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Public Face of Anonymous Leaves Group

Gunkerty Jeb writes "Barrett Brown, the reporter who became a media-friendly spokesperson for the shadowy hacking group Anonymous, says that he is quitting the group in the wake of a public feud that has broken out between different hacker factions within the loosely organized collective."

191 comments

  1. Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Pardon me as I break my tin-foil hat out here. But there are a lot of government agencies and companies who have a vested interest in seeing Anon fall to pieces. The timing on this is almost as convenient as Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Julian Assange being arrested for sexual assault (the former right after he pulled decisively ahead of pro-American Nicolas Sarkozy in the polls and the later just weeks after he released a series of secret documents that embarrassed the U.S.). But then, I've always said that pedophilia and sexual assault charges are the quickest way to discredit someone publicly--way better than anything as crude as assassination.

    Don't get me wrong, here. I'm not the kind of guy who thinks the moon landings were faked or that the U.S. planned 9-11 or any of that horseshit. But sometimes the timing on certain events just strikes me as a little too convenient for mere coincidence. And as was done with Wikileaks, the first step in a descrediting campaign is to encourage dissension from within and to get some internal plants/buy-offs to publicly bad-mouth the leadership (Daniel Domscheit-Berg, I'm looking in your direction, little plant). Just don't be suprised to see some Anon leaders suddenly facing rape/pedophilia/sexual assault charges in the near future. You'll know for sure if beautiful women suddenly start throwing themselves at 4channers in public.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anon won't fall to pieces: they're like a hydra - it'll break a part and there will be just more groups doing what they did.

      It's the same as al-Qaeda. Killing bin Laden will not do much.

      The only thing Anon enemies can hope for is continued in fighting so that all the Anon factions are fighting each other instead of their internet vigilante activities.

      The split and infighting is the best thing to happen to Anon's enemies.

    2. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 2

      Anon won't fall to pieces: they're like a hydra

      You're probably right. But that won't stop interested parties from trying.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    3. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Al-Qaeda as hydra only works if it is in fact decentralized - particularly in terms of skill set/funding. If OBL kept his funds under his own control, that alone would be a significant impact in funding operations. I agree with you if he was in fact a figurehead by the end.

    4. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by idontgno · · Score: 4, Funny

      You'll know for sure if beautiful women suddenly start throwing themselves at 4channers in public.

      That's not a sign of a covert government action; that's a sign of the Apocalypse.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    5. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll know for sure if beautiful women suddenly start throwing themselves at 4channers in public.

      That's not a sign of a covert government action; that's a sign of the Apocalypse.

      Nah, that's just a camwhore.

    6. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by JosKarith · · Score: 1

      You'll know for sure if beautiful women suddenly start throwing themselves at 4channers in public.

      That's not a sign of a covert government action; that's a sign of the Apocalypse.

      Nah, that's just a camwhore.

      GP specified beautiful, not "Passable for human on 320x240 VGA in a dim light at 2fps"

      --
      'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
    7. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it's the boy who cried wolf syndrome: conspiracy theory is such a favorite currency of the low iq and not quite mentally sound crowd, that if an actual real conspiracy theory happens, no one will believe it

      the effect of all the low iq and mentally deficient wack jobs constantly running around and crying wolf on conspiracies is to basically ensure that any rational and realistic consideration of an actual conspiracy theory is discounted up front

      all those constantly babbling about conspiracy theories actually help conspiracy theories succeed, because they hide the tiny signals in a fountain of noise

      i frequently laugh at and pour derision on conspiracy theory crack pots. however, i readily admit conspiracy theories are real. its just that they are exceedingly rare because they are so hard to pull off in airtight secrecy. but the dumber you are or the more mentally deranged you are, the more they seem likely, because your fear/ paranoia/ schizophrenia or dim perceptive abilities are unable to see just how incredibly hard an actual conspiracy theory is to actually pull off. how many ways it can fail, and continue to fail, long after the fact. how long has it been from the kennedy assassination. no one, NO ONE, the vast conspiracy has issued a peep about it, even accidentally? no one is still interested? come on! a lone asshole shot kennedy, not some mafia/ cia/ cuban/ whatever plot. occam's razor, my deluded friends, occam's razor

      but conspiracy theories do have value in this world: entertainment. they are a frequent part of hollywood movies, because, like alien invasions or superheroes, they tickle our fancy. even though we know such things are impossible (well, those of us who are mentally sound realize superheros, aliens, and overarching vast conspiracies by secret black ops agencies are impossible)

      please note conspiracy theory proponents: all the noise you dingbats constantly make about conspiracy theories, help to hide the actual real rare ones. not that that fact is going to change your behavior. because you're stupid and/ or deranged. but carry on, i need to laugh. yes, i know: the chemtrails from the government airplanes and the fluoridated water has completely turned me into a sheep. (giggle)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    8. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by zill · · Score: 5, Funny

      Anonymous Coward writes:

      It's the same as al-Qaeda. Killing bin Laden will not do much.

      Breaking news
      A member of the hacktivist group Anonymous has just announced that their organizational hierarchy is identical to that of al-Qaeda's, thus proving the suspicion that both terrorist groups are related and have been working together. The leaders of the two group could not be reached for comments.

    9. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or they are a bunch of delusional thugs and the delusion is falling apart in the cold light of reality. It has to be big business and the government that wants to see anon fail?
      Fail at what? Being mindless jerks that take there revenge on anybody the feel they can? Like this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_(group)#Epilepsy_Foundation_forum_invasion
      and
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_(group)#No_Cussing_Club

      The attack on Sony is just the latest example. Anon was at it's best a gang of relatively harmless jerks. Now they are just dangerous jerks with delusions that they have a right to be judge, jury, and executioner.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    10. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The above sounds very plausible, and I agree with the OP that it could well be true. Honestly, there's no dirty cheap-ass trick I wouldn't put past today's US administration. Their assaults on freedom, the internet, other countries' democratic processes, and their own citizens prove how wicked and wretched they've become. They are so far from their founding ideals of freedom and democracy they can't even see those founding ideals any more. Give it another 100 years of apathy, another 50 of irritation and cue in another revolution to restart the cycle. Until then, god have mercy on our souls.

    11. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by westlake · · Score: 2

      The timing on this is almost as convenient as Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Julian Assange being arrested for sexual assault (the former right after he pulled decisively ahead of pro-American Nicolas Sarkozy in the polls...

      When did Strauss-Kahn arrive in New York and how many people would know where he would be staying?

      To make this work, you would need to know quite a lot about the organization, staffing and routine of the hotel.

      The plan demands the successful bribery or coercion of a credible victim - in this case a veteran chamber maid with a nine year old daughter.

      You have one chance to get this right or the next time you meet she will be wearing a wire.

      It demands stagng the "assault" in a way that will convice the SVU - which is probably every bit as good as its fictional counterpart.

      The FBI and anyone else likely to be drawn into a case involving a high-profie foreign diplomat.

    12. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by AJH16 · · Score: 4, Funny

      So what you are saying is that the 9/11 truth movement and moon landing hoax conspiracies were really started by the government so they could get away with real conspiracies without anybody noticing? ;)

      --
      AJ Henderson
    13. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by mseeger · · Score: 1

      There is no need for any conspiracy to make Anon fall apart. This will happen automagically. Loosely organized, ideologicaly motivated, idealistic organisations have appeared and disappeared by thousands during the last century alone.

      There are reasons why most organisations don't work like Anon and that's because this model will not work over a prolonged time. Organisations like Greenpeace are slightly more democratic than North-Korea because they wouldn't be as effective and stable otherwise.

      I would love to be wrong on that issue....

      It even doesn't take an evil character for starting the downward spiral of death. The assholes usually just end on the top at the end because they can stand the endless bickering longer than anyone else.

      Sorry, Martin

    14. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dominique Strauss-Kahn

      I know, right? What kind of mindless sheep would believe that a rich, arrogant Frenchman could possibly treat women badly?

