A group claiming affiliation with activist hacker collective Anonymous says it has hacked 2,725 emails belonging to Tunisia's ruling Ennahda party, including those of the prime minister, in the latest challenge to the Islamist-led government.. In a video posted on a Facebook page belonging to Anonymous TN, a hacker wearing the trademark activist "Guy Fawkes" mask said the emails were released in protest against Ennahda's alleged failure to protect the unemployed and artists who were attacked by Salafi Islamists during a recent protest. The link for this article located at MSNBC is no longer available. . A cyber activist collective asserts it has disclosed 2,725 correspondence documents from the governing party in Tunisia, igniting fears about the implications of political hacking.. Tunisian Politics,Cyber Threats,Hacktivist Actions,Email Security,Political Leaks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hacktivism isn't found in the graffiti on defaced Web pages, in e-mail viruses bearing political screeds or in smug take-downs of government or organizational networks. These sorts of activities are nothing more than reverse censorship and "the same old cheap hacks elevated to political protest," according to Cult of the Dead Cow member Oxblood Ruffin. . . .. Hacktivism isn't found in the graffiti on defaced Web pages, in e-mail viruses bearing political screeds or in smug take-downs of government or organizational networks. These sorts of activities are nothing more than reverse censorship and "the same old cheap hacks elevated to political protest," according to Cult of the Dead Cow member Oxblood Ruffin. Hacktivism, as defined by the Cult of the Dead Cow, the group of hackers and artists who coined the phrase, was intended to refer to the development and use of technology to foster human rights and the open exchange of information. Speaking this past weekend at the Hackers on Planet Earth gathering, Ruffin pointed to the growing partnership against censorship between hackers, human rights activists and the academic community as proof that real hacktivism -- grass-roots resistance enabled by technology -- is a viable way to battle repression. The link for this article located at wired.com is no longer available. . Hacktivism isn't found in the graffiti on defaced Web pages, in e-mail viruses bearing political scr. hacktivism, isn't, found, graffiti, defaced, pages, e-mail, viruses, bearing, political. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hacktivists have officially moved from nerdish extremists to become the political protest visionaries of the digital age, a meeting at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London will be told on Thursday. . . .. Hacktivists have officially moved from nerdish extremists to become the political protest visionaries of the digital age, a meeting at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London will be told on Thursday. Paul Mobbs, an experienced Internet activist and anti-capitalist protestor, will tell attendees that the techniques used by politically minded computer hackers -- from jamming corporate networks and sending email viruses to defacing Web sites -- has moved into the realm of political campaigning. Mobbs says that the term "Hacktivism" has been adopted by so many different groups, from peaceful Net campaigners to Internet hate groups, that it is essentially meaningless, but claims that Internet protest is here to stay. "It has a place, whether people like it or not," says Mobbs. The link for this article located at ZDNet UK is no longer available. . Hacktivists have officially moved from nerdish extremists to become the political protest visionarie. hacktivists, officially, moved, nerdish, extremists, become, political, protest, visionarie. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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