Slashdot Mirror


Anonymous Under Civil War?

Stoobalou writes "Civil war appears to have broken out in the ranks of headless 'hacktivist' collective Anonymous, with claims that a rogue admin has seized control of two key sites used to coordinate the loose-knit group's online direct action. The news follows speculation that a breakaway group of Anonymous members was responsible for the hacking attacks on Sony's PlayStation Network and Online Entertainment Network, which saw personal information, including credit card details, stolen from as many as 100 million users' accounts."

14 of 301 comments (clear)

  1. Penny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1. Re:Penny by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      These "Anonymous" people just seem like a bunch of silly drama queens. It's sad that so many people see some sort of revolutionary spirit brewing there. In reality it's all about the LoLz for some and cheap ego glorification for the rest.

      You know what's really sad? That the closest thing we HAVE to revolutionary spirit is Anonymous. People only see the revolution there because everyone else is too busy with the bread and circuses.

  2. Civil war? by mr100percent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know if I'd call that civil war, more like dissension in the ranks, or mutiny or barratry, and a greater than average amount of anarchy.

    Now if you wanted to see Anonymous in Civil War, you should hear the Boxxy story. She managed to divide the indivisible.

    1. Re:Civil war? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yea, Civil War is bullshit and the author should be ashamed of himself. It's just the usual Internet drama that happens in every single community at regular intervals.

  3. Not News by Yeknomaguh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This happens literally all the time. Its not even remotely news. Some part of "Anonymous" is always attacking some other part. Someone gets their feelings hurt and takes down a website or two. They get their name dropped and they fall off the radar. It isn't "civil war"; it's actually just the way Anonymous works.

  4. Is it really civial war? by realsilly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It sounds to me that there are individuals who don't follow the same ideology as a majority of the group called Anonymous. But since the word Anonymous is the generic word for "The concept of many online community users generally considered to be a blanket term for members of certain Internet subcultures, a way to refer to the actions of people in an environment where their actual identities are not known" (from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_(group)), how can you discern on sect from another.

    If you are Anonymous in the collective term, then where one goes, you all go. It is part of the concept of Anonymous. True that only a small sub-group has made the decision to perpetrate a company and steal information, but their actions reflect on all those who associate themselves with Anonymous. If Anonymous as a whole disagrees with what some members do, punishment will be within and will likely be pretty swift.

    This to me is not Civil war, but punishment for breaking of the ranks.

    --
    Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
  5. Re:It was only a matter of time by Yeknomaguh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This crap happens ALL THE TIME. Anonymous "turned" on itself years ago. Infighting keeps us strong, routes out the cancer, and confuses the hell out of outside enemies and newbs like you.

  6. what by dragonhunter21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Rebellion: Resistance to or defiance of any authority, control, or tradition.

    Mutiny: Revolt or rebellion against constituted authority.

    How can you rebel when there's no leadership to rebel against?

    This is, at best, a schism, and anon has survived schisms before- see Boxxy or the Scientology protests.

    --
    Sent from my CR-48
  7. Re:How'd have thought... by horza · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Law is only loosely related to justice. Laws can be used to persecute people, and justice can be obtained by going outside of the law. The suffragettes also used civil disobedience, and also had internal warfare from women that believed a woman's place was in the kitchen and out of politics. They still managed to get the vote for women, and in retrospect we now see society as a better place for it.

    Not that Anonymous are the suffragettes any more than they are a bunch of anarchist computer network destroyers.

    Phillip.

  8. Re:What? by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a fallacy in your thinking: that any group, bearing any label, can proceed without some sort of organization. Even a mob takes its cues form certain charismatic/ loud/ exemplary actors. Anonymous is not immune from this observation. But this doesn't stop dreamers and mythologizers from thinking about anonymous in dreamy ways that may be romantic and inspiring, but simply isn't real.

    Anonymous has a structure, and that structure is simply its most active members, coordinating with each other. You can kill this rudimentary structure, and hurt anonymous. Yes, you can do that. 90% of what anonymous does is dome by 10% of its "members". If you were to profile who that 10% were, and take them all out at once, (not one-by-one, there is an organic retirement/ replacement continuum at work here) you would destroy anonymous.

    It would of course reconstitute itself, but if you continued this "observe most active members, and then take them all out at once" tactic at a regular tempo, you would kill anonymous, dry the well, poison it, and prevent it from refilling.

    Most assuredly, you can kill anonymous, all romantic dreamy notions of what anonymous is to the contrary.

    "Anonymous is about as cohesive as a fist full of jelly."

    Yes, that's an accurate metaphor. Please note that jelly actually has some cohesion.

    You can kill Al Qaeda. You can kill the borg. You can kill anonymous. It takes effort and a longstanding commitment, and the most effective longterm methodology is to neutralize what motivates its organic membership. But for all the romanticizing dreamy anarchists out there: you just don't understand the intrinsic nature of human social organization. We self-organize, and this is a strength we reply on subconsciously, and a weakness to exploit.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  9. A False Flag Operation by SplicerNYC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This "rogue" group stinks of HB Gary.

  10. Re:How'd have thought... by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please. Comparing Anon to the suffragettes is just going way over the edge. Anon is nothing more or less than a street gang. They use intimidation and threats to exert power. Yeah it would be a real shame if something bad happened to your network. When you have people afraid to make statements critical of them they are no longer just protesters they are a threat to peoples freedoms. Like the freedom of speech.
    They also become a boogie man for more restrictive anti hacking laws. And by hacking I mean things like modding devices that YOU OWN! And what everybody that confuses this vigilantly gang like activity with civil disobedience, forgets is that Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and Susan B Anthony where not anonymous. Now the KKK the rode out and lynched folks that did things that they didn't like, that terrorized people into silence they where anonymous. You are drawing the wrong parallel from history. Of course the Klan saw and still sees themselves as heroes just like Anonymous does.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  11. Re:It was only a matter of time by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sony calling anon evil for the actions of this group is more or less no different then calling all Christians evil for the actions of Westboro baptist church, anyone can be a christian, and even take some portions of the christian beliefs out of context, yet you don't see the media or anyone hounding Christians as a whole for the actions of one group that claims to be Christians.

    Or for that matter, calling all Muslims evil for the actions of Al Qaida (maybe a couple thousand people out of a population of well over 1 billion, or about 0.0002% of Muslims). But it sure happens far more than you might think.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  12. Re:It was only a matter of time by DurendalMac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You missed one big, key element: Sony has a central leadership structure. Christianity does not. Various sects may, but not Christianity as a whole. Enough shit has gone on at Sony that you can tell it's rotten to the top. A lot of these things wouldn't have happened without upper management knowing about it.