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What has Sabu taught Anonymous?

That you are responsible for your own anonymity. You can’t trust your friends, or even a paid service, to do that for you. Taking risks draws attention and puts your anonymity at risk.

That Anonymous scares law enforcement enough for them to spend resources handling informants and attempting to infiltrate agents into the “organization”.

That our strength is multiplied by our disarray. We are not an organization, we are a network through which information spreads. We disseminate information and respond to it as a collective of like-minded individuals working towards a common goal faster than any organization could ever hope to.

That Anonymous doesn’t flinch.

We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive.
We do not forget.
Expect us.

Source: pastebin.com

    • #anonymous
  • 1 year ago
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#opAlarmClock - “The world is filled with Anonymous sleeper agents; wake them up.”

Click for Wallpaper

Anonymous has grown considerably in recent years. Not just in numbers, but also scope, agenda, and — yes — maturity. It has transcended beyond the limits of cyberspace to appear as freedom fighters in our streets.

Freedom. It’s all about freedom: freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom to share ideas, freedom from oppression. Anonymous is the banner that concerned citizens can rally around to amplify the voice of their greivances and change the world for the betterment of mankind. Of course, as with anything that comes from the Internet, this platform of freedom for all comes with its share of lulz.

With world governments trying their hardest to brand Anonymous a terrorist organization — because they tremble in terror, naturally — there is no better time for a recruitment drive. We have the momentum, the swarm can only grow. Because, let’s face it, more freedom and less oppression for all is the most virtuous of goals.

  • Share stories of Anonymous helping people with EVERYBODY.
  • Get them involved on Twitter, IRC, Facebook… wherever they are active.
  • Cultivate an interest in current events, local and global.
  • Grow the legion.

White Knights can wear Black Hats.

#opAlarmClock - “The world is filled with Anonymous sleeper agents; wake them up.”

Source: pastebin.com

  • 1 year ago
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It pains me to know that some of my brothers must fall before the masses will wake up to the truth: we outnumber them.
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It pains me to know that some of my brothers must fall before the masses will wake up to the truth: we outnumber them.

    • #reLent
    • #Anonymous
    • #Activism
  • 1 year ago
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“Pissing off Anonymous is like sticking your penis in a hornets nest.”

EVIDENCE

Richmond, CA, Police Sergeant Mike Rood (#116) publicly threatened to murder activists via Twitter, then deleted his account in an attempt to destroy evidence.

His actions violate California Penal Code 422 regarding Criminal Threats. The incident was witnessed by thousands, and many of them documented the threat as evidence before Rood’s attempt to destroy it.

Mr. Rood is expected to have a very bad day at work tomorrow.

    • #Anonymous
    • #OpPigRoast
  • 1 year ago
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Occupy Oakland: A medic’s firsthand account of the events on Saturday, January 28th, 2012

*********************************************
Source: http://www.reddit.com/r/occupywallstreet/comments/p3apy/
Archive: http://pastebin.com/VpUMYEt8 
Title: IAMA Oakland medic, and I want to clear some things up about Saturday (January 28th, 2012)
Author: mememonkey
*********************************************

First of all, I was privileged to be out there with a lot of brave and beautiful people. I’d like to give my own account of what happened on Saturday, because the mainstream coverage I’ve seen has been universally laughable, not that that’s any surprise.

Folks were mostly gathered up in Oscar Grant Plaza by about noon, and the march started around 1 or 1:30. There were probably between one and two thousand marchers. There was a sound truck playing music, and the mood was festive and happy. Parents brought their children along, and the whole thing felt a bit like a roving dance party in the streets. There was also a bus following along which the police detained about halfway through the first part of the march on some minor infraction like people weren’t all wearing their seat belts or something.

When the demonstrators reached the first target building, it was already heavily surrounded by riot cops, and people didn’t even try to get near it. I don’t think anyone was actually expecting the “secret” target to stay secret, given the open nature of the movement and the heavy infiltration. By this point police had begun targeted arrests against certain individuals which were evidently on their list of organizers or repeat “troublemakers”. Nonetheless, the marchers were being quite peaceful and were prepared to just continue the march around the city. The police weren’t having that though, and they fired a number of smoke grenades into the crowd, which caused a bit of a panic since many people initially thought it was teargas. Minor injuries were incurred amongst the marchers.

A number of older demonstrators as well as people with children decided that this was a good time to call it a day and headed away from the main police line and crowd. Police then rushed in and attempted to arrest some of the parents for endangering their children. I’m not sure exactly how this turned out, but I was told that a number of parents were able to get away with their children.

Police began to close on the demonstrators who decided to continue the march through the city. Soon after police began to deploy actual tear gas along with beanbag rounds and paint balls apparently intended to mark people for later arrest. Police claim that people were throwing things at them after this. I didn’t witness demonstrators throwing anything, but it is possible. I don’t find it to be a constructive activity, but I also can’t blame people for being angry after a peaceful march was attacked. Medics responded to high numbers of chemical contamination and blunt force trauma cases.

