Latest Updates: internet attacks RSS

  • johnpi 10:32 pm on February 5, 2010 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , , , internet attacks, , , Joel Titus, Matthew Kaplan edl, , , , , , ,

    Several days ago I posted a photo from Internet vigilante Charlie Flowers’ Facebook page that i contended showed he had an English Defence League connnection. Richard Bartholomew looked at the same photo and thought I had made an ‘imaginative leap.’

    Flowers’ or one of his ‘Cheerleader’ associates has resolved the issue themselves by posting new photos to Facebook of Flowers meeting with EDL youth division leader Joel Titus, an activist with a history of violence who was recently arrested for assaulting a photojournalist, and Matthew Kaplan, who Bartholomew reports is the paid EDL publications coordinator responsible for leaflets and press releases.

    In comments to Bartholomew’s earlier post, Flowers’ or one of his supporters seems to have been most animated by the accusation that Flowers may be affiliated with or have affinity for racists or white supremacists. This latest photo seems a calculated response meant to subvert that conclusion. An anti-Fascist publication describes the mixed-race Titus as the figure the EDL “parades to the media as proof of their non-racist agenda.” Kaplan is a Jewish American student from Seattle, which supposedly rebuts the EDL’s reputation for Nazi affinities. Kaplan has appeared at several EDL demonstrations waving the Israeli flag. However the presence of minorities and Jews is hardly a defense. Racism and religious persecution are as much about who you exclude as who you let in.

    Flowers and his Internet vigilante friends the ‘Cheerleaders’ claim to be opposed to Islamic extremism, but they are actually against Islam and target Muslims indiscriminately, just as their fellow travelers in the EDL do, and there is no better evidence of that than the intimidation tactics they engaged in here at Talk Islam, publishing several front page contributors’ home addresses and sending mail to one blogger’s home. They have also repeatedly threatened me.

    None of those targeted – Hussein Rashid, Aziz Poonawalla or myself – could be described as anything other than moderate or progressive Muslims who have wrtten against extremism and religious violence.

     
  • johnpi 4:18 pm on February 1, 2010 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , England First Party, , , , internet attacks,

    Cyber-stalker Charlie Flowers’ English Defense League connection.

    Flowers’ group (‘the Cheerleaders‘) vows to engage in vigilante intimidation campaigns against online Islamists, but of the actions we know of, he and the group have mostly harassed moderate and progressive Muslims (here at Talk Islam), and UK leftists like Tim Ireland who has written against the BNP, an even more extreme right-wing, racist group than the EDL. Ireland was also the subject of a ‘Cheerleaders’ death threat, when Flowers or someone affiliated with the group threatened a “machete to your throat.”

    Here’s a photo from Flowers’ Facebook page:

    Photobucket

    Flowers is the balding, middle-aged man at far left in the back. The date the photo was taken is unknown, but it was posted to Facebook on Dec. 2. The others in the photo are Darren Marsh, ‘Shooter Kirpachi’ and Bill Baker. Marsh, on his Facebook page, is a ‘fan’ of a number of British nationalist affinity sites such as “English and proud,” “English Democrats – Putting England first!” and “England,” the latter two being fan pages of the English Democrat Party. The London mayoral candidate for the EDP withdrew in 2008 after he found that the party had entered into an alliance with the “avowedly racist” (Wikipedia) England First Party not to stand against one another. The candidate, Matt O’Connor, described EDP members this way:

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 10:44 am on January 31, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: internet attacks,

    Iranian Hackers attack Dutch Persian website.

    Hackers calling themselves the Iranian Cyber Army hijacked the website of a Dutch-based Persian language radio station at the weekend, weeks after doing the same to China’s Baidu Inc search engine and Twitter.com.

    Since early Saturday, visitors to the website of Dutch government-funded Radio Zamaneh, which reports on human rights and unrest in Iran, have seen the message “this web site has been hacked by Iranian Cyber Army” followed by a warning in Persian:

    “Iranian Cyber Army warns all treasonous mercenaries that it will not leave them at peace even in the bosom of their masters.”

    The radio station is trying to regain control of the site and expects to be back online on Monday, editor-in-chief Farid Haerinejad told Reuters.
    ….

    Radio Zamaneh is an independent foundation which describes itself at the “unheard voice of young Iran”. It broadcasts news and analysis of topics such as gender issues and religious minorities in Iran, along with music and entertainment.

     
  • johnpi 6:44 am on August 29, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , internet attacks

    Umair Haque at Harvard Business Publishing has an article on ‘information warfare’ tactics, as applied to the US healthcare debate.

    1. Speed it up. Use tools that transmit information orders of magnitude faster: as close to real-time as possible. Your enemies use email. Use Twitter, Facebook, and iPhone Apps instead.

    2. Microchunk it. Small resources, like messages, are more efficiently transmitted and utilized than big ones. Your enemies use lengthy, wordy messages — seriously inefficient communications. Try 140 character Tweets instead.

    3. Meta-attack. You’re attacking with “facts.” But facts don’t matter, because your enemy doesn’t value information like you do. Life expectancy’s smaller in the States? So what — according to your enemies, you can’t trust facts from Cuba (or France). So you have to attack not with “facts”, but with meta-information about how to value facts. Start with meta-information about how to value insurance rationally — over a lifetime, not a day, for example.

     
  • johnpi 2:52 pm on August 14, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , hackers, , internet attacks,

    Web war breaks out between pro-China and pro-Muslim bloggers.

    Pro-China and pro-Muslim hackers have clashed online in a series of attacks on Web sites triggered by deadly ethnic riots in China’s Muslim region last month.

    Messages left on defaced Web sites have either supported or condemned China’s rule over Xinjiang, the western province where rioting killed nearly 200 people. Chinese government Web sites have become the latest targets, adding to online attacks against an Australian film festival and a Turkish government site.
    ….

    Pro-China hackers last month defaced the Web sites of the Turkish Embassy in China and the Melbourne International Film Festival. The embassy was targeted after Turkish officials criticized China following the unrest in Xinjiang, and the film festival was targeted as it prepared to show a documentary about Rebiya Kadeer, a Uighur leader accused by China of organizing the riots.

    Attackers placed the Chinese flag and messages blasting Kadeer on the film festival Web site, and later organized a flood of the festival’s online ticketing system that left the showing of the Kadeer documentary sold out.

     
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