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A NEW ‘INSTITUTIONAL LEFT’? ‘ANONYMOUS’ DECLARES WAR ON AMERICA

With the highest respect and heartfelt loss in Andrew Breitbart’s passing,  we will be posting some of his most groundbreaking pieces here, and leading you over to the new Breitbart site. He was a General in the war against the left and we salute him. With that please enjoy and go over to the new site and get informed. Get off the couch and join in the battle against the leftist/marxist/communist/Islamist’s taking control of our country. “We are all Breitbart now”!
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It’s been a busy news week for Anonymous.  The hacker collective fueling the Occupy movement openly declared war on the United States earlier in the week, just as thousands of emails obtained through their Christmas hack of global intelligence think tank Stratfor were dumped to Wikileaks and splattered across front page news.

 

And on Friday, Anonymous decided to attack one of America’s most basic freedoms – religion.

But the week was not all back pats and blue ribbons for the hacktivists.  It seems some in America are finally fighting back against the misguided anarchy that is Anonymous.

Earlier this year, the hacking collective attacked numerous government and recording industry websites, including the Department of Justice, the FBI, Recording Industry Association of America and UniversalMusic.com.  The coordinated distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks were in response to the Department of Justice investigation into content sharing website Megaupload.com.

News sites are reporting this weekend that Anonymous supporters became victims themselves while launching that attack in January.  MSNBC reports:

Keep reading…

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Media Partners in Crime with WikiLeaks?

Via: Accuracy in Media

Gary Pruitt, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of The McClatchy Company, insists the U.S. newspaper publisher “must maintain the highest standards of ethical conduct.” But how does this comport with being a “partner” of WikiLeaks, the controversial website that has just published stolen emails from the private company known as Stratfor?

WikiLeaks has listed McClatchy as one of its “public partners in the investigation” of Stratfor. Another American “partner” is Rolling Stone, the rock & roll magazine.

The hacker group Anonymous, which is under FBI investigation, has taken credit for the data theft. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is himself a computer hacker—convicted of penetrating a U.S. military defense network in his native Australia—and maintains close ties to the Russian government. He recently announced a television deal with Russia Today (RT), the Moscow-funded propaganda channel. He previously received a Russian visa, in a show of support from the Kremlin, which says he should get a Nobel Peace Prize for his Internet campaign against American interests worldwide.

George Friedman, founder and CEO of Stratfor, which obtains information about and analyzes world events for private companies and U.S. Government agencies, says the theft and publication of the emails are “deplorable, unfortunate, and illegal” actions.

The McClatchy Company is described as the third-largest newspaper company in the United States. It publishes 30 daily newspapers and provides information for some 1,200 clients of the McClatchy-Tribune News Service. It also has a digital news operation.

James Asher, Washington, D.C. bureau chief for McClatchy Newspapers, says his company wasn’t involved in the theft and hasn’t decided what is newsworthy about the documents they have received. In his mind, being a “partner” only means the company received the information and does not make it morally or legally culpable in how it was acquired.

“I wouldn’t use the word ‘partner,’ but what are you going to do?” he said. “I believe in the First Amendment and if they want to call us partner, they can. That’s not what we do.”

Asher is in charge of 40 reporters and editors in Washington and around the globe.

Stratfor CEO Friedman has cautioned the media about using the material, saying, “Some of the emails may be forged or altered to include inaccuracies. Some may be authentic. We will not validate either, nor will we explain the thinking that went into them. Having had our property stolen, we will not be victimized twice by submitting to questions about them.”

WikiLeaks claims the Stratfor material “contains privileged information about the US government’s attacks against Julian Assange and WikiLeaks and Stratfor’s own attempts to subvert WikiLeaks. There are more than 4,000 emails mentioning WikiLeaks or Julian Assange.”

It is not surprising that Stratfor would cover the case, since Assange is reportedly under investigation by the U.S. Government and one of his alleged sources, Army Private First Class Bradley Manning, is on trial for stealing classified information and aiding the enemy. Manning faces life in prison if convicted of the largest release of classified information in U.S. history. Some of the documents concern counter-terrorism operations in the Middle East and the vulnerability of top-secret facilities to terrorist attack.

One of the alleged emails from Stratfor refers to a secret U.S. Government indictment of Assange. But there is no independent evidence that such an indictment has been handed down.

