![]() The secret group's 5 biggest hacksThe shadowy group of hackers that grew out of an anarchic message board on the website 4Chan, has made headlines quite a bit in recent months.
By: battery 1. Westboro Baptist Church After a February letter threatening to hack the widely loathed church's site was revealed to be a hoax, Westboro played the role of defiant victim, inviting Anonymous to "bring it." Days later, Anonymous hacked into Westboro's website. "Take this defacement as a simple warning: go away," they wrote. "The world (including Anonymous) disagrees with your hateful messages." There's a "lesson to be learned" here, says Tony Bradley at PCWorld. "When your supporters can be counted on your fingers, and your enemies outnumber the population of China, it is unwise to brazenly invite attack." 2. The Koch brothers Most recently, Anonymous went after the Koch brothers — the billionaire conservatives and prominent Tea Party backers — by launching a denial-of-service attack on the website of their advocacy group, Americans for Prosperity. Anonymous claimed that "Koch Industries, and oligarchs like them, have...started to manipulate the political agenda in Wisconsin." It's quite "unusual for Anonymous to take on such a blatantly political operation," says Adrian Chen at Gawker. But Anonymous says the attack is about unchecked corporate power. The hacker collective is now "actively probing" Koch-owned company websites for weaknesses — something that should make executives at those corporations "very nervous," says Byron Acohido at USA Today. 3. The Church of Scientology Anonymous made its name in 2008, when it declared war on Scientology. After Gawker posted a notorious video of celebrity Scientologist Tom Cruise, Anonymous posted a video of its own, declaring that "the extent of your malign influence over those who trust you as leaders has been made clear to us. Anonymous has therefore decided that your organization should be destroyed." It launched an elaborate disruption program called Project Chanology, which encouraged people to spam the church with emails and phone calls and bring down its website with denial-of-service attacks. 4. WikiLeaks' foes In December 2010, Anonymous mounted "Operation Payback," a wide-ranging effort to punish companies that had broken with WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. When MasterCard ceased processing payments connected to WikiLeaks, Anonymous crippled the company's websites. Visa, PayPal, and the website of Assange critic Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) suffered the same fate. On its website, one Anonymous member explained that the group isn't affiliated with WikiLeaks, but fights for the same reasons: "We want transparency and we counter censorship. The attempts to silence WikiLeaks are long strides closer to a world where we can not say what we think and are unable to express our opinions and ideas." 5. A bigshot cyber-security executive In perhaps its biggest coup to date, Anonymous directly caused the resignation of the chief executive of a U.S. security firm that was helping the government track down cyberactivists. Aaron Barr, who headed HBGary Federal, had boasted to the Financial Times that he would reveal the names of some of Anonymous's leaders. The group responded by hacking into HBGary's computer system through its public website, accessing 71,000 private emails, and indexing them in a searchable format for anyone to read. (visit: http://www.batteryfast.co.uk/ ) Read More Information: # # # http://www.batteryfast.co.uk/ We aim at offering the most updated and high quality consumer electronics to shoppers from all over the world End
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