Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Unmasking the "Anonymous" Protest Group

UPDATE, 4:00pm, 9/18/08: Please see the my updated post on the Palin e-mail hacking case, "Epic Fail? Hackers Sought Damaging Evidence on Palin."

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The organization originally alleged as hacking into Sarah Palin's personal e-mail account, known as "Anonymous," has been identified as a "left wing group" by Caleb Howe (the group was videotaped staging some unusual protests at this year's Republican National Convention).

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There's some question, however, as to the ideological identification of "Anonymous" as a leftist protest organization.

As one commenter at my previous post indicated:


I think calling Anonymous a group of "liberals" is a stretch. More like bored 14 year olds.
Further, according to information provided by
Michelle Malkin:

Anonymous is not exactly a group. It is people using the umbrella of a web discussion board for cover to be as offensive, funny, strange, or whatever as they want.
The Anonymous hackers are associated with the /b/ message board groups of 4chan.org, an image-posting site modeled after a similar webpage in Japan. The New York Times recently published a feature story on Anonymous-style hackers, with this description:


Measured in terms of depravity, insularity and traffic-driven turnover, the culture of /b/ has little precedent. /b/ reads like the inside of a high-school bathroom stall, or an obscene telephone party line, or a blog with no posts and all comments filled with slang that you are too old to understand.
But the original agenda of Anonymous hackers in the Palin case has been to protest the tax-exempt status of the Church of Scientology, and they've recently gone public with a series wider protests against organized religion:


Hackers who launched a massive online attack against the Church of Scientology are now turning to real-world protests to draw attention to what they call a "vast moneymaking scheme under the guise of 'religion."'

The loosely organized group of hackers, who meet up and coordinate attacks through Internet Relay Chat channels, have set Feb. 10 for a wave of protests at Scientology locations worldwide.

In anonymous postings on the group's Web site, organizers said they are trying to raise awareness about the threats to free speech posed by the church's lawyers, who, the group claims, aggressively try to silence critics by threatening lawsuits. The church said its lawyers follow standard procedures for protecting copyrighted materials.
As noted, in February, the group staged protests in Boston:


A group of more than 50 masked protesters gathered yesterday outside of the Church of Scientology of Boston headquarters on Beacon Street to demonstrate against the policies of the church. Protesters said the event was part of a worldwide demonstration against the church by Anonymous, an informal Internet-based group.

Donning Guy Fawkes masks modeled after those worn in the 2005 film "V for Vendetta," or face coverings improvised with T-shirts or scarves, participants began to assemble in front of the building at the corner of Beacon and Hereford streets around 11 a.m.

The story of Fawkes, an Englishman sentenced to death for attempting to blow up the House of Lords with kegs of gunpowder in 1605, was revived in the fictional "V for Vendetta," in which a crowd of people wear identical masks to challenge the government.
The Guy Fawkes paraphernalia is important in identifying the ideological orientation of Anonymous.

As fans of
the movie know, "V" is a revolutionary anarchist who dresses with a Guy Fawkes mask. The film is explicitly anti-fascist and anti-totalitarian, featuring allusions to the "warmongering" policies of the United States government (read the Bush administration).

Anarchism itself is a radical ideology favoring the total elimination of the state and the eradication of private property (a tenet anarchists share with communists). The wearing of Guy Fawkes masks by Anonymous protesters signifies a complete identification of the state as the ultimate threat to human freedom, which is combined with a revolutionary agenda toward the destruction of state institutions and the establishment of a utopian society of universal liberty and human equality.

Further, Anonymous, in its anti-Scientology program - expanded this year to include all church organizations accused of forming a "vast moneymaking scheme" - can be identified ideologically as representing radical left-wing anti-clericalism.

Anti-clericalism is an extreme left revolutionary ideology that seeks to overthrow the iron alliance of church and state in all aspects of the political and public in state-society relations. Revolutionary anti-clericalism emerged particulary during the European Enlightenment of the 16th century, and it saw
the full actualization of its violent ideological program against the Catholic Church during the Jacobin stage of the French Revolution of 1792.

According to
the latest Malkin report, a lone hacker is claimed to have breached Sarah Palin's personal e-mail accounts. However, at present, the identification of the attacker is unsubstantiated. As Wizbang notes:


Everyday I am learning that there doesn't seem to be a rock bottom for the scum who support Obama. Today we learned that a left wing nut hacked into Sarah Palin's private - PRIVATE - email account and splashed the contents all over the internet. Gawker is a website without any scruples and is promoting Palin's private information even though it was illegally obtained.
Even even if it turns out that the Anonymous hacker (who ILLEGALLY breached Governor Palin's proviate e-mail files) is a solo, non-ideological operator, the response on the establishment political left and the netroots blogosphere has been absolutely disgusting, and is in essence a total endorsement of the violation of the Palin family's dignity and privacy.

See, for example, Lindsay Beyerstein, at
the nihilist Firedoglake:


The contents of the inbox confirm that Palin was using her private account for government business. We already knew that Palin's advisers urged her to use private accounts, a la RNC email accounts, in order to circumvent FOIA requests and skirt subpoenas.
Beyerstein apparently has no problem with the hacker's reprehensible actions, which are subject to five years in federal penetentiary upon trial and conviction.