On the other hand, evidence produced during Bradley Manning’s preliminary hearing revealed that Manning was in direct contact with Assange, making the founder of WikiLeaks into a co-conspirator in the theft and release of classified information. Such evidence could be used in an indictment of Assange on espionage charges. Assange has denied having any contact with Manning.

While it has no compulsion about engaging in a partnership relationship with WikiLeaks and getting Stratfor’s internal emails, McClatchy has its own policy on the need for employees to protect confidential information.

The policy says, “All information you obtain as an officer, director or employee of the Company is the property of the Company and must be treated accordingly. Information not generally available to the public about the Company, its partners, suppliers, associates, news sources, advertisers and customers, including information that might be of use to competitors or harmful to the Company or its customers if disclosed, is confidential information… We must take steps to protect the confidential nature of documents and information both on and off the Company’s premises. We must take care to disclose confidential information only on a ‘need-to-know’ basis.”

Asked if he would mind somebody stealing his emails and releasing them to the public, Asher said his emails weren’t that interesting. When I asked to see them, he laughed and said, “It sounds to me like you have an agenda, sir.”

Asked if he thought WikiLeaks had an agenda, he said, “I don’t care if WikiLeaks has an agenda. I don’t evaluate information based on the agenda of the people who give it to us. I evaluate the information based on how accurate and real it is, and whether it has news value.” The company website has a special section on other WikiLeaks material.

Asked if McClatchy had done a story on WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange working for Moscow-funded Russia Today (RT) television, a controversial arrangement that raises questions about his political orientation, Asher said he wasn’t aware of that information.

However, some independent commentators have started raising questions about Assange’s agenda and loyalties.

GBTV founder and host Glenn Beck points out that Assange initially threatened to do a massive document dump that promised to be damaging to the Russians, but that the material was never released. Instead, Assange went to work for RT, regarded as a mouthpiece for the Russian government and its intelligence services. “He had to know he was going to be paid a visit by—the Russians,” Beck’s website points out. “They have a pattern of ‘silencing’ (read: murdering) journalists and others who damage Russia in one way shape or form. Assange never did release the Russian docs—instead, he now works for the Russian propaganda network RT News.”

Beck said Assange apparently enjoys living more than doing damage to the interests of the Russian government.

Jeff Bercovici of Forbes accuses Assange of monumental hypocrisy by going to work for RT. He says “Assange, self-styled foe of government secrets and conspiracies of the powerful, is going to be a star on a TV network backed by the Kremlin. The same Kremlin that has done suspiciously little to investigate or prevent the killings and beatings of journalists that have plagued Russia for more than a decade.”

He added, “In November 2010, in response to reports that Wikileaks was on the verge of releasing documents that would incriminate powerful Russian politicians and companies, Assange told my colleague Andy Greenberg that ‘we have material on many business and governments, including in Russia.’ As is frequently the case with Assange, no such documents have ever emerged. Anyone want to bet on the chances that’ll ever happen now?”

The implication is that Assange is a Russian agent whose anti-American mission is now out in the open for all to see—except that his U.S. media “partners” may not want to investigate this part of the story.

Cliff Kincaid is the Director of the AIM Center for Investigative Journalism and can be contacted at cliff.kincaid@aim.org.

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Mexican Army Shuts Down Zeta Drug Cartel’s Encrypted Mobile Phone Network

Cell tower

After Anonymous had its little on-againoff-again dealings with the Zeta drug cartel, the Mexican army has stepped in to cut the drug lords off-the-air. The Zetas were apparently running their own encrypted communications network — not your average run of the mill junkies-come-dealers that’s for sure.

The Army confiscated some pretty advanced equipment, with 167 antennas and 166 power supplies removed, along with 1,400 radios and 2,600 phones. This follows a similar raid by the country’s Navy, which tore apart another communication network the drug barons had set-up in another province of Mexico. Some impressive infrastructure that’s for sure. Just goes to show how entrenched, and what a massive deal, the Zeta cartel really is in Mexico. Maybe our own Police should take note — if the Zetas can set up their own encrypted communications network that works, why can’t the Rozzers. [AP via The Register]

Image credit: Cell tower from Shutterstock

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Anonymous Declare ‘War Against Corruption in the Mexico Government’

While this year will be remembered as the year of the hacktivist, it was in South America that cyber activists sprang up to protest against human rights violations, corruption and restrictions on internet freedoms.