      And yeah, how about that timing. I mean, it's not like he did the same thing to a French women years ago, and got away with it because he was a hot-shit politician... oh wait.

    15. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      While I see where you're going, we *are* talking about a group where each individual member can do pretty much whatever he wants and claim to be doing it on behalf of Anonymous. From that perspective,it's not so hard to believe that - as this group begins high profile activity - that there's a lot of internal dissent and disagreement; and I don't doubt that many yearn for the "good old days" when all of the members were of a [generally] like mind.

    16. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Inner_Child · · Score: 2

      That's not a sign of a covert government action; that's a sign of the Apocalypse.

      So... Saturday?

      --
      Today is red jello day - all workers must eat all of their red jello. Failure to comply will result in five demerits.
    17. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by circletimessquare · · Score: 0

      LOL ;-)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    18. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Caturday

    19. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, all it takes is a big bribe (perhaps coupled with a threat) and charges that only need to hold up well enough to last through the election. The end goal isn't a conviction, it's discrediting. He-said/she-said is more than enough for that.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    20. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anon has gone through such internal conflict before. They do all the time because any member can act on his own and claim to be acting for anon. But until now, there was no outsider-journalist doing an internship within the group.
      This journalist discovered nothing new, he simply found out how anon works, he didn't realize this is normal for anon, and he quit thinking the group was now facing a tough challenge. That journalist is saying "Anon is in deep shit, it's unusual" when in fact Anon faces and overcoms internal dissent constantly. But since there usually is no journalist-outsider following Anon, we don't hear about it. And now, because this one time a journalist tells us about this, we're thinking this problem is new to Anon.

      Anon will get over it like it never happened.

    21. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by spun · · Score: 1

      No tinfoil hat. In the words of Boots Riley from The Coup, "They're tryin' to kill the movement with the new CoIntelPro." You think that went away when congress shut it down? Yeah, right.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    22. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The French Socialist Party gets its best shot in 22 years of winning the Presidency and overthrowing a strongly pro-American regime. But a year before the election, their leading candidate, a guy with no criminal record in his 62 years who is leading by double digits in all the polls, suddenly decides to rape a maid in New York. That's quite a convenient coincidence for the United States and their friend Nicolas Sarkozy, no? That's right up their in convenience with Julian Assange deciding to become a serial rapist just a few weeks after leaking troves of secret U.S. State Department and Pentagon documents.

      Isn't it nice when all your enemies decide to become rapists after they cross you?

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    23. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OBL had no skill set. His only value was his assets which were largely frozen within a month of the Sept 11th attacks. This the reason Bush's butt wasn't on fire about capturing OBL when asked about it in 2002... OBL, without his assets, was nothing more than a token member of Al Qaeda. Too bad most people don't see him for what he was.
       
      And this isn't to take away from the recent killing of OBL. He still needed to go but he wasn't a significant threat once the groundwar started in Afganistan. If anything his best value would have been as a suicide bomber, a job normally reserved for unskilled jihadists.

    24. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      got enuff tinfoil for two? public deception by disinformation is a long-established tradition. and the media sux it up like a vacuum, then blows it back out over the too-stupid-to-care masses.

    25. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Dude, the CIA OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCED doing this shit! It's not like it's a censored secret!

      The problem is with how brainwashed the US population are. Including many here at Slashdot.
      You could tell them straight to their faces, that now they are being raped, insert your cock all the way, fuck around until it rips apart and they bleed, and they'd still form those fake-two-sides of the story:
      A. "Those fuckin' fearmongers and lie-spreading anti-Americans who try to denounce our heroes!"
      B. "Pardon me as I break my tin-foil hat out here. But the timing is almost too convenient. Don't hit me, for daring to even dream about thinking there might be a rape going on here."

      NOBODY seems to ACTUALLY take on a opposing side. As if it were China, where that is banned. Just that nobody forced them. Which makes it even worse, as it means they actually believe it!

      It's plainly obvious, that this is going on here: http://www.zpub.com/un/chomsky.html

    26. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Overthrowing a strongly pro-American regime? Wow, you really don't know Sarkozy or the French very much. He's strongly pro-American only in the context of French foreign politics since de Gaulle, who was almost obsessed with throwing a wrench into American plans in Europe. Sarkozy likes America, but he also likes rich friends who host him during his vacations. The two go hand in hand for him.

      As for DSK, he's apparently had a history of treating women in a less than gentlemanly fashion. The reason that DSK is the Socialists' best hope is because the others are intellectual lightweights (Segolene Royal, ugh) with no achievements to show for from a political perspective.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    27. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by horza · · Score: 0

      Wow good links. I had forgotten how funny they can be, as well as trying to stand up for civil rights. The attack on Sony was a simple DoS on their web site trying to highlight the suppression of OtherOS. Hardly a big deal to a company the size of Sony. The Chanology and HBGary were great reads.

      I thought they were just a bunch of jerks, but thanks for educating me. I can see their attraction, they do seem a pretty cool bunch.

      Phillip.

    28. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by LinksAwakener · · Score: 1

      Just don't be suprised to see some Anon leaders suddenly facing rape/pedophilia/sexual assault charges in the near future.

      The fact that most Anon members originated from 4chan and other mentionable image boards tells me that a good majority are *actually* guilty of pedophilia (in the sense that they own pornographic pictures of prepubescent children).

    29. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Artifex · · Score: 1

      i readily admit conspiracy theories are real. its just that they are exceedingly rare because they are so hard to pull off in airtight secrecy. (giggle)

      I think you need to understand the difference between conspiracy theories and actual conspiracies.
      Of course theories are real; many people have them. Are they valid? That's a different question.

      --
      Get off my launchpad!
    30. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Splab · · Score: 1

      He flies with the same airline company every time and you can bet he has his preferred hotels. You don't need to do that much planning, find one maid who is in financial troubles and offer her a $5k bribe, at some point she will have an excuse to go into his room - she doesn't even need to go on a witness stand, the damage is done, even if the charges are withdrawn the man has no political future.

    31. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      A better question is there ever going to be a time that *isn't* going to be able to fuel tin foil hat ideas?

      Really, you need more than that for a plausible conspiracy theory. There are *a lot* of things that have timing and odd circumstances surrounding them. Bin Laden jus happened to be killed when Obama is in desperate need for something to draw attention away from domestic policy problems followed with any proof being hidden and we just have to trust the govt DNA testers? Or how about his birth certificate - he spent how much money and how much time hiding the full version (which i 8do* think was stupid, I figure it was being held to release to discredit at a later point - as he did - but he waited so long he looks like an idiot too *at best*) and then gives us an easily faked copy?

      I'll buy that Assange is a case of women spurned coupled with Swiss easy rape laws and I'll even buy something similar with Strauss-Kahn (that one is much harder to buy, it looks much more like he did it right now), but the vast conspiracy to discredit and remove them is plain stupid, at least on the same level a the birthers and deathers.

      Its amusing to see each sides conspiracy theories running around now and how they view each others.

    32. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Hey even a broken clock is right twice a day. Some of the stunts are funny but frankly the attacks on free speech and the other other pranks go too far.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    33. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Having them break up into smaller pieces is a good thing. Because you now have a bunch of small groups with limited resources, and more diverse motive. So there will be more smaller attacks which may more easily be thwarted. Vs. a large organization who can do more tactile large scale attacks.
      These people are criminals. The fact that they are using computers to do their crimes doesn't excuse them. It is the same as breaking into a building. They are using "Oh we are protesting" nonsense to try to justify them acting as a criminal, the same way a bank robber justifies robbing the bank stating that the bank is just an evil organization and the money they steal will be covered by FDIC.

      OMG a Video Game System (not even the most popular one) has dropped OS Support, This is worth an attack on a company? Seriously? Out of all the unjust things in the world to fight about this is the best you can do and put your resources on? Whats next Hack Wendy's because you don't like the taste of their new fries?