As the march continued, police started to use a new tactic which recklessly endangered lives and led to many injuries. They would form up in a line behind the marchers and then on some signal charge towards the back of the march with their batons at the ready. Although attempts were made among the demonstrators to keep everyone calm, inevitably many people started running as a natural reaction to seeing a line of angry club-wielding police charging at them. Lots of people got knocked down in the press of bodies. People helped up whoever they could, but I have no idea how many people were injured during this or how badly. The police continued to use this tactic all the way back to Oscar Grant Plaza, charging forward for a block before stopping for a minute or two and then charging again. This charging tactic served absolutely no crowd control purpose, as they were pushing people in the direction the march was already going, and they could have just marched behind the demonstrators keeping pace, since nobody wanted to get within arm’s reach of them anyways.

Anyways, people regrouped at OGP to rest, wash up, seek medical attention, and eat. After some time, a decision was made to march around downtown Oakland again. The march was somewhat smaller this time, but probably still around 1,000 people. Oaklanders don’t give into police intimidation easily. The march eventually became a bit of a cat-and-mouse game as lines of police tried to surround the marchers and “kettle” them in for mass arrests. At one point fairly early on the police nearly succeeded, but a temporary chain link fence was pulled down allowing most or all of the marchers an escape route. Later on, a group of ~50-100 demonstrators did get blocked in on a section of Broadway without any side streets. Police then rushed in, jabbing, pushing, and beating people with batons until they were forced back into a corner near a YMCA building. Some people may have escaped through the YMCA building, and police used this to claim that the protesters were trying to take over the building, although I’m fairly certain this was never the plan since the YMCA was open and operational, not abandoned. Once the group of demonstrators was blocked in and completely surrounded, police announced that this was an unlawful assembly and ordered them to disperse. A few people tried to leave with their hands raised and were promptly thrown on the ground, beaten, and arrested. The police undoubtedly thought that they were quite clever with the Catch-22 situation they had constructed, but I doubt any of the subsequent arrest charges are going to stick as a result. Getting the charges to stick was probably not the point though.

The demonstrators were pinned into the corner like this for probably 40-60 minutes before enough police buses and vans showed up for mass arrests to begin. As the time approached, the police suddenly singled out on of the demonstrators and yanked him out of the crowd, threw him down and cuffed him. It is likely this was one of the people on their special list. A small bag of powder (possibly meth) was planted on him as he was dragged away. Given the fact that everyone knew they were going to be arrested for the past half hour or so, it is utterly illogical that this person wouldn’t have ditched the drugs if they really were his. He was overheard to say that they weren’t his, that he didn’t do drugs, and was willing to take a drug test right then and there to prove it.

Police later arrested a large number of demonstrators near OGP using similar tactics. Apparently some demonstrators got into City Hall, although I’m not sure if any arrests were made in the building. Some people were taken to jail in Oakland, others to Santa Rita (a much nastier place) in Dublin. Some were cited and released the next day, others are still in police custody.

Given my impending court appearance, I don’t want to discuss the exact involvement I may or may not have had in any of the above. I think, however, this provides a much more accurate picture of what went down than has been presented in the mainstream media, and I thank you for taking the time to hear the other side.

Source: reddit.com

    • #OccupyWallStreet
    • #Oakland
    • #OccupyOakland
    • #OWS
  • 1 year ago
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Anonymous is not Unanimous

Anonymous has a perception problem. Most people think we’re a group of shadowy hackers. This is a fundamental flaw. Anonymous is groups of shadowy hackers, and herein lies the problem. Anonymous has done a lot of good in just the past 9 months. It has helped with other groups in providing aid to people on the ground in countries where “democracy” is a bad word.

The mainstream media needs to understand that Anonymous isn’t unanimous. I’ve yet to see wide scale reporting make this distinction. A destructive minority is getting a majority of the press, while those of us who toil in the shadow doing good work for people at home and abroad go unthanked. 

BART protestors didn’t spring up out of thin air this week. Protests against BART have been ongoing for years. Where’s the media coverage? If the media paid more attention to peaceful protests and general social unrest, I think hackers would be far less inclined to do things such as leaking data just to get the attention of the press.

Finally, hacking isn’t just about breaking into web servers and leaking data to the public. Far from it. Hacking is just as much about breaking out of things as it is about breaking into things. Hacking is lifestyle, and a mindset. It is about learning more about the technologies we use and social norms we are subject to. 

Don’t let the actions of a few skew your perception of hackers as a whole.

@AnonyOps

Source: pastebin.com

    • #Anonymous
  • 1 year ago
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Meanwhile, in Poland…
Yes, this is the Polish parliament. 
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Meanwhile, in Poland…

Yes, this is the Polish parliament. 

    • #ExpectUs
  • 1 year ago
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opbartsf:

Anonymous: Operation BART - Update 8-25-11

(via youranonnews)

Source: opbartsf

  • 1 year ago > opbartsf
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FCC commissioner: BART critics may be right

CNET published an excellent article regarding the August 11th communications shutdown at four BART stations. Pulling quotes would do this article injustice, so I recommend you give it a read.

    • #OpBART
  • 1 year ago
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@AnonaDread: Still no word from #LintonJohnson (PR Head).  But the police were heard loud and clear. http://t.co/6Ie3nB9  #OpBART #muBARTek #USDOR

Source: twitter.com

  • 1 year ago
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℅ Anonymous Publishing

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Care of Anonymous Publishing is an attempt to digest the deluge of information regarding Anonymous.

Published works may be edited for spelling, grammar, and clarification.

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