Although the international internet collective Anonymous achieved renown for its attacks on Scientology, the application of legal procedures and big banks, its operations were more overtly political in Latin America, where it raised public awareness of crucial issues, such as the manipulation of information, the murders of bloggers and journalists by drug cartels and freedom of expression.

Cyber crime has been prevalent in Latin America since the birth of the World Wide Web. But the proliferation of computers and online access in the region, which has grown more than 1,000 percent over the past decade, according to the Miami Herald, has led to a surge in South American cyber activism.

Taking their lead from online groups in Europe and the United States, home-grown Latin American hackers have adopted the use of kits that used to be the preserve of computer programmers, as groups affiliated with Anonymous have sprung up in Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Venezuela and Brazil.

Following Amnesty International’s criticism of El Salvador for its abuse of anti-terrorism laws and the operation of police death squads, a group affiliated with Anonymous recently disabled a number of government websites in the country to demonstrate against the its poor human rights record.

The attacks were part of Operation Justice El Salvador, launched by Anonymous to target official sites, including that the president, which was taken offline after receiving 30 million hits.

In June, Anonymous launched Operacion Andes Libre – joint cyber attacks against the governments of Chile and Peru for violating the rights of internet users by monitoring blogs and social media, as well as tracking users’ opinions and locations.

Several Brazilian government websites were also taken down in June in a campaign led by LulzSecBrazil, a branch of Anonymous. Although the Brazilian government said the sites were offline only for a few hours, the attack had been announced in advance by LulzSec, which also criticised the Brazilian government’s manipulation of information. In a video, the group called on the South American country to be more transparent and less corrupt.

Earlier in the year, Venezuela and Nicaragua were targeted for their support of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.

2011 The Year of the Hacktivist: When Anonymous Finally Grew-Up

Anonymous then launched an attack of “spam bombs” on about  250 Colombian police officials in July .

In a pattern that has become regular with most hacker groups, the attackers went on to post a statement of intent, which contained personal data on National Police employees.

In Ecuador, Operation Condor, a name coopted from the military regime of the 1970s, was responsible for an attack against the government of Ecuador while President Rafael Correa held a speech in the congress.

With the hasthag #OPCondorLibre, the group aimed to raise awareness of “attacks on freedom of expression undertaken by the government of Ecuador”.

In Mexico, Anonymous launched OpCartel last month with a YouTube video in response to the alleged kidnapping of one of its members by a drug cartel near Veracruz stadium.

The operation, which initially aimed to take down the cartel, was later called off after the blogger was released and a victory was claimed over Los Zetas, one of the most violent cartels in Mexico.

The hacking group then shifted its focus from the drug cartel to the Mexican government, calling on the wider Anonymous community to attack government agencies.

Related articles

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Mexican Drug Cartel Tries to Silence Internet

Downtown Nuevo Laredo

Image by J. Stephen Conn via Flickr

Mexico‘s hyperviolent Zetas drug cartel appears to be launching what may be one of the first campaigns by an organized crime group to silence commentary on the Internet.

The cartel has already attacked rivals, journalists and other perceived enemies. Now, the target is an online chat room, Nuevo Laredo en Vivo, that allows users to comment on the activities of the Zetas and others in the city on the border with Texas.

Already, three apparent site users have been slain, and a fourth victim may have been discovered Wednesday, when a man’s decapitated body was found with what residents said was a banner suggesting he was killed for posting on the site. Chat room users said they could not immediately confirm the victim’s identity, because people all post under aliases.

Despite such precautions, users are highly vulnerable, and the Zetas could be tracking them from clues they leave online, experts said Thursday.

A female chat room user was found decapitated in September with a similar message as the one found Wednesday and at the exact same spot, with a message signed with the letter “Z,” which refers to the Zetas. Residents couldn’t fully read the latest message, because the dead man’s body was laid on top of it, in what appeared to be a more hurried execution.

“I don’t know of anything like this having happened anywhere else in the world,” said Jorge Chabat, an expert in safety and drug trafficking at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics in Mexico. “It is certainly new and worrisome … it is a frontal confrontation against the public; it is not just a confrontation with the government anymore.”

Drug cartels in Mexico have frequently attacked traditional print newspapers, by tossing explosives at their offices or killing, kidnapping or threatening reporters. Violence against journalists in Tamaulipas state, where Nuevo Laredo is located, has led local media to censor themselves, leaving residents on their own to separate fact from pervasive rumors spread on social networks.