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    34. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's actually leaving because his heroin addiction makes him unreliable.

      It's well known in anon circles that he has a serious addiction problem. I hope he is going to rehab.

    35. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No. That's just what they WANT you to think.

    36. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, they release conspiracy theories as a way of controlling all parts of the population. By controlling the truth, lies, and conspiracies they control everyone.

      Idea came from South Park.

    37. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by butalearner · · Score: 1

      Well here's the thing, they always were a bunch of small groups. In fact, they are a bunch of individuals that only rarely work together, and only when they feel like it. Each attack that they supposedly launch is only joined by a tiny subset of them, because most of them are just there to share porn. They attack each other and try to trick (i.e. make money off of) each other far more often than they flip on their LOICs and point them at a designated target.

      Now don't get me wrong, some of them (e.g. the ones who've used LOIC) are criminals, and all of them are at least a bit shady. But all these news stories saying there is a spokesperson or a public face just makes me laugh.

    38. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by The+Dawn+Of+Time · · Score: 1

      Is there some rule that says no one is allowed to oppose them? Frankly, what do you expect? People who act like assholes engender enemies. It's a basic fact of life.

      It's not like these people are universally lionized heroes or anything.

    39. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by The+Dawn+Of+Time · · Score: 1

      While you are certainly within your right to hold that opinion, people who wish to stop them from existing are also just as right.

      Basically, anonymous can't win. All they can do is shit in the well and ruin the water for everyone. Not exactly... inspiring.

    40. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Doesn't DSK have the nickname of "The Seducer" back in France?

    41. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Aceticon · · Score: 2

      All you need to maintain a proper conspiracy is that the number of those in it is small, that most participants know who the other participants are (and thus can enact reprisals for blowing the whistle) and that it's in the best interest of all participants to keep quiet about it (maybe because of the intensity of possible reprisals).

      This is why government conspiracies are such a popular theory (and probably also popular in practice), since governments do have the strongest power to silence and punish whistleblowers.

      In addition to this, it also helps if the nature of what is being hidden by the conspiracy is so outrageous that if somebody does blow the whistle on it, they can be made to look like nut-cases, creating the interesting paradigm that it should be easier to maintain a conspiracy around a set of events that looks highly unlikelly than it is to do so around a set of events that looks like just a variant of common occurrence.

    42. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      That would be Afghanistan.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    43. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      uh... that's an original comment. google any segment of the text above and you won't find any matches except this comment. it's not copypasta

      now it might not be an original THOUGHT. i am certain other people have expressed this sentiment before

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    44. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      people change over time. the ruthless become guiltridden. the desperate become mindful of making amends. decades pass. conspiracies are never airtight

      there was a fountain of conspiracy theories one hundred years ago. there will be a fountain of conspiracy theories one hundred years from now. 99.99999% of them aren't even remotely real, just products of the feverish imaginations of small or paranoid schizophrenic minds

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    45. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      The tragedy is that the French Socialist Party was willing to put up with someone who's a rapist - with one Socialist leader telling her own daughter not to report a sexual assault by home - in order to have a stronger candidate against Sarkozy. If this came from nowhere, you'd have a point, but the warning signs about this guy were all over the place.

    46. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by a_hanso · · Score: 1

      I've always said that pedophilia and sexual assault charges are the quickest way to discredit someone publicly

      That's what they did to Blake!

    47. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

      However, there does seem to be a conspiracy against using capitol letters.

    48. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by drb226 · · Score: 1

      The attack on Sony is just the latest example.

      Um...assuming that was Anonymous...

    49. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Illy-chan · · Score: 1

      Do they have to be human or sober? Those Japanese robots are getting pretty good. If not that, C2H5OH, has been getting otherwise untouchable people laid for centuries.

    50. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by ron_ivi · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is that the 9/11 truth movement and moon landing hoax conspiracies were really started by the government so they could get away with real conspiracies without anybody noticing? ;)

      Well, mkultra (cia hiring prostitutes to slip their clients LSD while they were watched by agents through one-way-mirrors) might be easiest to explain that way.

      As well as those alien-autopsy conspiracies of odd-shaped bodies that happened around the time of human radiation experiments.

    51. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Illy-chan · · Score: 1

      If only nuts think aliens are real, than NASA sure has lowered their standards. Wasn't there a press release just yesterday that they're going to search a number of planets for signs life? I think you're putting too much weight on fake conspiracies. There are real ones, and plenty of them. They just generally aren't as grand or well planned as the more famous ones. At least, the ones I know of in my city are that way, I know of a few people who were actually set up by the city government. These schemes are mostly powered through massive corruption, lot's of money with, perhaps, a sprinkling of stupidity. They get found out from time to time but it's hard to kick anyone out when you live in a one party town.

    52. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > Don't get me wrong, here. I'm not the kind of guy who thinks the moon landings were faked or that the U.S. planned 9-11 or any of that horseshit.

      Don't shoot the messenger please, just asking a honest question here: I am still wondering "What _was_ the official reason Building 7 collapsed" ?

      I'm not interested in Conspiracy Theories, I just want the honest facts, and a government to treat its citizen with respect by valuing honesty, like most other people want.

    53. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by DDLKermit007 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, this guy, and really, NOBODY has any buisness attempting to be a PUBLIC figure for Anonymous. It's in the NAME! Allot of the disention likely stems from him wanting to be a vapid attention seeking whore. It's best he steps down, and no one else attempt to be some figurehead. Anonymous is best off sticking to the whims of the masses. This is more like Anon getting back to buisness of doing things for the "lulz". And no, I do not identify with them, or say I am not with them. This is the nature of where this group springs from.

      Remeber, Anonymous does not forgive.

    54. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You know, I bet if Martin Luther King had went on a talk show back in the 60's and alleged that the FBI was spying on him, attempting to infiltrate and discredit the SCLC, and sending letters to his wife alleging affairs--everyone else on that talk show would have laughed and called him a paranoid conspiracy theorist.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    55. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      The Scientologists are also infamous for using this tactic against their enemies. Pretty nasty stuff.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    56. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Pardon me as I break my tin-foil hat out here .. the first step in a descrediting campaign is to encourage dissension from within and to get some internal plants/buy-offs to publicly bad-mouth the leadership ..

      No need of a tin-foil disclaimer, wherever you see some dissident group self-destruct, it's invariable because one or more of the factions have been infiltrated by the state security apparatus.

    57. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by TheCarp · · Score: 0

      Needed to go? Needed for what exactly?

      He was a vain old man who wrote emails and put our videos of himself moralizing and denouncing his enemies. As you say, he was little more than a figure head. Honestly, even with his assets, even before the ground war... 9/11 was just a big, deadly, tragic, publicity stunt. It never represented any manner of existential threat to people here.... it was hogwash from day one.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    58. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is a lot of words about nothing.

    59. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Maltheus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      how long has it been from the kennedy assassination. no one, NO ONE, the vast conspiracy has issued a peep about it, even accidentally?

      Actually, E. Howard Hunt, one of the engineers of the Watergate break-in, audio recorded a confession on his death bed to his son. He also implicated Cord Meyer, Frank Sturgis, David SÃnchez Morales, William King Harvey, a French gunman who worked for the Mafia, and Lyndon B. Johnson. He could have made it up, I suppose, but he's hardly some crackpot. He's someone who would have been in a position to carry it out. And since it was a deathbed confession, there was no glory to be hounded.

      But you're right. Nobody cares or this would have been a much bigger story. People have been conditioned to blindly reject anything that might even hint of a conspiracy theory.

    60. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by bluemonq · · Score: 1

      I think you're dismissing him too easily. By that token, the Queen of England doesn't really squat, and England would go on just like normal after her passing with King Charles (eugh...).

    61. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by bluemonq · · Score: 1

      The problem with that is...well, as they say: if two people know about it, it's no longer a secret. I mean, just look at the leaks about the bin Laden operation. The original hope was that zero details would leak out. Now we know the dog's name!

