As Above, So Below

Navigation

Mouse:
< and > buttons

Mouseover posts to use scroll wheel

Keyboard:
LEFT/RIGHT or J/K

UP/DOWN and HOME/END
activate when you click on a post

&#8216;Anonymous&#8217; Warns NATO: &#8216;This Is No Longer Your World&#8217;
 NATO has poked the bear of the internet (which responded by announcing that it&#8217;s actually a hydra).
Anthropomorphic confusion aside, a NATO security report about &#8220;Anonymous&#8221;—the mysterious &#8220;hacktivist&#8221; group responsible for attacks on MasterCard, Visa, PayPal, Amazon and, most recently, Sony—has led the underground group to respond by cautioning NATO, &#8220;This is no longer your world. It is our world - the people&#8217;s world.&#8221;
NATO&#8217;s report, issued last month, warned about the rising tide of politically-motivated cyberattacks, singling out Anonymous as the most sophisticated and high-profile of the known hacktivist groups:
&#8220;Today, the ad hoc international group of hackers and activists is said to have thousands of operatives and has no set rules or membership. It remains to be seen how much time Anonymous has for pursuing such paths. The longer these attacks persist the more likely countermeasures will be developed, implemented, the groups will be infiltrated and perpetrators persecuted,&#8221; the report read, also asking, &#8220;Can one invoke Article 5 of the Washington Treaty after a cyber attack? And what response mechanisms should the Alliance employ against the attacker? Should the retaliation be limited to cyber means only, or should conventional military strikes also be considered?&#8221;
In response, Anonymous issued a lengthy statement (Google-cached version; the site is having server issues currently) that says, in part:
&#8220;We do not wish to threaten anybody&#8217;s way of life. We do not wish to dictate anything to anybody. We do not wish to terrorize any nation.
We merely wish to remove power from vested interests and return it to the people - who, in a democracy, it should never have been taken from in the first place.
The government makes the law. This does not give them the right to break it. If the government was doing nothing underhand or illegal, there would be nothing &#8216;embarassing&#8217; [sic] about Wikileaks revelations, nor would there have been any scandal emanating from HBGary. The resulting scandals were not a result of Anonymous&#8217; or Wikileaks&#8217; revelations, they were the result of the CONTENT of those revelations. And responsibility for that content can be laid solely at the doorstep of policymakers who, like any corrupt entity, naively believed that they were above the law and that they would not be caught.
A lot of government and corporate comment has been dedicated to &#8216;how we can avoid a similar leak in the future&#8217;. Such advice ranges from better security, to lower levels of clearance, from harsher penalties for whistleblowers, to censorship of the press.
Our message is simple: Do not lie to the people and you won&#8217;t have to worry about your lies being exposed. Do not make corrupt deals and you won&#8217;t have to worry about your corruption being laid bare. Do not break the rules and you won&#8217;t have to worry about getting in trouble for it.&#8221;
It goes on to warn, &#8220;do not make the mistake of challenging Anonymous. Do not make the mistake of believing you can behead a headless snake. If you slice off one head of Hydra, ten more heads will grow in its place. If you cut down one Anon, ten more will join us purely out of anger at your trampling of dissent.&#8221;
Quite when Anonymous started modeling itself after fictional terrorist organizations is unclear, but the message is just the opposite: NATO is on warning. How they&#8217;ll respond to this—if they&#8217;ll respond—remains to be seen, but I doubt that I&#8217;m the only person hoping that any response will be far more measured than bringing up conventional military strikes again.
(via Techland)
&#8212;
It&#8217;s worth mentioning that the writer of this article made the assumption Anonymous was referring the Marvel comic group Hydra, but it was originally derived from the Greek mythological creature which can grow back heads that have been cut off. High-res

‘Anonymous’ Warns NATO: ‘This Is No Longer Your World’

 NATO has poked the bear of the internet (which responded by announcing that it’s actually a hydra).

Anthropomorphic confusion aside, a NATO security report about “Anonymous”—the mysterious “hacktivist” group responsible for attacks on MasterCard, Visa, PayPal, Amazon and, most recently, Sony—has led the underground group to respond by cautioning NATO, “This is no longer your world. It is our world - the people’s world.”

