Anonymous Responds to Sony Attack Accusations
source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/05/04/973151/-Anonymous,-Sony,-and-the-rule-of-law
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- BKsaysAction
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Last month, an unknown party managed to break into Sony's servers and acquired millions of customer records including credit card numbers. Insomuch as that this incident occurred in the midst of Anonymous' OpSony, by which participants engaged in several of our standard information war procedures against the corporation and its executives, Sony and other parties have come to blame Anonymous for the heist. Today, in a letter directed to members of Congress involved in an inquiry into the situation, Sony claimed to have discovered a file on its servers, presumably left by the thieves in question, entitled "Anonymous" and containing a fragment of our slogan, "We are Legion." In response, we would like to raise the following points:
1. Anonymous has never been known to have engaged in credit card theft.
2. Many of our corporate and governmental adversaries, on the other hand, have been known to have lied to the public about Anonymous and about their own activities. HBGary, for instance, was caught lying a number of times to the press, to the public, and to Anonymous itself (in this phone call, for instance, ( http://tinyurl.com/...) CEO Aaron Barr makes a number of untrue statements regarding the intent of his "research," claiming for instance that he never tried to sell the information to the FBI when e-mails acquired soon showed that he had been set to do just that; executive Karen Burke was also caught lying to Bloomberg about having not seen an incriminating e-mail that she had in fact replied to just a few days before). The U.S. Chamber of Commerce lied about not having seen the criminal proposal created by them for Team Themis; Palantir lied about not having any idea what their employees were up to; Berico publicly denounced a plan that they had actively engaged in creating; etc. There is no corporation in existence will choose the truth when lies are more convenient.
3. To the contrary, Anonymous is an ironically transparent movement that allows reporters in to our operating channels to observe us at work and which has been extraordinarily candid with the press when commenting on our own activities, which is why reporters prefer to talk to us for truthful accounts of the situation rather than go to our degenerate enemies to be lied to.
4. Whoever broke into Sony's servers to steal the credit card info and left a document blaming Anonymous clearly wanted Anonymous to be blamed for the most significant digital theft in history. No one who is actually associated with our movement would do something that would prompt a massive law enforcement response. On the other hand, a group of standard online thieves would have every reason to frame Anonymous in order to put law enforcement off the track. The framing of others for crimes has been a common practice throughout history.
5. It should be remembered that several federal contractors such as HBGary and Palantir have been caught planning a variety of unethical and potentially criminal conspiracies by which to discredit the enemies of their clients. This is not a theory - this is a fact that has been reported at great length by dozens of journalists with major publications. Insomuch as that our enemies have either engaged in or planned to engage in false flag efforts, it should not be surprising that many of the journalists who have covered us, who know who we are and what motivates us - and who have alternatively seen the monstrous behavior of those large and "respectable" firms that are all too happy to throw aside common decency at the behest of such clients as Bank of America and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce - also have their suspicions that some capable party performed this operation as a means by which to do great damage to Anonymous in the public eye. Those who consider such a prospect to be somehow unlikely are advised to read about what was proposed by Team Themis in their efforts to destroy Wikileaks, and should otherwise take a few minutes to learn about COINTELPRO and other admitted practices by the U.S. intelligence community. The fact is that Anonymous has brought a great deal of discomfort to powerful entities such as Booz Allen Hamilton, Palantir, and much of the federal government; the Justice Department in particular is likely unhappy that our efforts revealed that it was they themselves who recommended the now-discredited "law firm" Hunton & Williams to Bank of America in order that the latter might better be able to fight back against Wikileaks. All of this is now public record, and anyone who finds it laughable that those or other entities may have again engaged in tactics that they are known to have engaged in in the past is not qualified to comment on the situation.
Anonymous will continue its work in support of transparency and individual liberty; our adversaries will continue their work in support of secrecy and control. The FBI will continue to investigate us for crimes of civil disobediance while continuing to ignore the crimes planned by major corporations with which they are in league.
We do not forget, even if others fail to remember.
We not forgive, even if others forgive our enemies for those things for which we are attacked.
We are legion, and will remain so no matter how many of our participants are raided by armed agents of a broken system.
We are Anonymous.
Supposedly there will be a third attack against the Playstation Network. However I hope Anonymous will not partake and in fact, track down the scumbags that framed them and show Sony and some disgruntled playstation and psp owners that they're a force of good.