But, of course, that's typical of those on the political left. As
Victor Davis Hanson noted yesterday, the current attacks on Sarah Palin and the GOP ticket have "no parallel in modern election history."

The hacking of Sarah Palin's personal e-mail files is so far the most diabolical attack on the GOP vice-presidential nominee to date. Even if we find that a lone, totally unhinged Internet "lulz" geek got lucky in breaching Governor Palin's personal data, the failure of the left-wing political establishment to completely and unequivocally repudiate this most vile "dirty trick" of campaign 2008 reveals the total, unremitting project of ideological demonization among political actors of the contemporary left-wing Democratic establishment.


In sum, there's nothing, absolutely nothing, that's beneath the radical left-Democrat Party alliance in its sickening, immorally grotesque grab for power this year.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I just wanted to help you out on the Guy Fawkes masks worn by the teens in Anonymous - it's not a reference to the movie and comic book, "V," but rather something far more simple:
In 2006, on 4chan /b/, there was a simple joke based on a stick figure character named Epic Fail Guy, or EFG. He wore a Guy Fawkes mask, and signifies failure in the /b/ community. Failure for what, I don't know - laughs?

From what my son tells me, /b/ ridiculous, and takes nothing seriously.

What I'm getting at is this: 4chan is not left wing; if you looked at the boards, you would see racist remarks, debate on politics that leads to mud throwing on the current administration, and cooking recipes.

Anonymous said...

Phillip A., you should definitely tell your son if he is in the group to get out. Anonymous masks itself as a group that's fighting for a good cause, when in reality it's just using that as a mask to it's real activities, which include hacking people they don't like, attacking people, posting their personal information on their own wiki site, and at the very very worst, potentially causing several teen suicides due to cyber-bullying.

You may think I'm joking, but trust me, this group is nothing more than a bunch of hacking hoodlums with too much time on their hands.

Anonymous said...

Here's a site they use to post their attacks and personal information of others illegally. Site information:

Domain ID:D105616787-LROR
Domain Name:ENCYCLOPEDIADRAMATICA.ORG
Created On:22-Jan-2005 19:45:57 UTC
Last Updated On:17-Jan-2009 15:39:01 UTC
Expiration Date:22-Jan-2010 19:45:57 UTC
Sponsoring Registrar:GoDaddy.com, Inc. (R91-LROR)
Status:CLIENT DELETE PROHIBITED
Status:CLIENT RENEW PROHIBITED
Status:CLIENT TRANSFER PROHIBITED
Status:CLIENT UPDATE PROHIBITED
Registrant ID:GODA-09766655
Registrant Name:andrew thornton
Registrant Street1:833 West Buena Ave
Registrant Street2:#1207
Registrant Street3:
Registrant City:Chicago
Registrant State/Province:Illinois
Registrant Postal Code:60613
Registrant Country:US
Registrant Phone:+1.7022548168
Registrant Phone Ext.:
Registrant FAX:
Registrant FAX Ext.:
Registrant Email:
Admin ID:GODA-29766655
Admin Name:andrew thornton
Admin Street1:833 West Buena Ave
Admin Street2:#1207
Admin Street3:
Admin City:Chicago
Admin State/Province:Illinois
Admin Postal Code:60613
Admin Country:US
Admin Phone:+1.7022548168
Admin Phone Ext.:
Admin FAX:
Admin FAX Ext.:
Admin Email:
Tech ID:GODA-19766655
Tech Name:andrew thornton
Tech Street1:833 West Buena Ave
Tech Street2:#1207
Tech Street3:
Tech City:Chicago
Tech State/Province:Illinois
Tech Postal Code:60613
Tech Country:US
Tech Phone:+1.7022548168
Tech Phone Ext.:
Tech FAX:
Tech FAX Ext.:
Tech Email:
Name Server:NS1.DREAMHOST.COM
Name Server:NS2.DREAMHOST.COM
Name Server:NS3.DREAMHOST.COM
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:
Name Server:

Anonymous said...

Anonymous is anonymous and therefore it is hard to link any such attacks to Anonymous even if the collective claims to have committed the attacks. There's also MANY false rumors being spread about Anonymous by the cult of scientology (as they would be going against KSW if they didn't keep to L Ron Hubbard's "Fair Game" policy). Anonymous and 4chan, while related, are not the exact same anymore. Anonymous may be a bit juvenile, but they are certainly not dangerous. Yes they have hacked in the past, but in some of those cases the people hacked have gone to jail. One I can think of right off the top of my head is when on Anon saw a video of a kid torturing a helpless cat and got together with some other Anons and hacked, through dubious yet legal means, into his account, got his personal information, and sent it in to the police along with a copy of the video. There are also numerous reports of people finally having the courage to leave the cult of scientology because of Anonymous. We're not the devils people like to see in our masks. We are your sisters, your brothers, your mothers, your fathers. We are your lawyer, your friends. Your mailman, your great aunt. We are you. We are Anonymous. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.