anonymous control


February 7th, 2008

HPR ran a segment on Project Chanology, give it a listen if the subject is of interest to you. It also got me thinking that, while Anon might be a decentralized group, getting some control over their actions could be a huge asset.
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first round of scientology documents leaked


January 27th, 2008

The Church of Scientology and an Internet group going by the name of Anonymous have been going at ‘war’ in the past few days, with CoS being on the receiving end of quite a few electronic blows.

First round of documents that were retrieved from the CoS are here. I didn’t yet check to see how many of these documents have been previously available and whatnot, but briefly skimming over them, they definitely seem to be internal, ‘for-pay’ material. So if you find this genuine and have off-shore mirrors, you know what to do.

UPDATE: Obviously most of these documents and a whole bunch of other related materials are available at the Bay.


takedown - HLS


August 20th, 2007

Huntingdon Life Sciences has been engaged in animal testing for a few decades now and has been repeatedly exposed in the media for their cruel treatment of animals. Were this really providing an advance in medical research, some might be tempted to give them a slack for it - but cosmetic products, fertilizers, dyes and artificial sweeteners hardly justify anything.

Huntingdon vs. SHAC & InsideHLS


facebook DMCAs


August 17th, 2007

So some Facebook code got leaked in a bunch of places so obviously the guys sent around DMCA notices [I got wind of it when on the BinRev Forums the mods had to edit some parts of a thread to remove some of that code.]

But! The code can still be found in Google’s cache so I got my copy - and made a mirror in .jp  I won’t link to it for various reasons, but it is available for those that want it.


step one


June 27th, 2007

Spammers, phishers, DoS-ers… the dudes and dudettes that give spice to our online existence and always keep us on our toes. Every medium with its problems, naturally, and while completely removing one threat is unfeasible1, minimizing its impact is attainable.

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  1. It is either impossible or simply a stage before a greater threat emerges []

the aftermath of fbi’s bot roast


June 14th, 2007

One million bots isn’t that much. Think that some companies have thousands of computers living with near-identical settings - one gets wanked, so do the others. Most residences now have multiple machines, too, in a similar situation. Granted, a lot of these cases mean a limited number of IP addresses are available to the bot-herder - but it’s a failover scenario, one host goes down, the next one can do the herder’s bidding.

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nationalistic pride


May 18th, 2007

Well, it’s not about that. Before being suspended, Romanian President Traian Basescu awarded, post-mortem, the “Star of Romania” to the deceased Liviu Librescu, the Romanian-born professor that died at Virginia Tech while holding the door closed so his students could escape their attacker.

For that, Basescu will show up in next year’s Guinness Book of World: Fastest Presidential answer to a citizen request

So no, not nationalistic pride. But as the linked article mentions, it would be nice if more presidents actually ‘listened to the streets’ once in a while.


BT gets raided… again


February 28th, 2007

I’m doing this because I believe BT is one of the most influential contemorary artists, one whose work has done so much for our… spiritual well-being.

This is the second time his studio gets jacked… completely. So he’s posted a full list of equipment with serial numbers and he’s offering up a reward for information regarding the perpetrators. Info on BT’s Official Website.

Everyone down in Cali… get on craigslist and eBay and scout for these items. Entrapment, deceit and social engineering are your tools. Go have some fun!

edit: The picture of the reward flyer.


2 for 2


July 19th, 2005

I might make this a part-time job… anyway who thought it productive to read junk mail? :) this second case was LaSalle and a site in Korea… an ex-site in Korea.

cheers!


phishers


July 18th, 2005

— inaequitas wrote:

> From inaequitas Mon Jul 18 01:42:50 2005
> Received: from [inferno] by web40702.mail.yahoo.com via HTTP; Mon,
> 18 Jul 2005 01:42:50 PDT
> Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 01:42:50 -0700 (PDT)
> From: inaequitas <>
> Subject: Fwd: Account investigation warning [Sat, 16 Jul 2005 17:44:24
> -0300]
> To: abuse@thrunet.com
> CC: Report@doshelp.com, emailhoax@abnamro.com
> Bcc: this.blog
> MIME-Version: 1.0
> Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=”0-1059165754-1121676170=:3036″
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
> Content-Length: 11679
>
> Please consider the following site as it is phishing information from
> customers of LaSalle Bank:
>
> http://211.59.14.67:680/rock/la
>
> The IP was traced in the range owned by Thrunet.com so I feel it is your
> company’s responsibility to remove this website.
>
> [code]
>
> root@inferno root # whois 211.59.14.67
> query: 211.59.14.67
>
> # ENGLISH
>
> KRNIC is not a ISP but a National Internet Registry similar to APNIC.
> The followings are information of the organization that is using the
> IPv4
> address.
>
> IPv4 Address : 211.59.14.0-211.59.14.255
> Network Name : THRUNET-INFRA
> Connect ISP Name : THRUNET
> Connect Date : 20031218
> Registration Date : 20040922
>
> [ Organization Information ]
> Organization ID : ORG35266
> Org Name : Thrunet Co., Ltd.
> State : SEOUL
> Address : Thrunet IDC B/D, 1338-5, Seocho-2dong, Seocho-ku
> Zip Code : 137-072
>
> {rest of `whois` query response removed}
>
> root@inferno root # traceroute 211.59.14.67
> traceroute to 211.59.14.67 (211.59.14.67), 64 hops max, 52 byte packets
> 1 gw.freeshell.org (192.94.73.62) 0.561 ms 0.456 ms 0.434 ms
> 2 sl-gw28-fw-6-1-0-TS12.sprintlink.net (160.81.88.133) 7.793 ms
> 4.217
> ms sl-gw28-fw-6-1-0-TS22.sprintlink.net (160.81.88.169) 4.172 ms
> 3 sl-bb20-fw-2-0.sprintlink.net (144.232.12.161) 4.765 ms 11.605 ms
> 4.328 ms
> 4 sl-st21-dal-13-0.sprintlink.net (144.232.20.81) 13.704 ms 20.444
> ms
> 5.519 ms
> 5 so1-1-0-2488M.ar1.DAL2.gblx.net (208.51.134.33) 8.669 ms 22.219 ms
>
> 5.216 ms
> 6 so3-0-0-2488M.ar3.PAO2.gblx.net (67.17.94.97) 63.463 ms 48.682 ms
> 61.869 ms
> 7 ANC-Korea-Thrunet-Co-MOVE.ge-6-0-0.ar3.PAO2.gblx.net (67.17.163.22)
> 47.251 ms 48.811 ms 46.915 ms
> 8 211.110.7.101 (211.110.7.101) 200.778 ms 182.630 ms 184.053 ms
> 9 210.117.126.25 (210.117.126.25) 209.756 ms 201.706 ms 194.725 ms
> 10 210.117.121.130 (210.117.121.130) 184.155 ms 195.527 ms 221.298
> ms
> 11 210.117.121.169 (210.117.121.169) 225.086 ms 228.391 ms 195.173
> ms
> 12 dom1-incheon1.thrunet.com (210.117.127.162) 202.972 ms 197.256 ms
> 196.719 ms
> 13 210.221.6.54 (210.221.6.54) 196.707 ms 196.231 ms 206.281 ms
> 14 211.59.14.67 (211.59.14.67) 205.825 ms 192.363 ms 215.165 ms
>
> {traceroute information obtained through a remote shell}
>
> [/code]
>
> I thank you in advance for the steps taken in removing this thread from
> the Internet. This e-mail has also been CC-ed to ABNA MRO to allow them
> to
> take necessary steps as they see fit.
>
>


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