    62. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      I have been close enough on the outside of a real conspiracy that went down to say.... I too believe in their existence if not most conspiracies.

      I think most conspiracy theories miss the fact that.... people, even conspirators, are seldom evil for the sake of evil. Normally their "conspiracies" are quite mundane... and generally more about being self serving than about actual power struggles or plans, and more about, making money for someone.

      Like "9/11 was an inside job"? Really? Conspiracies tend not to be so complicated... shit, look at the royal wedding security plans for "what if the bride runs away from the altar". They said there was talk of "making her go through with it" and even there they said there was no way everyone would play ball, and even the mundane end version got leaked in the end.... yet some people seem to think rigging sky scrapers with explosives in secret was doable?

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    63. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      No, Friday.

    64. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, many of the most outlandish conspiracy theories originated that way. Whenever anyone asks anything plausible, they can be dismissed by associating them with the ridiculous stuff.

    65. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Muphry's Law strikes again!

    66. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      2 faps per second?

    67. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're all wrong...last Thursday.

    68. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1

      People have been conditioned to blindly reject anything that might even hint of a conspiracy theory.

      I think that's called "healthy skepticism," "logic," and "reason." Requiring sufficient facts in order to believe an argument is not a weakness. Look at the fiction section of a library; any fool can fabricate a story that's reasonably convincing. SlashDot posters routinely denigrate religions on precisely this issue. Coming up with a theory of events doesn't mean squat. You have to get proof, not simply ask questions that raise suspicions. "This is suspicious" only means you need to investigate more to find proof. It never means you should start accepting something as true in the absence of evidence, and "I'm right" should never be your Null Hypothesis.

      The reality is that people need to say "I don't know" a hell of a lot more than "I think."

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    69. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      I don't consider it healthy, logical or reasonable to blindly believe anything. In this sense, it's not the conspiracy theorists who are saying "I know." They are saying, "I think," based on a limited set of facts. Limitations that even scientists have to deal with. The only people saying "I know" are the ones blindly rejecting theories because they are afraid how people might reject them if they do. They don't even take the time to disprove anything, because they think they just already know and that everyone else is stupid, and that's BS.

    70. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      OMG a Video Game System (not even the most popular one) has dropped OS Support, This is worth an attack on a company? Seriously? blah blah blah bitch bitch bitch

      Sounds like you are just made because they didn't fight for YOUR pet cause.

    71. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      Well, it will be copypasta (or as the nips say, kopipe, or so I'm told) as soon as I find a proper place to post it.

    72. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doubt it, 4chan has been full of "normal" people since it became so explosively popular in 2007/2008 when the media got a hold of Chanology. There hasn't been a good CP thread in years.

    73. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Agent_provocateur
      "a person or group that seeks to discredit or harm another by provoking them to commit a wrong or rash action"

    74. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Winning.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    75. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by lexsird · · Score: 1

      The guy has a conspiracy theory about conspiracy theories, so I guess this makes him one of "low iq and mentally deficient wack jobs".

      What retarded troglodytes marked this as insightful? This is troll bait 101.

      --
      Take the Red Pill.
    76. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah bro, it's still lol

      we're jus chillen, while u hatin :[:[

      R CONSPIRCIEISIS RLY CONSPRICISIES??/ lol

    77. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Hyperhaplo · · Score: 1

      What attack on Sony?
      Is there proof that Anonymous was behind the credit card theft? and if so, how have the benefited?

      Citation Required... ?

      Links would be nice..

      --
      You have a sick, twisted mind. Please subscribe me to your newsletter.
    78. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Stregano · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points right now as I can't agree with this enough (you are already at 5, but I would still give you something anyway).

      --
      The world is how you make it
    79. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The attack on Sony is just the latest example. Anon was at it's best a gang of relatively harmless jerks. Now they are just dangerous jerks with delusions that they have a right to be judge, jury, and executioner."

      Actually it's just an example of the market responding to a corporations actions.

    80. Re:Someone is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because you're stupid and/ or deranged. but carry on, i need to laugh. yes, i know: the chemtrails from the government airplanes and the fluoridated water has completely turned me into a sheep. (giggle)

      Or have they turned you into a wolf in sheeps clothing?

  2. woot by Osgeld · · Score: 5, Funny

    drama from something that doesn't even exist, ladies and gentlemen we have hit web 3.0

  3. it used to be fun by aahpandasrun · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm so sick of Anonymous taking itself so seriously. It used to be about raiding barbie message boards, annoying habbo hotel players, and prank calling Tom Green. Even the recent project forever alone, getting guys on okcupid to unsuspectingly meet at a pay phone in times square is what Anonymous was always about. Not this stupid hacker / legion bullshit. It's stupid.

    1. Re:it used to be fun by PhilHibbs · · Score: 2

      It's like the plot to Fight Club, isn't it? You like the fighting, but not Project Mayhem.

    2. Re:it used to be fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And I'm so sick of newfags constantly proclaiming what Anonymous is about.

    3. Re:it used to be fun by PhilHibbs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm not sure what a "newfag" is, but I agree, there's been a lot of people spouting stuff like "Anyone can be Anonymous", "how can anyone deny it was Anonymous, when Anonymous is my cat", etc. recently, clearly they don't know anything about Anonymous.

    4. Re:it used to be fun by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean Anonymous with a capital 'A'. I thought we were talking about anonymous.

      Everyone knows anonymous is a mouse (heard in the walls or behind the couch at night) not a cat.

      --

      Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    5. Re:it used to be fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I read here and elsewhere, Anonymous used to be the "Anonymous is everyone and no one" type of group you're describing. The whole "Organized Underground Hacker Group" seems to be something that popped up in the last 6 months or so. The first place I came across it was the news with an unemployed 20-something claiming he was a lieutenant in Anonymous. The 'organized group' comes off more as people trying to glory hound using Anonymous' name more than anything.

    6. Re:it used to be fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's something that has been said by Anon for years before this shit started you idiot mods, do I have to put fucking quotes around it?

    7. Re:it used to be fun by IsoRashi · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Not sure if you're just joking with a uid that low, but "fag" is just slang for a person. "newfag" is something like "the new guy" or "newbie". "wowfag" is someone who plays WoW. You get the idea.

      --
      This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
    8. Re:it used to be fun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Silly me here I thought "fag" was slang for a homosexual.

      Thanks fag.

    9. Re:it used to be fun by drb226 · · Score: 1

      Says Anonymous Coward. Hm...

    10. Re:it used to be fun by Altus · · Score: 1

      and I thought it was slang for a cigarette. Or short hand for a bundle of sticks.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

  4. The real reason why he left by simoncpu+was+here · · Score: 4, Funny

    Barrett Brown can't Triforce.

    1. Re:The real reason why he left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bloody Newfags

    2. Re:The real reason why he left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

       ∆
      ∆ ∆
      amidoinitrite?

    3. Re:The real reason why he left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that you only have +3 Funny, not +5, actually adds to slashdot's credibility.

    4. Re:The real reason why he left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > "I'm tired of the drama," Brown told Threatpost in a phone interview May 10. "You've got kids fighting for control of an IRC channel. I'm a researcher. I'm into revolutionary stuff. But there are other people for whom its about exerting power," he said.
      He mad.

      cap: dogmas

  5. New low in anon reporting by Vahokif · · Score: 1

    Good job, you managed to get "public face" and "group" in the same headline. Who the hell is this guy?

    1. Re:New low in anon reporting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He deals with all the media people and keeps things together in the IRC rooms, according to the transcripts of other incidents.

    2. Re:New low in anon reporting by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      it's just some guy who started making reports in the name of anonymous, with his own name attached, making them non reports of dubious quality. maybe he got enough of publicity now to score a real reporter gig? or someone messed with him for making claims, which wouldn't be a surprise at all.

      or maybe sony got wind of him. that would be great, actually.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  6. Isn't "the public face of Anonymous"... by futonrevolutionary · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...an oxymoron?

