Thousands of Whistle Blowers Vulnerable After Anonymous Hacks SAPS
First time accepted submitter fezzzz writes "Anonymous performed a data dump of hundreds of whistle blowers' private details in an attempt to show their unhappiness with the SAPS (South African Police Service) for the Marikana shooting. In so doing, the identities of nearly 16,000 South Africans who lodged a complaint with police on their website, provided tip-offs, or reported crimes are now publicly available."
Reader krunster also submitted a slightly more in depth article on the breach.
How on earth does this fit with Anonymous' general philosophy of helping the little guy against the oppressive regime? Nine times out of ten they take that philosophy to an insane extreme, but this seems just the opposite.
Maybe someone else has a beef with some whistle blowers and wanted to expose some names.
Now you always have Anonymous to blame...
This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
Hackers ... This, they said was “for the 34 miners killed during clashes with police in Marikana on August 16 2012”.
So to protest the miners being killed by police, the hackers hack in, steal the information of other folks who had problems with police and then release it thus exposing those same people to reprisals?
What a bunch of fuck tards!
My comment about SAPS is no better. In short, they come across as brutish, stupid thugs. They are not police, just a gang with fancy uniforms.
"Proof that Anonymous are idiots."
- Anonymous Coward
the entire summary and the first half of the article is basically an agenda for discrediting anonymous and whitewashing the local cops.
the leak was in response to the complaints from citizens sent to the police department, assigned a case number, and basically ignored by the police. what were the complaints about? the shooting death of 34 platinum mine workers by the police. you dont need to worry about exposing whistleblowers because the police killed 34 mine workers during a protest pretty much describes the suspects. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/tvandradio/10016471/South-Africa-the-Massacre-That-Changed-a-Nation-BBC-Two-review.html
Good people go to bed earlier.