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Hugh Martin
"Hacktivists Set Their Sites High"
The Australian
February 21, 2000
After the hacking of yahoo!, Amazon.com,
CNN and other websites in
mid-February, there was a general outcry about security and the
possibility
that this represented the beginning of an information war. (Information
warfare, by the way, is a sinister sounding term that doesn't adequately
describe the disruptive actions of hacktivists. It does, however, help to
mobilise public opinion in favour of the corporate and government
institutions against which most hacking has been directed.)
It's easy to convince people that their
electricity, gas and water supply
can be threatened by a mysterious group of cyber-terrorists bent on
destroying civilisation as we know it. It's equally easy to dismiss the
matter as electronic graffiti, the work of one disgruntled teenager. But
it
takes a lot more effort to explain why particular groups seem to be more
frequently targeted than others.
The recent round of hacking focussed on
commercial sites. Previous targets
have included the Mexican government, the Chinese government, the
Indonesian government, the FBI and the US Defence Department. Some of the
motives for these attacks, which rarely rise above petty vandalism, can be
explained politically. For example, the Zapatistas in Mexico have been
running a high profile campaign since the early nineties; the Belgrade
hackers of 1999 were protesting NATO's bombing of Serbia.
One of the most recent politically
motivated hacks targeted the Armenian
National Institute (ANI) whose representatives met with FBI officials from
the National Computer Crime Squad following a mid-January attack on the
Institute's web site that redirected visitors to an Azeri propaganda site.
The computer hackers called themselves the "Green Revenge Group" or "HiJak
TeaM 187."
The same group of hackers appears to be
pursuing a campaign to disrupt the
free flow of information to and from web sites on Armenian issues in the
United States. An Azeri newspaper, Zerkalo, in an article dated January
25,
stated that the group has "declared war" on a large number of
Armenian-related web sites.
Corporations on the other hand have been
slow to accept that ideological
opposition is hardening as a major element of mainstream protest. Clearly
any action that prevents a company from conducting its legal business
cannot be encouraged, but just as clearly there is a great deal of
frustration amongst ordinary educated people about environmental
degradation, poor working conditions and the effects of consumer culture.
The WTO protests in Seattle last year
demonstrated this growing frustration
and a deep level of cynicism towards big business and government, as well
as a willingness on the part of apparently disparate groups to express
their frustration through both electronic and physical protest. Electronic
protesting these days is a simple matter of downloading easy-to-use
software from the Web, or of visiting a protest site where you can set
your
browser to bombard a target site with requests for information. Anyone can
be a hacktivist.
But hacktivism covers a much wider range
of activities than simply leaving
rude messages on a company's Web site or even locking a site with denial
of
service. It also includes the general organisation of protests over the
Internet--by email and Web posting. The global G8 protests of 1998 and
1999 and the WTO protests of last year were successfully organised by
email and mobile phone--creative (but not illegal) use of information
technology by protest groups has confounded law enforcement worldwide.
Consumer activist organisation Adbusters promoted Buy Nothing Day and WTO
protests on their campaign pages: "If you're gearing up for the Seattle
WTO Conference (Nov.30 - Dec. 3)," they advised, "or planning to observe
Buy Nothing Day on November 26, visit www.adbusters.org to add the
following mindbombs to your culture jammer's toolbox:
* Download 30 sec. And 60 sec.
professionally-produced radio spots to
broadcast on college, community and commercial stations.
* Download B/W or color graphics to produce your own campaign materials.
* Scan the list of Buy Nothing Day organizers for local co-conspirators
and
links to other culture jamming websites."
Culture jamming, the practice of
subverting advertising and corporate
branding, is a gathering force and a close relation of hacktivism. Another
link in this chain is the proliferation of email viruses. Surely it's not
purely a coincidence that the majority of those pesky viruses, like
Melissa
and Chernobyl, infect only Microsoft products? |