    1. Re:Isn't "the public face of Anonymous"... by Random2 · · Score: 1

      No, it's media hype. They want something to identify the group, attack, and discredit. Without some defining figure, it becomes pointless to try. Hence why they're trying to make this a big deal, because it allows for a 'target' of slander and disinformation.

      It's not like this really hurts Anonymous. Even if they have hissy fits with themselves (not the first time it's happened after all) all it means is the group momentarily shrinks, remembers what it's actually there for, and then resumes it's activity.

      --
      "Our goal each year should be to increase the number of goals we set for ourselves!"
    2. Re:Isn't "the public face of Anonymous"... by Random2 · · Score: 2

      Prime example: The president of the US. Compare how often you hear about 'the Bush/Obama/Regan administration' versus the names of the people who actually did the work, like Jacob Lew, Arthur Laffer, John Roberts, etc. It's far more convenient to brand one person/few people as the label for a group, and then force them to 'take responsibility' for the organization, whether or not they even know of the events.

      --
      "Our goal each year should be to increase the number of goals we set for ourselves!"
  7. namefag != Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    namefag != Anonymous
    fuck off Barrett Brown, we won't miss you

    1. Re:namefag != Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. The guy left Anonymous as soon as he chose to identify himself.

    2. Re:namefag != Anonymous by Nursie · · Score: 1

      I thought Anonymous' spokesman was David Mudkips anyway. H sure got his name in the papers a few times when the scientology protests were kicking off.

  8. Re:m00t by stonewallred · · Score: 0

    FTFY

  9. Quiting anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does that mean he's going to shout his name out loud in public spaces now, in order to not be anonymous by obscurity?

  10. Re:Loosely organized? by Vectronic · · Score: 0

    Wait... so it's Apple's fault?... Anonymous split into Mac Vs. PC?... gotcha.

  11. Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous? by mkraft · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe Anonymous will go back to it's roots instead of having "leaders" and "spokespeople".

    Hmm, maybe I should have posted anonymously. :)

  12. Isn't the public face of Anonymous... by digitaldc · · Score: 2

    ...a Guido 'Guy' Fawkes mask?

    I didn't know that something called 'Anonymous' could have something called 'public' - seems nonsensical.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Isn't the public face of Anonymous... by TheyTookOurJobs · · Score: 1

      Sh!t was SO CASH.

    2. Re:Isn't the public face of Anonymous... by Myopic · · Score: 1

      You didn't know that? Huh. Well it shouldn't be surprising at all. For reference, see Primary Colors (by "Anonymous") who had the public face in the form of a book agent.

  13. Post Group Organization??? by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1
    I thought that Anonymous didn't HAVE members, and that when 4chan was doing something popular (like LOIC) people were "part of" Anonymous and when 4chan was doing something unpopular (like getting raided because of LOIC) people were "not part of" Anonymous.

    It seems to me like in this kind of post-group, Mr. Brown could come back when ever he wanted.

    1. Re:Post Group Organization??? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      Welcome to the myth of Anonymous.
      Anonymous didn't take personal data from the Sony Network. Anonymous has no members so just because some people that say they are members of Anonymous did the attack you can not say Anonymous did it.
      Followed by.
      Anonymous fights for internet freedom!

      sigh....

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    2. Re:Post Group Organization??? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      he could, just not with his own name.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  14. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah! Back to its roots, before all these NEWFAGS turned up. Remember when /b/ was good?

  15. Re:Loosely organized? by pspahn · · Score: 2

    I would have chosen "Poorly Unorganized".

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
  16. My brain is full of F by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This headline is like some kind of Euler painting of idiocity.

  17. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by JosKarith · · Score: 1

    Yeah! Back to its roots, before all these NEWFAGS turned up. Remember when /b/ was good?

    No.
    Just kidding, but point taken. There's a lot less of that indefinable bastardness that reminded me of Alt.Tasteless and a lot more copypasta nowadays.

    --
    'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
  18. ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is no group.

    there is no anonymous.

    please stop posting these horrible "news" stories just to squeeze out a few clicks.

  19. Re:Loosely organized? by Dunbal · · Score: 0

    Nah I'm just laughing at all the idiots who told me I was doing the wrong thing when I am now $60k richer and they are not. Not bad for 2 weeks' work.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  20. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the meantime, ladies and gentleman, I'll be the new spokesperson for Anonymous. If you want to ask me anything, please just shout it loudly in any media.

    Thanks.

  21. Quitting may not be an option. by elucido · · Score: 1

    Barret Brown if he was every really in this group will find out soon that quitting isn't as easy as making a public declaration.
    That is perhaps the main reason not to join this sort of group, when you join they own you and you cannot quit.

    As far as Barret Brown being the public face, that was a stupid idea in the first place which smelled like a setup. The guy also released a crappy manual on opsec on pastebin. Couldn't he have made a PDF? A website? It didn't have much substance either.

    Let's face it, a group like Anonymous was never supposed to have a Public Face. It's a vigilante group. If Mr. Brown has quit the group it's possible he quit because he's been turned informant for the FBI. It's also possible he quit because he's been discovered. It's also possible he quit because of a legitimate dispute. But we cannot just take his word on it.

    We need to hear what Anonymous has to say about him.

    1. Re:Quitting may not be an option. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Barret Brown if he was every really in this group will find out soon that quitting isn't as easy as making a public declaration.
      That is perhaps the main reason not to join this sort of group, when you join they own you and you cannot quit.

      What? They're like a street gang now?

      If Mr. Brown has quit the group it's possible he quit because he's been turned informant for the FBI. It's also possible he quit because he's been discovered.

      It's possible he discovered they're mostly a bunch of dumbass kids. The ones who aren't dumbass kids probably aren't interested in Barret Brown.

      FTFA: "I'm tired of the drama," Brown told Threatpost in a phone interview May 10. "You've got kids fighting for control of an IRC channel."

      It's also possible that he's a dumbass too.

      FTFA: "I'm a researcher. I'm into revolutionary stuff. But there are other people for whom its about exerting power"

      OK not only possible, but extremely likely.

    2. Re:Quitting may not be an option. by elucido · · Score: 1

      What? They're like a street gang now?

      Some of the members may be members of street gangs and there could be a street gang, mafia, or gangster element to it. It's a criminal organization which relies on extortion so you can expect that if extortion goes on, it would be hard to break free from this sort of organization. Anonymous may have a lot of dirt on Mr. Brown or on any member who gets close to the organization. This could be any embarrassing information, such as that some members are potential pedophiles, or maybe other members have given their nudes to a member of Anonymous and this could be released, or maybe another members identity is in the possession of Anonymous and could be released to the feds(doxed and swatted).

      FTFA: "I'm tired of the drama," Brown told Threatpost in a phone interview May 10. "You've got kids fighting for control of an IRC channel."

      I'm not interested in what Mr. Brown has to say. I'm interested in what Anonymous has to say about why he left. He's going to spin it any way he likes to be in his favor. What does the group think of him now?

      It's also possible that he's a dumbass too.

      FTFA: "I'm a researcher. I'm into revolutionary stuff. But there are other people for whom its about exerting power"

      OK not only possible, but extremely likely.

      It's this anti government attitude that takes down groups like these. If they want to be a human rights organization, they did and can do a lot of good focusing on that. But when they focus on just one government, singling out the USA, this is not going to be very smart or very good for the members of Anonymous. While Libya or Egypt might not be able to do anything about Anonymous, the NSA, FBI, CIA, DEA and other three letter organizations have the resources and assets to wipe Anonymous out. I'm guessing the core members understand this and aren't interested in being tortured like Bradley Manning.

  22. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    /b/ was never good

  23. The problem with Anonymous... by Bloodwine77 · · Score: 1

    ... is that anybody can be a member. This isn't a borg collective with a unified vision.

