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Hacker Collective Attacks KKK Sites (theepochtimes.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A KKK web site went offline for several hours Saturday, part of an ongoing attack campaign being attributed to "several hacker collectives, including Anonymous and BinarySec, under a loosely-coordinated operation theyâ(TM)re calling #OpKKK." The Epoch Times newspaper reports that "Over the course of the last couple months, websites belonging to the KKK flicked off and on, members of the hate group have had their identities posted online, and their recruiting efforts have been attacked." Saturday's DDoS attack and others are being chronicled on Twitter with the hashtag #OpKKK, prompting the newspaper to describe the collective as "very active".

"Part of OpKKK is bringing attention to the fact that these groups are not dead and are in fact finding a new life online..." one attacker told the newspaper. "We private citizens have the right to pass judgment and respond to hate speech and those who perpetuate these dangerous ideals...and there are consequences."

6 of 191 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Dangerous Zealots. by Z80a · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, Those people generally "respond" by taking over the moderation of several places and carpet banning and deleting everything that goes against their rhetoric, and when its outside the internet calling the police with bomb threats, hitting the fire alarm etc etc etc..

  2. Re:Dangerous Zealots. by swb · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've been hearing this misunderstanding of free speech more and more.

    There's free speech, which is normally a shorthand for the right to free speech, which is constitutionally protected at the Federal level and often at the state level and the former is often used to enforce that right nationwide where government attempts to limit it.

    Then there's freedom of expression, which is the philosophical concept of the moral right to express one's opinion free from arbitrary constraints and reprisals.

    Pedants who use the limitations of constitutional freedom of speech as a justification for attacks on freedom of expression I think are somewhat dangerous. If you believe that freedom of expression is good, I don't think you should ever endorse private reprisals against the expression of unpopular opinion. Censorship and repression of speech aren't good qualities just because they are exercised by private entities, especially when implemented as hostile attacks designed to limit the freedom of expression of others.

    I think this leads to a mob mentality that justifies repressive behavior against unpopular opinion. If hacking KKK sites is justified because you believe their ideas are reprehensible, why doesn't that give the KKK moral justification for hacking Black Lives Matter? "Black Lives Matter is good and the KKK is bad" isn't sufficient.

    Freedom of expression should hold that everyone should be able to express their opinion without fear of reprisal. People may decide not to like you or support you based on your opinions, but this is a the natural outcome of the marketplace of ideas. But if you endorse affirmative attacks on unpopular speech makers, you are only relying on the winds of popular opinion before you may be subject to those same attacks with the same moral weight you claim to have.

  3. Re:Dangerous Zealots. by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Informative

    Can you define "consequences"? While I agree that no one has the right to do anything illegal, there is no right to be free of the consequences of your speech. If you publicly and openly espouse racist beliefs, then there will be consequences; everything from shunning by friends and neighbors to even potentially losing your job. The state cannot punish you for your beliefs, but society is not limited to state action.

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  4. Re:Dangerous Zealots. by Yosho · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ok, so all the posters being called SJWs here on Slashdot or Reddit or elsewhere for having an opinion have such magical censorship powers? Good to know how you view your reality and people you disagree with.

    Do you remember that time Slashdot interviewed Brianna Wu, and a few days after the "Ask your questions" article was posted, the majority of comments or questions that were critical of her -- several of which were at +5 -- was suddenly modded down to -1? And then every question she was asked was a total softball?

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    Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
  5. Re:Dangerous Zealots. by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the Jim Crow south, there was a body of law that sought to deprive blacks of political and economic rights. Segregation wasn't merely a sort of social agreement between white folk, it was the law in several states.

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    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  6. Re:meh by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Informative

    The KKK is granddad's white's only club. The current white supremacist movements overtook them a long time ago.

    But the KKK didn't come to its low point simply because people walked away. The FBI spent years undermining, much as it does with newer white supremacist organizations.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.