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Forum Post: BREAKING - Anonymous Takes Down FBI, DoJ And Music Industry Websites

Posted 12 years ago on Jan. 19, 2012, 9:14 p.m. EST by PeaceNow (84)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

BREAKING Anonymous takes down FBI, DoJ and music industry websites

http://rt.com/usa/news/anonymous-doj-universal-sopa-235/

Hacktivists with the collective Anonymous are waging an attack on the website for the White House after successfully breaking the sites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA and Motion Picture Association of America.

In response to today’s federal raid on the file sharing service Megaupload, hackers with the online collective Anonymous have broken the websites for the FBI, Department of Justice, Universal Music Group, RIAA, Motion Picture Association of America and Warner Music Group.

“It was in retaliation for Megaupload, as was the concurrent attack on Justice.org,” Anonymous operative Barrett Brown tells RT on Thursday afternoon.

Only hours before the DoJ and Universal sites went down, news broke that Megaupload, a massive file sharing site with a reported 50 million daily users, was taken down by federal agents. Four people linked to Megaupload were arrested in New Zealand and an international crackdown led agents to serving at least 20 search warrants across the globe.

The latest of sites to fall is FBI.gov, which finally broke at around 7:40 pm EST Thursday evening.Less than an hour after the DoJ and Universal sites came down, the website for the RIAA, or Recording Industry Association of America, went offline as well. Shortly before 6 p.m EST, the government’s Copyright.gov site went down as well. Thirty minutes later came the site for BMI, or Broadcast Music, Inc, the licensing organization that represents some of the biggest names in music.

Also on Thursday, MPAA.org also returned an error as Anonymous hacktivists managed to bring the website for the Motion Picture Association of America. The group, headed by former senator Chris Dodd, is an adamant supporter of both PIPA and SOPA legislation. Universal Music Group, or UMG, is the largest record company in the United States and under its umbrella are the labels Interscope-Geffen-A&M, the Island Def Jam Motown Music Group and Mercury Records. Brown adds that “more is coming” and Anonymous-aligned hacktivists are pursuing a joint effort with others to “damage campaign raising abilities of remaining Democrats who support SOPA.”

Although many members of Congress have just this week changed their stance on the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA, the raid on Megaupload Thursday proved that the feds don’t need SOPA or its sister legislation, PIPA, in order to pose a blow to the Web.

Brown adds that operatives involved in the project will use an “experimental campaign” and search engine optimization techniques “whereby to forever saddle some of these congressmen with their record on this issue.”

8 Comments

8 Comments


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[-] 2 points by ComeTogetherNOW (650) 12 years ago

We need to keep the internet free. The Megaupload raid demanded a response. They got it. We can use the same technology they seek to limit to keep it free. This technology is our best tool to free ourselves from the money grubbers who want to use us like sponges to stack up their wealth.

Peace.

[-] 1 points by mserfas (652) from Ashland, PA 12 years ago

The Anonymous attacks seem reminiscent of some of the stink-bomb and purgative type pranks that the OSS used to try to support morale in occupied Europe before the Allies could mobilize for invasion. They're not seriously damaging the government or its campaigns, and in the meanwhile, the precedent is being set (once again) that anyone who in any way assists two people in communicating has a duty to spy on and censor their conversation. This is the bedrock principle that replaces freedom of the press and freedom of association in any copyright-abiding society. But however small, the Anonymous action has worked - it got me, and probably you, to look up what happened with Megaupload. http://rt.com/usa/news/megaupload-shut-million-authorities-231/

Whatever happens, however long it takes for the tides of war to turn, we can be confident of one thing above all: copyrights on intangible content simply don't work. There are infinitely more efficient ways to reward creative work. Whether in an orgy of joyful piracy, or amid massive predatory lawsuits alleging similarity of works, or even because the creative process has been replaced so much by strategic promotion within massive monopolistic publishers that no one even wants to read books or listen to music any more... one way or another, this war will end.

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[-] -3 points by Girlfryday (-45) 12 years ago

So you protest what you believe is a crime by commiting a crime. Nicely done. Cause that will so help to make things better

[-] 0 points by GirlFriday (17435) 12 years ago

Bwaaahahahahahaha. Ahhh, shit. Isn't this fun? I think watching you little Koch whores is pretty fun

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[-] -3 points by Girlfryday (-45) 12 years ago

It is indeed. I can't wait for you to be enslaved

[-] 0 points by GirlFriday (17435) 12 years ago

Bwaaahahahahahaha. Ahhh, shit. Isn't this fun? I think watching you little Koch whores is pretty fun.

[-] -3 points by Girlfryday (-45) 12 years ago

doh ya got me

[-] 0 points by GirlFriday (17435) 12 years ago

Bwaaahahahahahaha. Ahhh, shit. Isn't this fun? I think watching you little Koch whores is pretty fun

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