    As an outsider, the first sign that Anonymous has gone off the tracks is when they poked the WBC. While the WBC are a vile group of human beings, it seemed odd that Anonymous would even bother with them. After that, they started to attack the Koch Brothers. I can't remember a few of their other more recent operations, but the term "jumping the shark" comes to mind.

    As an outsider, Anonymous seems to have two major issues: 1) it is spreading itself too thin with a plethora of weak objectives and 2) it has started to take itself too seriously

    1. Re:The problem with Anonymous... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that they fight against something instead of fighting for somethnig.

    2. Re:The problem with Anonymous... by Steauengeglase · · Score: 1

      I thought the WBC thing was just WBC members getting attention so they could start up a round of lawsuits from honeypots?

    3. Re:The problem with Anonymous... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      started?

      you must be new here.

      When they started protesting scientology is when they started taking themselves too seriously.

      The whole anonymous does not forgive and does not forget thing was a damn meme in reaction to getting banned by WTSnacks when he was feeling like a dickbag and handing out blanket bans because he thought it was funny against anonymous posters.

      the whole anonymous is a movement and force started after most of the kids who started the joke moved on or got tired of getting banned, or grew up and got jobs, so you had the group who got trolled and harassed by people from 4chan joining the ranks under the anonymous banner and calling themselves a group of hackers and trolls. Where really most were getting what they saw as "retribution" for being victimized in the first place. Most of them came from groups that were trolled by random 4channers spouting that meme as a joke. I remember some of the first raids, and the people who led them (SHOCK SHOCK THERE IS STRUCTURE) ended up being from gamefaqs, deviantart, gaia, and various furry communities (majority of them being from these) and all wanted to be the almighty, all powerful trolls that abuse everyone else. Naturally they took themselves seriously.

      I've been able to troll some of these so-called anonymous "leaders" quite easily, just found out their past, and started making mentions about it to them, they broke character got very upset, and left. You shouldnt brag about your online girlfriend and bring her around chatrooms, especially when she knows the real you and tends to slip up, showing her deviantart page with you as a watcher, with your art that will get you trolled mercilessly by others.

      WHOOPS.

  24. You had me at... by davevr · · Score: 1

    "public face of anonymous". No need to read the rest of an article when it starts with that line.

  25. Re:the unhol cost of paradise lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    get some help brother.

    please.

    i can see your mind and it is in trouble.

  26. 'newfags' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as they don't triforce, I'm ok with them.

  27. Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 1st thing I did when I went to post this was to make sure I clicked the anon post button.

    I was once part of 'the scene' and while there is loyalty, if someone has to leave they have to leave. It might have pissed us all off if it was an OCx with gigs (back in the day gigs was good) had to pull their box off the net but it happened. That is why we had multiple dumps.

    This story seems like such a non-starter. That a fluid group like anon is gonna be fluid? Ok.

  28. Anonymous does not trust Mr. Brown by elucido · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    And it should be obvious to anyone why. Mr. Brown is focused on the sort of activities designed to elicit the maximum response by the most powerful military and government in the world. He is focusing on finding corruption in the US government, in the US military.

    This is either a tactical error of epic proportions, or it's part of a deliberate design by his FBI handlers to turn him into the ultimate informant. I'm not accusing or saying with any degree of certainty that Mr. Brown is an informant. I'm saying that when people deliberately provoke the government, or talk about revolution in the USA, usually the loudest public speaker talking about it is the biggest informant.

    I believe Anonymous cut him out of the picture because Anonymous does not trust him anymore. He isn't a hacker, he's a journalist. He came into Anonymous from the perspective of an observer/journalist. If he isn't participating in the ops and does not have a reputation as being an actor, it makes a lot of sense for them to push him out. The attention of the media usually brings the attention of the feds.

  29. No such thing... by HotTuna · · Score: 2

    First of all, if there is such a thing as "Anonymous" then this guy left it the minute he identified himself. Second, 10 minutes on 4chan should be enough to convince anyone that /b/tards can't organize their way out of a paper bag. Third, ponies.

    1. Re:No such thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >mfw ponies

    2. Re:No such thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that he gave his name as being associated with a group suspected of major criminal acts probably means he's already talked to the authorities. Enjoy your visitors, Anonymous.

  30. RAGEQUIT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please someone tag this story with "ragequit."

  31. Not true Anon. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Brown told Threatpost that he and around two dozen Anonymous members are forming a splinter group to focus on efforts to root out what Brown has described as 'criminality and corruption' within the U.S. Government, U.S. military, corporations and the media."

    He wasn't in it for the lulz. He wasn't true Anon just a protestfag.

  32. Re:Ladies and gentlemen... by JockTroll · · Score: 0

    Gandalf leaves west. Thorin sits down and starts singing about gold.

    --
    Geeks are so full of shit that "beating the crap out of them" takes a whole new meaning.
  33. Where there was but one, now there are many. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you break a rock into two pieces, you get two rocks. No less rock, nor anything else but rock. And so it is with Anonymous. Where there was one large one, now there are several smaller ones. They are still each Anonymous.

    tl;dr If you thought that this was how you would be rid of Anonymous, then you don't understand. Anything.

    1. Re:Where there was but one, now there are many. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think that 2 small groups are as strong as a big one, then you don't understand. Anything.

  34. the number of objectives should be by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    OVER NINE THOUSAND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    http://www.google.com/search?q=nine+thousand

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  35. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PROTIP: We never had "leaders" and "spokespeople", we don't, and we never will. Because we are not a group!
    Those people are not Anonymous. If you can identify them, they stopped, at that very moment, to be Anonymous. It's that simple. Because that's how Anonymous is defined.
    Which shows that those who call themselves or others "Anonymous", haven't even understood what the word (capitalized and non-capitalized) itself means. Let alone the concept of disorganization with spontaneous (dis-)aggregation based on commonalities.

    I don't understand how you can have a bazillion of comments repeating that fact to your face 24/7, but it still not entering your head?!
    It's a level of ignorance and living in a fantasy world, that's on the brink of schizophrenia / fundamentalist religion / brainwashed by social engineers !
    Save yourself, man!

  36. Correct me if I'm wrong... by Millennium · · Score: 1

    Isn't someone claiming to be the public face of Anonymous by definition doing it wrong?

  37. Anonymous' Mother was quoted saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "He's not the Messiah; he's a very naughty newfag!"

  38. He was never a "member" of Anonymous by snarfies · · Score: 1

    Barrett Brown was NEVER a member of Anoymous.

    We know who he is.

    Therefore, by definition, he is not part of Anonymous.

    1. Re:He was never a "member" of Anonymous by thsths · · Score: 1

      > Barrett Brown was NEVER a member of Anoymous.

      > We know who he is.

      > Therefore, by definition, he is not part of Anonymous.

      You logic is undeniable - but flawed. You know who he is fine - but you didn't know that he was part of Anonymous. At that point he could have been.

      But once somebody openly claims to be part of Anonymous, he certainly seizes to be just that.

  39. And in the end... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing of value was lost.

  40. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trap thread? Trap thread!

  41. When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?!? by LordRobin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Those of us who have know of 4chan for 10+ years can't help but be a little perplexed at this transformation of Anonymous into "Hacking Heroes of the People". For as long as I remember, Anonymous, or as they used to call themselves, "/b/tards", were more known for pulling elaborate Internet trolls, vandalizing web pages, and basically creating chaos just "for the lulz". Far from being heroic, these people could be a nightmare. Get the wrong kind of attention from the Anonymous horde, and find your personal information posted all over the web.

    Then they chose a few targets who everybody agreed deserved it: white supremacists, Scientology, arrogant corporations. Suddenly the media decides they're heroes and everyone just eats it up.