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Paisano1
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AnonOps Network Pwned - Warned of Insider Threat
"It looks as if AnonOps has been pwned. Reports had surfaced that the hactktivist network AnonOps, which provides communication services used by the rogue movement Anonymous, is apparently battling threats to the integrity of their systems from a disgruntled insider..."
https://www.infosecisland.com/blogview/13621-AnonOps-Network-Pwned-Warned-of-Ins...
- 1 year ago
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Paisano1
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Paisano1
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Sony May Offer Bounty for Information on Hackers
"The fact that Sony is considering a reward at all speaks to how seriously it wants the person or people who carried out the attacks that have forced its gaming services offline for nearly two weeks to face prosecution..."
https://www.infosecisland.com/blogview/13619-Sony-May-Offer-Bounty-for-Informati...
- 1 year ago
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Paisano1
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Itsbatman_Durr
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indeed
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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BKsaysAction
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http://m.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/may/06/anonymous-sony-playstation-hack?c...
Here's another update. According to this story some rogue members may have been involved in the theft.
- 1 year ago
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BKsaysAction
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rustyred
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BKsaysAction:
If that is the case than they need to be shut down by the real Anonymous because if they are rogue, than they are not really Anonymous. They are nothing more than criminal hackers.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Itsbatman_Durr
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rustyred:
yeah there are always those that want to profit off of subversion. but this was a frameup
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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telcod
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Personally, anarchy is looking kinda attractive compared to amerikan dribble and foxy news. Less Excedrin. Clarity of vision. "Purity of Essence." Screw Fluoride.
- 1 year ago
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telcod
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jubal
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Anonymous are not thieves...they are subversives.
- 1 year ago
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jubal
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rustyred
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jubal:
You are indeed correct sir.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Paisano1
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Hackers Planning Third Attack on Sony Networks
"A third attack is planned against Sony's Web site. The people involved plan to publicize all or some of the information,, which could include customer names, credit card numbers, and addresses, according to the source. The hackers claim they currently have access to some of Sony's servers..."
https://www.infosecisland.com/blogview/13594-Hackers-Planning-Third-Attack-on-So...
- 1 year ago
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Paisano1
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rustyred
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Paisano1:
Not Anonymous' style.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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PeteLeS33
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'Another attempted at big corp to inflatrate its own computer banks, only to bastardize the real threat. This is only an inversion of terms. Anonymous never hacks to obtain personal information they only hack to find corporate corruption.
- 1 year ago
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PeteLeS33
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rustyred
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PeteLeS33:
You are absolutely right!
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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riverratt50
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Anonymous is a bunch of pimply faced punks that hide in their closets and try to hack into PRIVATE systems. Totally against the law. But, who cares on here? No one. Lawbreakers welcome. Republicans, Tea Partiers, Birthers and Right Wing Nuts we proudly hate em all while cheering on unlawfulness. Good Folks here on current. lol
- 1 year ago
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riverratt50
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telcod
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riverratt50:
When the law is outlawed, only outlaws will have law.
- 1 year ago
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telcod
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rustyred
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riverratt50:
Fuck off Rat.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Itsbatman_Durr
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riverratt50:
meh you are static
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Milieu
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riverratt50:
Dear Mr. Asshat, Anonymous has done more for freedom and Personal Rights than the entire Cancer that calls itself The Republic Syndicate has, so, Diaf and STFU.
- 1 year ago
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Milieu
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telcod
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Let's see? Who can we tag for our lousy security? Osama? No, he's dead again. How about..............
- 1 year ago
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telcod
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ReMarker
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Good snag BK and I'm with you. Anonymous catching the thieves would be great.
- 1 year ago
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ReMarker
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theknopfknows
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SOMEBODY IS WATCHING YOU,
AMERICA BECOMES CUBA! HA HA!
"WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THAT RAUL"
"IT´S ABOUT RIGHT"! FIDEL
TWEEDLE DEE TWEEDLE DUM
FIDEL and RAUL SAME SCUM! - 1 year ago
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theknopfknows
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timetide
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theknopfknows:
out of left field...
- 1 year ago
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timetide
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PeteLeS33
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theknopfknows:
Turnabout is fair play, isn't it??
- 1 year ago
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PeteLeS33
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savroD
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It wouldn't surprise me to find that the crooks are part of the plutonomy!
- 1 year ago
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savroD
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chew_chew
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Given the choice of believing Anon or Sony, I believe I would pick Anon every time.