Juan Carlos Romero, who helps lead the press freedom group Article 19, said local newspapers have often stopped publishing crime reports out of fear, leading residents to turn more to the Internet for information like that posted Thursday on Nuevo Laredo en Vivo: where gunshots have been heard, where vehicles suspected of carrying cartel lookouts have been seen, which streets are safe to travel.

“What are people doing in the face of the lack of information, the kind of information you need to make decisions: Where can I drive? Can I leave the house?” said Romero. “People are forging new channels of communication on the Internet, social networks, Twitter, blogs, Facebook.”

Drug cartels appear to have learned that such Internet sites reach far more readers than northeastern Mexico’s small regional newspapers and have adjusted their attacks accordingly.

“We are witnessing a new behavior of criminal forces in the country,” said Erick Fernandez, a communications professor at the IberoAmerican University in Mexico City. “We are in a new phase.”

Romero agreed. “It appears to me that organized crime is trying to get common citizens to stop real-time coverage of violence,” he said, saying that “the intimidation is having a multiplier effect.”

Anonymous hackers score win over drug cartel

Erica Naone
November 7, 2011 – 9:07AM

Anonymous takes on a formidable foe ... a grab from its latest video.

Anonymous takes on a formidable foe ... a grab from its latest video.

Latin American members of the activist hacker group Anonymous called off a planned November 5 plan to expose people associated with the Zetas, Mexico’s most violent drug cartel, according to the group’s blog. Read here:

In a post written in Spanish on the group’s Latin American blog, the members said they had called off the action after the Zetas met a demand to release a kidnapped group member, and that: “We can say that, while bruised, he is alive and well”.

The hacker group said the person was freed with a note warning that if information were released, the cartel would make the kidnapped member’s family suffer, and kill 10 people for each exposed name.

The message left by the dead blogger's body by the notorious Zetas drug cartel.

Anonymous members previously threatened to release names and addresses of taxi drivers, journalists and police officerswho they said acted as “loyal servants” to the cartel to see if that would prompt arrests.

They said they were “fed up” with the cartel’s actions, particularly the alleged kidnapping. For much of the week, people claiming to be Anonymous members have gone back and forth saying the hacker action was canceled or would go ahead.

Anonymous, a loosely knit group that has attacked financial and government websites around the world, had in September claimed responsibility for orchestrating the shutdown of several Mexican government ministries, but did not give a reason for that action.

Barrett Brown, a Texas hacker who posted details about the planned action, said via his Twitter account: “I will be continuing the fight against the cartels”.

Brown said via a post on Pastebin he would avoid revealing names that would trigger the ire of the Zetas but still intended to send information to the German newspaper Der Spiegel for confirmation.

“In the meanwhile, I will be going after other cartels with the assistance of those who have come forward with new information and offers of assistance,” he said.

Reuters

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/anonymous-hackers-score-win-over-drug-cartel-20111107-1n2i6.html#ixzz1cyIor7ym

‘Hackers’ threaten Mexican drug cartel in YouTube film

A Guy Fawkes mask associated with the "Anonymous" group

An internet video – which claims to be linked to the Anonymous hacking movement – has threatened to expose details about a Mexican drugs cartel.

The YouTube message said it was “tired of the criminal group the Zetas, which is dedicated to kidnapping, stealing and extortion”.

It said the cartel “made a great mistake” carrying out an abduction of one of their members in Veracruz.

Local law authorities said they cannot authenticate the video.

The message shows a person dressed in a Guy Fawkes mask associated with Anonymous and other activist groups.

The voiceover, which is in Spanish, claims to know about police officers, journalists, taxi drivers and others who aid the cartel.

It said it will publish photographs and other details unless the kidnapped member of its group – who has not been identified – is released.

“We cannot defend ourselves with weapons, but we can with their cars, houses and bars,” the message added.

“It’s not difficult. We know who they are and where they are.”

Revenge attacks

The video was posted under the username MrAnonymousguyfawkes. It was uploaded on 6 October, but was first reported at the end of last week by the global intelligence think tank Stratfor.

An attempt to contact the video’s author did not receive a reply.

Analysts at Stratfor said that if Anonymous carried out its threat, it would likely lead to the murder of those named as cartel associates by rival gangs. It said there could also be reprisal attacks against suspected hackers.

Map

Veracruz is about 260 miles (420km) east of Mexico city, on the Gulf of Mexico.

Over recent months local authorities have reported a rise in drug-related crime. They said rivals of the Zetas cartel were challenging it for control of the area.

