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Electronic disobedience

transmitter | 25.03.2003 20:13

About protests in cyberspace

Since cyberspace has become a type of public space, people have discovered it as a place for demonstrations. Cyberactivism ranges from inserting vicious pop-ups in undesirable websites to denial of service attacks and (sometimes very efficient) spoofs. Here are some examples:

Online occupation of Army careers office

Online Demo on June 20, 2001 against the airline Lufthansa because of their involvement in the deportation business. 13000 people participated. The Online demo was part of the ongoing campaign "deportation-class". Lufthansa is getting increasingly angry and has taken people to court - but their overreaction doesn't make them look very clever.

Denial of Service:
The electrohippie collective explains some aspects of present electronic anti war protests on its Iraq War Action Page. An example can be found here.

Cyberspoofs:
In early 2000, RTMark transferred Gatt.org--which people sometimes mistake for the World Trade Organization's official website--to a group of impostors known as The Yes Men. Since then, the Yes Men have been invited to several international conferences as representatives of the WTO. Here are pictures of one presentation.

transmitter

Comments

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government job

26.03.2003 08:02

That aljazera is down could only be the work of the U$ government.
I commented before that the PRO-war people do not have the co-ordination too do DoS Attacks, I still believe that. Only the whitehouse, "outraged" at the POWs footage would take this site down.

Democracy is dead


It only takes one person to launch a DDoS

27.03.2003 20:13

You say the pro-war people don't have the numbers to launch a DDoS, well it only takes one person to release a worm that launches a DDoS, more DDoS info:

 http://www.google.com/search?q=DDoS

Chris