- 1 year ago
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chew_chew
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NiceN
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I say Anonymous should get the information back and play Robin Hood. Also resurrect PSN, I'm bored... _-_
- 1 year ago
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NiceN
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Itsbatman_Durr
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NiceN:
omg bored times two doin the best we can though
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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BKsaysAction
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It's been a strange couple of weeks being both an ardent supporter of Anonymous and a frustrated PS3 owner. It's like watching parents fight. Clear up your differences and fix your faults. I want to get back to my games.
- 1 year ago
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BKsaysAction
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Arizona_Huey
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CYBER FIGHT!!!! Find out who tried to finger Annon and digitally kick their ass
- 1 year ago
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Arizona_Huey
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Arizona_Huey:
its known. its a battle of perception.
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Paisano1
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Seems "weird" they would post a reply on Daily Kos and not issue a press release on Anon News - this is probably more Barrett Brown drivel as he seeks to position himself as the "Anon Spokesman". Given the nature of the Anon structure, it is entirely possible some Anons perpetrated the hack, but the small inner circle of leadership (ya ya, they deny it , but they exist) did not sanction the hack. When you have a movement that has no requirements to join, and no official structure, you will inevitably have a free for all when it comes to objectives.
- 1 year ago
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Paisano1
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Paisano1:
Yep. And how can they say Anonymous didn't do it. Isn't there motto we're all Anonymous or something... if someone did it and didn't leave their name they are obviously anonymous lol
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
wow how clever
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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unimatrix0
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Sony is incompetent, using Anonymous as a scapegoat in order to draw attention away from their gross negligence.
- 1 year ago
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unimatrix0
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rustyred
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unimatrix0:
There is that possibility that Sony fucked up and has jumped on the 'Let's Blame Anonymous Bandwagon'. Or, they really don't know who it was and still jumped on the bandwagon.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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unimatrix0:
Or it could be true that a member(or members) of Anonymous did hack the network and left those files there and will not own up to it. Anonymous isn't a centralized group and no one is giving "orders"
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Itsbatman_Durr
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unimatrix0:
this is very true. that stuff was so badly organized meh
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Itsbatman_Durr
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
there are members acting towards a common goal and then sometimes the same members acting towards a personal goal
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Itsbatman_Durr
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dalistuff
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Wow, is this part two to Sneakers? Sometimes crypted messages lead to the truth. Welcome to the technical revolution.
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dalistuff
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artemis6
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Thanks for posting this , i was wondering how they would respond ....
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artemis6
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GISchmo
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If not them then who?
- 1 year ago
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GISchmo
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ANONRRR
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GISchmo:
That Sir or Madame is THE question. Let us hope that they will be brought into the light so that Anonymous can stop being vilified by others.
- 1 year ago
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ANONRRR
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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ANONRRR:
they take part in illegal activity...they vilify themselves...
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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timetide
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
I see we have a new troll. now the question is is it a new new troll or an old troll with a new profile?
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timetide
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bailey78
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timetide:
Old troll new profile.
- 1 year ago
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bailey78
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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timetide:
Oh that's what I love about this place. If you have a different point of view than the group of friends already conversing in a thread you are labeled a troll. Do you deny that this Anonymous group takes part in illegal activities? Amazon? Mastercard? Visa? Paypal? Bank of America?
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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bailey78:
I think you people don't understand where I am coming from. I support the sentiment these people convey, just not the way they do it. When you resort to illegal hacks you do in fact vilify yourself.
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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bailey78
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
are they not fighting Villains? it takes a villain to out villain a villain. as I see it they are working to keep others from deceit and bring forth to light that which others whould prefer to be hid most of which is big Corpertions as far as I can tell. I have nothing to gain nor to lose.. I am merely a bystander at the scene of the crash. Am I going to watch it Yes I am will I enjoy it Well Yes I will.
- 1 year ago
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bailey78
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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bailey78:
wrong + wrong = right?
"Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”
—Martin Luther King, Jr. - 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
Anonymous did not steal from these sites. They compromised them as payback for their dirty tricks against the people.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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bailey78
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
A lot of great men have said great things over the years. sometimes that light comes from a dark place. For even Hell is lit.
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bailey78
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PeteLeS33
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timetide:
HHHMMMMMM???
- 1 year ago
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PeteLeS33
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Itsbatman_Durr
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bailey78:
thats my vote too
- 1 year ago
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Itsbatman_Durr
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bailey78
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Itsbatman_Durr:
And that Vote counts!
- 1 year ago
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bailey78
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BKsaysAction
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Sony CEO Howard Stringer apologized today for the PlayStation Network breach, as meanwhile the company released specific details regarding the identity-theft monitoring promised to its customers whose personal information was exposed in the cyberattack.