    Sorry, I don't buy it. This is the same group that popularized the phrase "TITS OR GTFO", who created Pedobear. I don't buy that these people have suddenly grown Hearts of Pure Good. In their heart, they still get off on creating chaos for fun, and eventually they'll go back to it. Some 4channers will web-harass some teenage girl who made an ass of herself on the Internet (as already happened once), or do something else morally reprehensible, and will use the Anonymous banner because why not? Then the media's collective head will explode as they try to understand why their wonderful Internet Bandit Heroes have turned bad.

    ------RM

  42. Anonymous is the mob, it has leaders but denies it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The mob claims not to exist. They claim to be legitimate businessmen. They claim to have no hierarchy, structure, or internal planning.

    Those are all lies.

    Anonymous is an on-line gang. It has leaders, structure, goals. It denies them all because if it didn't, it would be obvious it was a gang and it would be subject to increased scrutiny and prosecution under RICO statutes.

    As the on-line world becomes darker and darker, people who use the Internet will flock to gangs, just as minority children do in inner cities. Gangs offer them protection and meaning in a chaotic, dangerous world. Gangs lure them in with women, drugs, and attention. Anonymous lures them in with pornography and jokes and gives them a place where they can be as racist and sexist as they want to be.

    However, like everything else in the world, ultimately it comes down to money. Someone is funding Anonymous. Someone is protecting them from the government (really, if a Japanese gang attacked one of America's biggest corporations, do you think the US might press Japan to go after them?).

    Who? Why, the US government, of course. Anonymous is a government-funded, government-protected para-cyber-military organization for engaging in false flag attacks against foreign corporations and foreign governments. Because of the outrageous behavior of Anonymous, the government has plausible deniability regarding their connection; in fact, the mere idea of the US utilizing anime and meme-obsessed "newfags" for false flag hacking operations against, say, Iran, sounds ludicrous. And indeed it should, because members who are attacking Iran are not posting memes and child pornography. They have very little to do with those members. Those members are the smokescreen. Their attacks against, for example, Second Life, were merely screening exercises afforded to a group of malcontent white metrosexual men to build an army of followers.

    You might respond "What about Scientology?" Do you think the US government cares about Scientologists? That was a clear effort to define Anonymous as "outlaws."

    And "What about Wikileaks?" Yes, what about Wikileaks? After all, do you think the US government is really scared of Wikileaks? Aside from Manning, who clearly violated his responsibilities in the military, has the US targeted any members of Wikileaks? The database Manning "compromised" was likely compromised dozens of times by foreign powers. No effort was made to keep it secure. And the data released by Manning? It merely supports the notion that the US did not attack civilians in Iraq. Almost all of the embarrassing information "leaked" by Wikileaks was detrimental to other powers, not the US. The US came off as, mostly, clean.

    The US isn't afraid of Wikileaks. Why should it? Do you think Wikileaks has the power of the Soviet Union's intelligence agencies at the height of the Cold War? Chinese intelligence agencies? British? Japanese? German?

    If the US is prepared to defend its intelligence against those powers, Wikileaks can pose no threat. Period. "But what about all the people in the US government calling for Assange's head?" Like, who? Palin? She's a private citizen. Huckabee? Another private citizen. There have been no attempts by the US to even charge Assange for conspiracy in the Manning leak. Zero. Why? Wikileaks is absolutely no threat.

    And since Wikileaks is absolutely no threat to US businesses or government interests, it can be seen as an asset. Yet another para-cyber-military organization for the sole purpose of revealing "leaked" information regarding powers that we want denigrated.

    Wikileaks + Anonymous = the perfect tool for going after weaker regimes and organizations with absolutely no egg on the face of the United States government.

    No, this isn't a conspiracy theory. I don't claim the government started either organization, but only that they found them useful and likely have moles inside them helping steer them the way they want.

  43. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They never left their roots. Even newfags know that namefags aren't Anonymous. Some self-proclaimed idiot pretended he spoke for a "group" that doesn't exist and the media ate it up. Never mind he represents nobody but himself.

  44. Re:Maybe Anonymousnwill go back to being anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't have any... the media and articles like this one make people they have. It's just a bunch of bored kids! (and retarded "adults")

  45. you got me by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i wrote "conspiracy theory" in a bunch of places i should have written "conspiracy". i made it confusing. sorry

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  46. Re:the unhol cost of paradise lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this was the last cry of desperation of his neuron before dying of loneliness

  47. What you are advocating for... by bjk002 · · Score: 0

    ... can be achieved by predictive analytics software already available. Someone just needs to pipe the tax data into the system. Its really quite trivial to accomplish from a technological perspective. Its the political perspective that stops any such endeavors from happening.

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    1. Re:What you are advocating for... by bjk002 · · Score: 0

      wrong thread... ignore.

      --
      Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  48. So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares about dramatizing hackers or what they do! This is as stupid as reporting on SEAL TEAM 6. Jesus get some real tech news /.

  49. Anonymous Direction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with Anonymous as a 'group' apart from being mostly comprised of young, idealistic, if not arrogant, cocky, and spoiled American kids, is that they don't really know right from wrong. They think they do, but what I've seen happen when 'Anonymous' shows up is an actual doing of harm to people who are actually working to forward the greater good. And I'm not talking about fucking PayPal, credit card companies, or Scientology. Most of these Anonymous kids need to be spanked. Their arrogance is astounding.

    1. Re:Anonymous Direction by sarku · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up.

  50. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what's wrong with Pedobear?

  51. Obligatory... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And nothing of value was lost.

  52. Re:IMF is encouraging the dissension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So your saying that Barrett Brown is the man behind the IMF mask, and that we really did land on the moon???

  53. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then they chose a few targets who everybody agreed deserved it: white supremacists, Scientology, arrogant corporations. Suddenly the media decides they're heroes and everyone just eats it up.

    While most of us don't relish the thought of many of their actions, we feel that it is particularly daring, spectacular, and a bit heroic to stand up to bullies which normal people can't stand up against. Or, I do.

    Scientology's pattern of abuse has been systemic - heck, I'm posting anonymous out of mild paranoia that I'd rather they not be on their radar. "Fair game" and their general view that lying, cheating, and deliberately abusing the justice system to silence dissent or criticism means that only an anonymous adversary has a hope of escaping unscathed. Similarly, it lets them stand up to bigots with less fear of repurcussions.

    I wouldn't join them, but I respect some of their actions ... even if I can also recognize that many of their other actions are despicable. I recognize that Anonymous is a diverse collective, rather than a single organized one one, and that I can't villainize (or laud) all of them any more than I can praise (or despise) all of the members of a nation for an action.

  54. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'd be more apt to agree with your positions if you didn't say 4chan was 10+ years old.

    It was made in 2003.

  55. 4chan was founded in 2003 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so, unless you're from October 1st 2013, or later, you couldn't know about 4chan for 10+ years.

  56. I have to say I agree by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Really, which is more likely? 1) there's a giant world-government conspiracy to discredit Anonymous (which, in the grand scheme of things, is pretty small potatoes)? or 2) a group of semi-antisocial types turned their anti-sociability on each other?

    I know which one I find easier to believe.

    1. Re:I have to say I agree by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      So you vote for the world-government conspiracy... Very prudent.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  57. sage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >know of 4chan
    >10+ years

  58. There's a reason for all this chaos within Anon... by gosand · · Score: 1

    it's called puberty.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  59. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's pretty impressive to know a 6 year old site for 10 plus years.

  60. Re:Anonymous is the mob, it has leaders but denies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No, this isn't a conspiracy theory

    Yes it is. You are making a claims that the US Government secretly supports Wikileaks and Anonymous (which would be a conspiracy), but your claim is wholly unsubstantiated by any sort of evidence (thus it is a theory*).

    A theory about a conspiracy.

    Conspiracy theory.

    And until you provide some hard evidence, it will remain a conspiracy theory and will be rightfully regarded as one.

    *Theory, of course, in the everyday sense, not the scientific one

  61. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by LordRobin · · Score: 1

    O_O Okay.

    Well, it's like this. I didn't remember when 4chan was founded, just that it seemed like "a long time ago". I knew it was at least 2004, because I remember reading /b/ before I moved to my current home. And seemed a while before that. Guess I should've Googled.

