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Anonymous Knocks Out Ministry of Sound Website

An anonymous reader writes "The latest DDoS attack from Anonymous has knocked offline UK solicitor Gallant Macmillian's website, the Ministry of Sound Website and their payment website. Macmillian is currently looking for several hundred identities of suspected file-sharers, accused of uploading artists under the Ministry of Sound label."

26 of 240 comments (clear)

  1. OMG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Goofus killed Gallant.

  2. For a moment I thought... by PaulBu · · Score: 4, Funny

    That UK actually has an official Ministry of Sound (as in, Govt. agency) ! :)

    Paul B.

    1. Re:For a moment I thought... by PatPending · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yup; it's located next to the Ministry of Silly Walks

      --
      What one fool can do, another can. (Ancient Simian Proverb)
  3. Should have stayed relevant by yamamushi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ministry of Sound has been struggling a lot lately, http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/feb/21/ministry-of-sound-threat . They haven't really stayed relevant in the electronic music world lately, so it won't be a big loss to see them disappear in the near future irregardless of file sharers. As a music producer and dj here in Austin, I feel obligated to buy the music I play and remix (mainly because I'm friends with producers who've burned that unspoken respect into my style, Francis Preve, Josh Gabriel, etc.). When labels go out of their way to pursue file sharers, I feel obligated to go out of my way to find their tracks through non-conventional methods. Not everyone has money to dish out for music, but they will pay to go to shows, clubs, raves, etc. Let them appreciate the art! When was the last time Ministry of Sound put out a track that reached the top 10 charts on beatport.com ? When was the last time Toolroom Knights did? Music evolves, and it feels like they pressed the B button to hold themselves back on purpose.

    --
    - Aetheral Research -
    1. Re:Should have stayed relevant by lightversusdark · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ministry of Sound is still one of the better clubs in London, especially with the closure of Matter, so they are still providing a venue for shows, clubs, raves, etc. The better promoters prefer Fabric as it's not as "corporate" as the others.
      The brand itself has been diluted to worthlessness. You can get MoS branded alarm clocks and iPod docks FFS.
      The label, while being the biggest indie label in the world, just churns out compilations - The Annual, Best of Happy Hardcore volume 40 etc.
      The company does still release credible records, but they are all on imprints like Hed Kandi and particularly Data Records. Eric Prydz is at the top of his game, and Example is riding high in the charts.
      Palumbo is a businessman, and that he would jump on the opportunity to screw a few more pennies out of file-sharers doesn't surprise me in the least.

      --
      "There is nothing nice about Steve Jobs and nothing evil about Bill Gates." - Chuck Peddle
  4. Offtopic, but I'm really curious by zill · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Are there any laws governing what you can legally name your organization?

    Can I register a corporation under the name "Federal government of the United States"?

    1. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by Jesse_vd · · Score: 5, Funny

      It worked out pretty well for the Federal Reserve

    2. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by cappp · · Score: 5, Informative
      There are loads of laws that are applicable. Trademark and obscenity are likely to be the ones you run into most - try registering Fucking Microsoft for instance - but there's also a bunch of regulations controlling the use of characters, abbreviations, and all of that. I did a quick search and found a great list of British restrictions on specific terms including

      Accredited, Auditor General for Wales, Bank, British, House of Lords, University,

      and so on. A general rule of thumb - if it has the potential to mislead you probably need to get some permission.

    3. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Informative

      We've a scam company here in the UK called London Mint Office. It's not affiliated with the real mint at all, but somehow they get away with it. It's just on the right side of legal - the standard 'didn't read the small print,' where the customer is offered what looks like a good deal on a product (A commorative coin) but isn't clearly told that in accepting the agreement they are also agreeing to be direct-debited for a case full of overpriced junk coins every month... and the only way to get out of the deal is via a phone line that is always unavailable.

    4. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by arivanov · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Depends on the country.

      15+ years ago the current Bulgarian prime minister business was called "First Private Police". That was in the first years after the fall of the berlin wall and funnily enough they were more efficient and less corrupt than the police proper. IIRC the ministry of the interior tried to sue them for trademarke infringment and failed. So they started stopping their cars for 2h checks every time they had to attend to an incident in progress, arrest their staff for nealry anything and so on until they forced a name change.

      So it depends. The government has "its ways". Now are they going to apply them is a different matter

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    5. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Informative

      We've a scam company here in the UK called London Mint Office. It's not affiliated with the real mint at all, but somehow they get away with it. It's just on the right side of legal - the standard 'didn't read the small print,' where the customer is offered what looks like a good deal on a product (A commorative coin) but isn't clearly told that in accepting the agreement they are also agreeing to be direct-debited for a case full of overpriced junk coins every month... and the only way to get out of the deal is via a phone line that is always unavailable.

      If its a direct debit then it is clearly not the only way. Cancel your direct debit - most banks let you do it online.

    6. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Informative

      Which would be a breach of contract if they play their cards right, leaving you even more fucked up than in the previous situation.

      Not if key details of the contract were only in the fine print, and the cancellation number unavailable. You would have two defences: 1) The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977, and 2) You made reasonable attempts to notify the company about the cancellation.

      I would be very surprised if they even took you as far as the court for that.

    7. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by ooshna · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's because no one ever visited your site.