NATO’s report, issued last month, warned about the rising tide of politically-motivated cyberattacks, singling out Anonymous as the most sophisticated and high-profile of the known hacktivist groups:

“Today, the ad hoc international group of hackers and activists is said to have thousands of operatives and has no set rules or membership. It remains to be seen how much time Anonymous has for pursuing such paths. The longer these attacks persist the more likely countermeasures will be developed, implemented, the groups will be infiltrated and perpetrators persecuted,” the report read, also asking, “Can one invoke Article 5 of the Washington Treaty after a cyber attack? And what response mechanisms should the Alliance employ against the attacker? Should the retaliation be limited to cyber means only, or should conventional military strikes also be considered?”

In response, Anonymous issued a lengthy statement (Google-cached version; the site is having server issues currently) that says, in part:

“We do not wish to threaten anybody’s way of life. We do not wish to dictate anything to anybody. We do not wish to terrorize any nation.

We merely wish to remove power from vested interests and return it to the people - who, in a democracy, it should never have been taken from in the first place.

The government makes the law. This does not give them the right to break it. If the government was doing nothing underhand or illegal, there would be nothing ‘embarassing’ [sic] about Wikileaks revelations, nor would there have been any scandal emanating from HBGary. The resulting scandals were not a result of Anonymous’ or Wikileaks’ revelations, they were the result of the CONTENT of those revelations. And responsibility for that content can be laid solely at the doorstep of policymakers who, like any corrupt entity, naively believed that they were above the law and that they would not be caught.

A lot of government and corporate comment has been dedicated to ‘how we can avoid a similar leak in the future’. Such advice ranges from better security, to lower levels of clearance, from harsher penalties for whistleblowers, to censorship of the press.

Our message is simple: Do not lie to the people and you won’t have to worry about your lies being exposed. Do not make corrupt deals and you won’t have to worry about your corruption being laid bare. Do not break the rules and you won’t have to worry about getting in trouble for it.”

It goes on to warn, “do not make the mistake of challenging Anonymous. Do not make the mistake of believing you can behead a headless snake. If you slice off one head of Hydra, ten more heads will grow in its place. If you cut down one Anon, ten more will join us purely out of anger at your trampling of dissent.”

Quite when Anonymous started modeling itself after fictional terrorist organizations is unclear, but the message is just the opposite: NATO is on warning. How they’ll respond to this—if they’ll respond—remains to be seen, but I doubt that I’m the only person hoping that any response will be far more measured than bringing up conventional military strikes again.

(via Techland)

It’s worth mentioning that the writer of this article made the assumption Anonymous was referring the Marvel comic group Hydra, but it was originally derived from the Greek mythological creature which can grow back heads that have been cut off.

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus

Notes

  1. makhatmaghandi reblogged this from boisterouslyenthroned and added:
    I’m really not thrilled with Techland’s omission of certain content, but after having read their full page (...
  2. fofiriam reblogged this from pandorasprings
  3. cleanerlight reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine and added:
    wow
  4. itsanamergencykael911 reblogged this from lostinyourrevelry
  5. lostinyourrevelry reblogged this from loandbehold
  6. im-in-love-with-a-dream reblogged this from loandbehold
  7. foundorfollowed reblogged this from pandorasprings
  8. pandorasprings reblogged this from jadedhippy
  9. jadedhippy reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine and added:
    When did Anonymous go from a group who took down feminist blogs for lulz to…THIS? I’m so confused.
  10. damionlaing reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  11. dreammerchant reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine and added:
    Cloud computing…not your best bet just yet.
  12. littlegrenades reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine
  13. thank-you-fire reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  14. nicothenick reblogged this from thatqueeryoungbuck
  15. vesivett reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine
  16. divorcedreality reblogged this from amodernmanifesto
  17. amodernmanifesto reblogged this from guerrillamamamedicine
  18. guerrillamamamedicine reblogged this from so-treu
  19. wilderdude reblogged this from eclecticchaos1
  20. blaqueviolet reblogged this from digitalwasteland
  21. digitalwasteland reblogged this from deanaferal and added:
    Go Anonymous! It’s like the Laughing Man.
  22. theunconventionalman reblogged this from jdgentleman
  23. jdgentleman reblogged this from metaconscious
  24. kat-attack-attack reblogged this from blehmeng
  25. monkeyinajar reblogged this from theinternetaccordingtoadrian