    2003? Really? That means I was reading 4chan back when it just started! I'm never cool enough to get in on the ground floor of anything.

    And because of this stupid mistake, everyone will ignore my points. Fine. I'll just post them again in the next thread about "Anonymous the Hacking Robin Hoods".

    ------RM

  62. Good, I hope they burn in hell. by lexsird · · Score: 1

    Let them fall apart and feed on each other like the animals they are. Offer up some of them incentive to turn on each other, and lets make a horror story/cautionary tale out of all of them. Decent people don't operate from veiled threats like punks. They screwed with ME when they hacked Sony. Before I didn't give a fuck about them or their baby games, but now, FUCK THEM. We need to lock down this wild west show known as the Internet. Its full of criminals that we can't find or track down. The music industry, and movie industry are about toast from all the thieves. The game industry is in shambles from trying to cope with thieves and asshats that hack their games then flood the cheat/hacks out to every jackassed punk.

    It needs to be a global, multinational effort, with no place to run or hide. And cocksmoke countries like China that encourage it's people to constantly probe our cyber defense, we lob thermal nukes at them until either they get the picture or they are all dead. BTW, here is a genius idea a friend of mine had for dealing with these Chinese hackers trying to probe your system/network. You let them in a port with some stupidly simple permutation that only a moron would put on. When they get in, they get the "welcome file" that is chocked full of western propaganda, thus flagging themselves via their own "great fire wall of china". If it doesn't flag them, we have really great propaganda, it might screw them up..lol.

    It's time for the anonymity to stop all around. It will help save the children. (lol) I am more interested in stopping the "Internet Douchbag" effect, where people hide behind their computer and say the most fucked up shit they would NEVER dream of saying to anyone in real life without getting throttled to death with their own shoes. If you are an asshole to someone on the Internet, they should know who you are immediately. I think after about a year or so of the mayhem that would occur, people would settle down and act like civilized human beings. It's like my driving axiom "Unleashed Road Rage Cures Road Asshole-ishness". Perhaps after Mom and Dad watch in the news were a couple got throttled along with their punk kid for basically letting their punk kid run their mouth to the wrong people, they will get off their ass and check out what their heathen hellspawn punk kids are doing online.

    Or one would know where that red neck retard lives at, the one that screams shit on voice chat, loves Fox News and Bush. The one that drawls out that Southern accent so bad that God curb stomps 12 kittens every time he hears it. I know it would raise a conundrum of choosing between tasking an Air Group to carpet bomb the entire area code for the sake of the gene pool, or surgical strike armed with a wooden spoon. (Slow death via wooden spoon is the gist)

    Of course, my ways might be considered a bit harsh by some. Nobody seems to like my ideas for getting our prison population under control. I say to save money, promote obedience and fear in the public, and reduce the size of all of our prisons down to only ONE that we do this: we feed prisoners other prisoners. Just put guards on the wall, open the cells and let them decide democratically who gets ate. We could sell this on Pay-Per-View and generate revenue.

    --
    Take the Red Pill.
  63. Re:Anonymous is the mob, it has leaders but denies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The mob claims not to exist. They claim to be legitimate businessmen. They claim to have no hierarchy, structure, or internal planning.

    Those are all lies.

    Anonymous is an on-line gang. It has leaders, structure, goals.

    That's not quite accurate.

    There is (or I should say, was) a small core group of people which your description applies to. But the bulk of "Anonymous" are indeed the random mob with no real structure or hierarchy. And while the core group does have a lot of influence, they don't really have any direct control over the bulk of the people who operate under the Anonymous moniker.

    What has happened in the wake of the Sony attacks, is that core group has splintered into at least two, and probably more, factions and have now gone to war with each other. Most "members" of Anonymous are not involved in this.

    You could compare Anonymous to a religion such as Christianity. Anybody can come along and say "I'm a Christian", and they are considered part of that general group. But there's no formal canon to follow, no central controlling authority, etc. There are a few core groups such as the Catholics, Mormons, Baptists, etc. which could be considered the "core leaders" of that religion, but they don't have any say about who gets to call themselves "Christian" or how they operate. Sometimes these groups come together under a united cause, but usually they go about their own business. The only major difference here is that Anonymous does not have a more-or-less standard Manifesto, whereas the Christians have a bunch of old documents of various sorts which they collectively refer to as "The Bible" and which are somewhat uniform. (I say somewhat because there are quite a few variants, and a LOT of disagreement over what they mean)

    No, this isn't a conspiracy theory. I don't claim the government started either organization, but only that they found them useful and likely have moles inside them helping steer them the way they want.

    If you think the US government is the only one doing things like this, you're hopelessly naive.

  64. Re:Anonymous is the mob, it has leaders but denies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cool story, bro!

  65. Post ended in quads by lupinstel · · Score: 1

    His post ended in quads, he was defeated by Taxmaster and was thereby forced to leave 4chan forever. At least he is a man with convictions.

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Cthulhu.
  66. I hate to throw out an "I told you so" but... by Stregano · · Score: 1

    The moment that they started getting better organized is when they actually formed a small, internal group. I am sure that people will be pissed and tell me I am wrong, but think about it. They have spokespeople saying they did not do the PSN attack and they even posted something on their FaceBook page that was a video that stated it while they showed their logo. Think about that sentence for a little bit. Really, seriously think about it. The PSN attack is a perfect example of what Anon truly is, compared to what people think they are. According to the rules and way Anon works, if even one single person does something in the name of Anon, Anon did it. The other people who do stuff with this every once in awhile will just simply not partake, like how Anon works, but that does not mean that since many people did not participate, that it was not the hand of Anon doing it. It is impossible to say that Anon did not do something when there is even a slight bit of proof that they did. Who is to say they did not do it? According to what Anon is, you can't say Anon was not involved. If Anon was not involved even though there is proof, even if minimal, that Anon was involved and they were "framed", that means that Anon can decide who is working for Anon. If you know who is working for Anon, then it turns into less of a collective, and more of a group of people who will bring in a bunch of people to do stuff. Also, who are the ops in the IRC channel of AnonOps (one of the meeting points for Anon)? Who decides who is an op there? Why are there even ops in AnonOps? According to what Anon is, there are no ops. There are no leaders. Groups are formed per scenario. That would mean no spokesperson, no catchphrases, no logos, no way of knowing if Anon is behind something or not. What I can see happening is that the base group of Anon is starting to feel heat under them, so they are trying to get away. A place like AnonOps, which is supposed to be a huge meeting place for Anon is just a small subsection of Anon. A smaller group of people that go there, even if alot of people go there. The people that started this idea probably forgot about the fact that if you get thousands of people together in a crowded area, a few of them are not going to go along with the "collective" and do what they want even if everybody else does not approve. They still do it though. Hop onto the web and see some of the attacks Anon has done to see that not every attack has been "for justice and good" or something like that

    --
    The world is how you make it
  67. Re:Anonymous is the mob, it has leaders but denies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who has been posting on 4chan since 2004, I can safely say that you have no idea what you're talking about. Anonymous is formless, if there are "groups" they aren't any more the leaders of Anonymous than people in a mob with a megaphone, you get "leaders" that popup and the group decides to follow if the message is good enough, the group is only held together by generally agreed upon ideals and nothing more. You throw out these statements such as "like everything else in the world, ultimately it comes down to money. Someone is funding Anonymous. Someone is protecting them from the government", this is stupid, you're trying to see things that are simply not there. There is no money or conspiracy, it's a group of bored teenagers and college students with a chip on their shoulder about how shit the world is and they're acting out, that and the same group but they attack people "for the lulz" without a set goal other than to annoy and cause havoc. In a sense, Anonymous is a fusion of Batman and The Joker.

  68. Re:When did Anonymous (i.e. 4chan) become heroic?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    10+ years? 4chan was created in 2003.