    8. Re:Offtopic, but I'm really curious by imakemusic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      When Railtrack Plc - the company that ran the British railway system - was sold to Network Rail, the name Railtrack became available at Companies House. Some enterprising bloke registered Railtrack Ltd and proceeded to mess people about by answering their letters (PDF). Worth a read.

      --
      Brain surgery - it's not rocket science!
  5. When I was a kid we just played pool all day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's nice to see kids these days cooperating with each other to make the world a better place.

  6. Re:Not enough lulz, it is insufficient. by Omnifarious · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What would be the most amusingly effective is to infiltrate the computers of these organizations and start running filesharing software on them handing out copies of stuff that you just know the MPAA, RIAA or some other organization is going to be really hot about.

    Explaining to a judge how their filesharing was totally innocent even though their IP addresses were flagged would be really fun to watch. Also, in 3-strikes jurisdictions, watching their ISPs kick them off the net would also be huge fun.

  7. Re:Holy poorly written summary batman! by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Funny

    It would be nice if:
    a)You explained what Anonymous was(is it a group? an unknown attacker? A kind of bug spray?)

    Its you!

  8. Re:Not enough lulz, it is insufficient. by Securityemo · · Score: 4, Funny

    People just don't understand me. Why can't they just accept that we have different sexual drives in life? ;_;

    --
    Emotions! In your brain!
  9. Re:This isn't helping by Nursie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    'Some of them even think that breaking the law is always 'bad', I'm willing to bet."

    SOME?

    I went on a tour of Alcatraz a few years back, and the guide stopped to explain how the island had been taken over by students/protestors after it had closed as a prison, as a protest about the disenfranchisement of the Native American populations.

    It was when she said "And sometimes when we look back from many years afterwards, we can see that (very rarely) breaking the law might be justified or at least we can try to understand their motivations".

    That shocked me. That it needed to be spelled out that clearly to some people, that sometimes people break the law for the right reasons, not because they're just hippie scum. It was then that I realised how straight-and-narrow a lot of folks see life. I don't know if they just don't think for themselves or if the buy all the bullshit or what. A lot of people won't even disagree with the government.

    Hell, in the UK I heard people say "well if the government tell us we need to go to war in Iraq, then we must need to, it's not like they'd do it for no reason". Now I don't care which side of the should we/shouldn't we debate on iraq you come down on, the government's duty is to prove to the population that invasion of a foreign country is necessary. And the people's duty is to look at and question that proof.

    bah. "Sheeple" is an overused cliche, but I truly believe it fits for a lot of people.

  10. Re:This isn't helping by Adambomb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I run out of gin.

    --
    Ice Cream has no bones.
  11. Re:Not enough lulz, it is insufficient. by Securityemo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Oh, I'd simply love to 3. But I'm a bit blushing towards building up the protected double-life required for my mommy/gf not finding out about my randy gay orgies with turkish assboys and imported russian manwhores. She'd be so very, very disappointed in me. Ah, santorum, how I long for thee.

    --
    Emotions! In your brain!
  12. Wow by BancBoy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Your average MoS compilation is bus compressed so hard that I don't dare subject my amps to it, go anywhere near the clip light with that stuff and you know your spending a significant fraction of your time putting out DC.

    Wow! I don't know what half that meant, but it sounded damn insightful!

    --
    [UID-HeinzIntel]
    1. Re:Wow by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Every sound in the recording (even the ones that should be quiet) are amplified to a high level. If this level is too close to the point on a VU meter that indicates the amp will lose the tops of the waveforms (clip them off) the output signal will look like a flat line, or DC voltage. This is hard on amplifiers." I feel like the "English Sound Engineer" version of "English 50 Cent".

      Hope I actually got it close to correct.

    2. Re:Wow by Vryl · · Score: 4, Informative

      Mostly correct. Describing "compression" as "amplification" is arguably correct, but doesn't tell the full story, even tho you correctly point out the soft sounds.

      Compression basically makes the soft sounds louder, and/or the loud sounds softer so there is less dynamic range in the music - that is, the difference between the soft and loud noises is made smaller, or even much smaller.

      The result is that the music sounds "louder", but you can lose a lot of the "feel" of a track.

      It also uses more energy, and drives your amp and then your speakers much harder, and hotter.

      But hey, that is a ton more words than you used, and someone will pick holes in this version too.

      Yours is pretty darn good, for a paraphrase to non sound geeks.

  13. Re:Why bother with this? by Spliffster · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, it seems to have worked against ACS Law, the domain does not resolve anymore (since ca. 29. Oct). http://acs-law.org.uk/

    It is very likely that ACS Law will go out of business for doing their shady "porn" extortion. After/During that attack, some 200MB of emails "leaked" which will put the last nail in their coffin: http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/5850493/ACS-Law_leaked_emails

  14. Re:There's a word for this sort of thing: terroris by imakemusic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Absolutely. It was terrifying. The prospect of not being able to buy the latest remix of Unce-unce-unce-unce shook my soul to its very core. I will be having sleepless nights for months to come. I worried about my family and my friends getting caught in the denial of service or getting wounded in the crossfire. "Never again", I thought to myself, "will my people be free to listen this mindless horseshit without fear of a slight delay because they can't buy it online and will have to walk to the shop or get it from a different website." Pure terror. I wanted to stand up to these evil people but I was scared so I just sat there, quietly leaking bodily fluids.

    --
    Brain surgery - it's not rocket science!