti-trust actions against companies in new industries; to stop attempts to impose "Net Neutrality" rules on broadband providers; to prevent government control of online infrastructure; to broaden private control of the wireless spectrum, and shore up "private property rights on the Internet."

The Pauls also take a stand for the growing industry known (and widely criticized) as "big data."

They deride the notion that "private sector data collection practices must be scrutinized and tightly regulated inthe name of 'protecting consumers,' at the same time as government’s warrantless surveillance and collection of private citizens’ Internet data has dramatically increased."

Paul's so-called "Audit the Fed" bill will soon be put to a vote in the House of Representatives, and the new campaign will kick off shortly thereafter.

"We are going to bring to this project the same kind of intensity, resources and energy we brought to the Fed Audit," said one Paul adviser.

The document is intended to serve as a conservative counterpoint to a Declaration of Internet Freedom released this week and hosted by the group FreePress, though the two share some goals. The earlier document, which sets out broad principles but does not take sides on divisive issues like Net Neutrality, was signed by groups including the American Civil Liberties Union as well as Internet companies such as Mozilla.

The language of the document tries to reclaim the issue of Internet freedom from the strange bedfellows that have staked a claim to it: progressives and tech companies on one hand, and more traditional conservative politicians like California Rep. Darrell Issa.

"Internet collectivists are clever," the manifesto says, accusing their foes of series of Orwellian linguistic twists. "They are masters at hijacking the language of freedom and liberty to disingenuously pushfor more centralized control. 'Openness' means government control of privately owned infrastructure.'Net neutrality' means government acting as arbiter and enforcer of what it deems tobe 'neutral'."

"This is our revolution -- government needs to get out of the way," the manifesto concludes.

This is also a new stage for what supporters refer to as the Ron Paul Revolution, and a way to make sure that Ron Paul's followers stay on board with the movement after the congressman's retirement from the House of Representatives. Paul supporters are already Internet-savvy, frequently launching digital campaigns of their own, and skew young. And the new cause gives his son Rand an easier way to connect with them, given that his relationship with his father's supporters has often been fraught.

Internet freedom, Paul insiders say, is going to be Rand's end-the-Fed.

Making Rand Paul the standard-bearer of Internet freedom "is one of the goals," said a Republican strategist close to the campaign.

"As you may have noted he has been speaking out about Internet Freedom a fair amount including in his endorsement of Romney on Hannity," the strategist said in an email. "Freedom online and freedom and liberty offline are seamlessly linked and Senator Paul gets that."

A Paul adviser told BuzzFeed that the full Campaign for Liberty Internet project will start about two weeks after the Fed bill vote.

This is the freeloading communist hippy version that they are against.

http://act.freepress.net/sign/internetdeclaration?source=website_dif_home

Declaration of Internet Freedom

Tired of fighting bad bills like SOPA, PIPA and CISPA? Want to stand up against those who are trying to control what we do and say online? Let's do something different. Add your name below and join the global movement for Internet freedom

We stand for a free and open Internet.

We support transparent and participatory processes for making Internet policy and the establishment of five basic principles:

Expression: Don't censor the Internet.

Access: Promote universal access to fast and affordable networks.

Openness: Keep the Internet an open network where everyone is free to connect, communicate, write, read, watch, speak, listen, learn, create and innovate.

Innovation: Protect the freedom to innovate and create without permission. Don’t block new technologies, and don’t punish innovators for their users' actions.

Privacy: Protect privacy and defend everyone’s ability to control how their data and devices are used.

We arranged civilization in which most crucial elements profoundly depend on science and technology We also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology This is a recipe for disaster We might get away with it for a while but sooner or later this combustible mix of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces CSgn

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Re: The Internet War Begins
« Reply #143 on: July 10, 2012, 10:05:11 AM »
Anonymous has a new target: Pedophiles

Summary: Anonymous has a new mission: Operation PedoChat. Yes, that's right. The hacktivist group is once again targeting pedophiles; its crosshairs are currently aimed at some 100 websites.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/T2qhObxvR5g" target="_blank" class="new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/T2qhObxvR5g</a>

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