Drugs gangs have been linked to the killings of other campaigners who used the internet to denounce the cartels’ activities.

In September the bodies of a man and woman were found hanging from a bridge in the northern city of Nuevo Laredo.

Attached signs read: “This is going to happen to all of those posting funny things on the internet” and listed the names of two blogs.

“The internet offers a space for people to challenge the cartels with some anonymity,” said Robert Munks, a Latin America expert at the defence analysts IHS Jane’s.

“But the cartels have exceptionally good reach and can unmask some of these internet posters, and as we’ve seen the consequence can be pretty dire. I think there will be further postings, and I regret, further deaths.”

‘Anonymous’ Abandons Attack Against Mexican Drug Cartel?

New York Daily News
By 
 on November 2, 2011

'Anonymous' Abandons Attack Against Mexican Drug Cartel?REUTERS
Just days after announcing its intent to reveal information about civilians who have assisted the Mexican drug cartel Los Zetas, the group has seemingly backed down for fear of possible violent reprisals.

Two apparently self-identified Anonymous members, Skill3r and Glynnis Paroubek, were quoted in Mexican newspaper Milenio as saying, “We didn’t want irresponsible administrators to condemn participants [in the operation] to death. We’ve discussed it extensively and we all decided to remove it.”

(MORE: Anonymous vs. Zetas: Hackers Target Mexican Drug Cartel)

This statement follows a post on the Anonymous Mexico Facebook page that reads in part: “Our fight is not of this kind and our ideals are not in tune with that operation. The note [announcing Operation Cartel] published in many electronic media is completely false.”

The decision may be a smart one; global intelligence company Stratfor released a report yesterday claiming that “Los Zetas are deploying their own teams of computer experts to track those individuals involved in the online anti-cartel campaign, which indicates that the criminal group is taking the campaign very seriously,” a comment which comes with the extra weight of earlier internet-related murders as a warning to “internet snitches” trying to intervene in the drug war.

Despite this, it’s possible that Anonymous is split over the decision to withdraw from this particular operation; according to a tweet from Anonymous member Sabu, “#OpCartel is very much alive and like I said to others in private our war is on corruption on both sides of the spectrum. Vamous a GUERRA!” We may not know until November 5th whether or not the operation is still in existence… which, admittedly, may be part of the plan.

MORE: ‘Anonymous’ Threatens to Take Down Fox News Next Month

Original Story below:

Anonymous hacker group threatens Mexican drug cartel Zetas in online video

Hacker group fighting to get kidnapped member of their group back

BY NINA MANDELL
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, October 31 2011, 12:14 PM

The hacker group Anonymous had a grim -- and gutsy -- warning for the drug gang the Zetas.
screen grab/

The hacker group Anonymous had a grim — and gutsy — warning for the drug gang the Zetas.

A notorious group of international hackers is fighting back against a violent Mexican drug cartel after the gang took one of its members captive.

Anonymous, a group behind numerous noteworthy hackings around the world, said it will post the identities and addresses of the Zeta cartel’s members – many of whom are corrupt cops, taxi drivers and seemingly ordinary citizens and businesses, the Houston Chronicle reported.

In a video posted online earlier this month, a masked man tells the cartel, “You made a huge mistake by taking one of us. Release him. And if anything happens to him, you (expletive) will always remember this upcoming November 5th .”

The group told its members not to wear their traditional mask in public, which signifies they are part of the group — or even purchase them in preparation for the possible upcoming fight against the blood-thirsty cartel, PC World reported.

On Sunday, Anonymous claimed to have hacked the Website of a former official in Mexico and on Monday put a message on the site alleging that it was part of the Zetas, according to PC World.

“We cannot defend ourselves with a weapon but we can do this with their cars, homes, bars, brothels and everything else in their possession,” the Anonymous video warns.

While the move is certainly audacious, experts warn it could lead to more deaths of bloggers and journalists who are already being targeted by the group.

It could also be extremely dangerous for the cartel – not because of law enforcement but because it identifies them to rival gang members.

“It is a gutsy move,” Mike Vigil, the retired head of international operations for the Drug Enforcement Agency told the Chronicle.

“By publishing the names, they identify them to rivals, and trust me, they will go after them.”

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/anonymous-hacker-group-threatens-mexican-drug-cartel-zetas-online-video-article-1.969859#ixzz1carpBDPv