Sony has made a deal with identity-protection firm Debix to offer a service called AllClear ID Plus for free to U.S. customers registered with PlayStation Network or Qriocity prior to the attack two weeks ago, Sony spokesman Patrick Seybold wrote in a blog post today.Sony Chairman and CEO Howard Stringer today publicly apologized to customers for the first time in a separate letter posted to the PlayStation blog.
"As a company we--and I--apologize for the inconvenience and concern caused by this attack. Under the leadership of Kazuo Hirai, we have teams working around the clock and around the world to restore your access to those services as quickly, and as safely, as possible," Stringer wrote.
Before today, Hirai had been the highest-ranking Sony executive to address the security breach, leaving many, including us, to wonder why the CEO had remained silent.
Stringer addressed the question that many customers and members of Congress have asked: why did Sony take so long to inform customers their information may have been stolen?
"It's a fair question," he wrote. "As soon as we discovered the potential scope of the intrusion, we shut down the PlayStation Network and Qriocity services and hired some of the best technical experts in the field to determine what happened. I wish we could have gotten the answers we needed sooner, but forensic analysis is a complex, time-consuming process. Hackers, after all, do their best to cover their tracks, and it took some time for our experts to find those tracks and begin to identify what personal information had--or had not--been taken."
Stringer emphasized that the identity-theft monitoring program the company is offering customers has a "$1 million identity-theft insurance policy" included. Customers will be able to enroll in the program through an activation e-mail they'll receive "over the next few days." Registration will be open till June 18.
Sony says this offer applies only to U.S. customers, but it is working on similar offers for PSN and Qriocity account holders in other countries. Sony did not mention whether a similar offer would be made to Sony Online customers whose information was also exposed.
The company says it still doesn't know who orchestrated what it's calling a "highly sophisticated, planned" attack that exposed the records of more than 100 million of its customers two weeks ago. The company is still working to retool its servers and bring PlayStation Network and Qriocity back online. Sony said today that it is in the "final stages of internal testing" before restoring service.
Sony said over the weekend that it planned other ways of compensating customers, though no further information was included in today's update.
On the weekend, Sony said that in addition to ID-theft monitoring, it would offer some free downloads and 30 days of free PlayStation Plus premium service to Sony customers affected by the breach. Qriocity Music Unlimited subscribers will also get free service for 30 days.
Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-31021_3-20060256-260.html#ixzz1LXXr66tE
- 1 year ago
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BKsaysAction
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rustyred
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BKsaysAction:
Thank you for posting this article. We must make every effort to show the world that Anonymous is in the game for the benefit of the peoples of the world.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred:
Are you affiliated with Anonymous? I am just curious what defines the parameters of "the benefit of the peoples of the world". What is the agenda? Will they send food to starving people in poor countries? Will they help fund cures for terrible diseases?
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
No, the agenda, if you could call it that, is to expose the truth behind why people on this planet are starving, or have rampant diseases, or are slaves, etc., etc., It is the greed and power of others that perpetuate these atrocities against mankind.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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ANONRRR
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It is unfortunate that the criminal element that has the knowhow to hack and steal uses the known abilities of the Anonymous hacktivists as cover for their crimes. Anyone who really knows Anonymous understands that our movement is here to reveal the truth that is hidden deep in the bowels of big business, governments, particular cult "religions", and those that would sell their souls in the name of greed and power. There have been those that have besmirched the reputation of Anonymous to their own ends. I call upon the hactivists of Anonymous to use their abilities to uncover the real criminals as they have striven to do with the legal criminals. I also call upon all members of Anonymous to do whatever they can to prove to the world that even though we have no official stance on particular issues, we are united by one righteous goal and that is the transparency of truth. The truth will set you free. We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forget. We do not forgive. Expect us.
- 1 year ago
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ANONRRR
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rustyred
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ANONRRR:
Well said.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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ANONRRR:
transparency of the truth....hm like the truth of PSN users identity????? perhaps?
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
No one cares about the identity of Play Station users. This is a ridiculous comment.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred:
Really....no one at all cares about the identity of Play Station users?.....then why did someone (or a group of people) hack into the PSN servers and take information on its users identity? Their networks didn't crash themselves and neither did those Playstation users identities steal themselves. It is clear that SOMEONE was VERY interested in the identity of PSN users. I am pretty sure that yours is the ridiculous comment friend.
- 1 year ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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rustyred
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
Again, it is possible that Sony simply fucked up and wants to blame someone other than own up to their mistakes. Oh, and I am not your friend.
- 1 year ago
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rustyred