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    ‘Anonymous’ draws increased scrutiny from feds

    KTVU

    SAN FRANCISCO -- With another 'Anonymous' BART protest scheduled for Monday night, the hacker group is drawing the attention of the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and other federal investigators over its recent activities.

    What was once a small group of pranksters has become a potential national security threat, federal officials say.

    The FBI has carried out more than 75 raids and arrested 16 people this year in connection with illegal hacking jobs claimed by Anonymous.

    View video coverage of protests.

    Since June, the Department of Homeland Security has issued three "bulletins" warning cyber-security professionals of hacking successes and future threats by Anonymous and related groups, including a call to physically occupy Manhattan's Wall Street on Sept. 17 in protest of various U.S. government policies.

    San Francisco police arrested more than 40 protesters last month during a rowdy demonstration organized by Anonymous that disrupted the evening commute. The group called for the demonstration after the Bay Area Rapid Transit system shut off it cell service in San Francisco stations to quell a planned protest over police shooting on a subway platform.

    "Anonymous' activities increased throughout 2011 with a number of high-profile attacks targeting both public and private sector entities," one of the bulletins issued last month said.

    Some members of the group have also called for shutting down Facebook in November over privacy issues, although other Anonymous followers are disavowing such an attack -- underscoring just how loosely organized the group is and how problematic it is to police.

    "Anonymous insist they have no centralized operational leadership, which has been a significant hurdle for government and law enforcement entities attempting to curb their actions," an Aug. 1 Homeland Security bulletin noted. "With that being said, we assess with high confidence that Anonymous and associated groups will continue to exploit vulnerable publicly available Web servers, websites, computer networks, and other digital information mediums for the foreseeable future."

    Followers posting to Twitter and chatting in Internet Relay Channels insist there are no defined leaders of Anonymous and that it's more of a philosophy than a formal club, though a small group of members do the most organizing online.

    "Anonymous is not a group, it does not have leaders, people can do ANYTHING under the flag of their country," wrote one of the more vocal members who asked not to be identified.

    "Anything can be a threat to National Security, really," the member said in an email interview. "Any hacker group can be."

    The member said that the group as a whole wasn't a national security threat, but conceded some individuals acting as Anonynous may be considered dangerous. DHS' latest bulletin, issued Sept. 3, warned the group has been using social media networks to urge followers working in the financial industry to sabotage their employers' computer systems.

    The DHS warning comes on the heels of several Anonymous-led protests of the Bay Area's transit agency that led to FBI raids of 35 homes and dozens of arrests, as well as to the indictment of 14 followers in July on felony computer hacking charges in connection with a coordinated "denial of service attack" against Paypal's website last year.

    Security officials said the "DDoS" attacks occur when a website is overwhelmed by malicious messages carried out by thousands of followers, usually with easily downloadable software.

    "Anonymous has shown through recently reported incidents that it has members who have relatively more advanced technical capabilities who can also marshal large numbers of willing, but less technical, participants for DDoS activities," the August DHS bulletin said.

    Anonymous orchestrated the crashing of Paypal late last year after the online financial service suspended Wikileaks' account after the website published confidential diplomatic cables and other sensitive U.S. government intelligence. The group also targeted Visa, Mastercard and others for the same reason and has carried out several other hacks during the year. Last month, for example, the group claimed responsibility for hacking a website belonging to the Bay Area Rapid Transit agency and releasing personal information of 2,000 passengers.

    "Anonymous is incredibly active," said Josh Shaul, chief technology officer of Application Security, Inc., a New York-based provider of database security software. It's rare to have a hacking group willing to work outside of the shadows. These guys are quite brazen."

    Anonymous emerged in 2003 from an Internet chat channel where members organized random Web incidents for their own amusement. By 2008, the prankster nature of Anonymous morphed into "hacktivism," where members sabotaged websites and leaked confidential information for political purposes.

    Investigators suspect a splinter Anonymous group known as LulzSec was responsible for a June 15 denial of service attack on the CIA's public website.

    This summer, Anonymous claimed credit for hacking into a Booz Allen Hamilton website and leaking email addresses of 90,000 U.S. military personnel and hacking a Monsanto Co. website and releasing personal data of 2,500 employees.

    Until July, law enforcement officials around the world had arrested just a handful of suspected hackers thought to be affiliated with Anonymous. But on July 19, the FBI fanned out across the United States and raided more than 35 homes, seizing dozens of computers and arrested 16 on charges that they participated in the Paypal attack.

    In response, Anonymous said it hacked a website on Sept. 1 belonging to police chiefs in Texas. The group posted personal information such as emails about internal investigations before the site was shut down.

    FBI investigators in court filings said that the raids and arrests were made from a list of 1,000 computer users that Paypal cyber-security workers identified as the most active attackers. The fourteen appearing in San Jose federal court have pleaded not guilty and were released on bail after promising not to access Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites.

    Most of the defendants were younger than 30. Security experts and the Department of Homeland Security say most of Anonymous followers are so-called "script kiddies," young people who carry out the attacks and who are "less skilled hackers" than the vocal group members who call for the protests and attacks.

    The DHS defines script kiddies as: "Unskilled individuals who use scripts or programs developed by others to attack computer systems and networks and deface websites."

    Photo caption: From a  screen shot taken from californiaavoaid.org, an organization sponsored by Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), a page from the website after it and other BART-related sites were hacked by the hacker's group Anonymous on Sunday, Aug. 14, 2011. (AP Photo/californiaavoaid.org)

    Copyright 2011 by KTVU.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


     

    102 comments

    • Lisa  •  8 mths ago
      Those Anonymous people are talented but are not smart enough to earn public support.
      They can claim "freedom of speech, freedom of gathering and so on...". However the moment they hacked in the system and released people's private data and blockaded commuter's way going to work/home, they started becoming losers...
      • CristinaR 8 mths ago
        Agreed.
      • Eric A 8 mths ago
        I agree also. Don't forget that one of their favorite mantras is "The system is guilty." Apparently the members of anonymous feel that anyone who is not a member of their group, is part of the system, and therefore guilty and needs to be punished by anonymous.
    • love baseball  •  8 mths ago
      Disrupting those trying to stay afloat. Best news shot I saw on these protests was of a homeless man pushing one of the protesters off a BART train.. Protesting is fine but don't bother people making an honest living.
      • A Yahoo! User 8 mths ago
        honest living... workin' for Monsanto.... hmm.
    • Eric A  •  8 mths ago
      Isn't it Ironic that a leftist group like anonymous is making it so difficult for people to use public transportation, that people will most certainly return to using their cars during the days that anonymous holds their tantrums? Conclusion: anonymous is contributing to Global Warming!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  8 mths ago
      To Anonymous: If need be, "we the people" will take matters into our hands in dealing with you. You are no longer just facing the Government, you have now pissed off some people that can deal with you,,,,,, legally,,,, or illegally.
    • Eric A  •  8 mths ago
      Who decided that anonymous was going to be in charge, and that anonymous should be in a position to choose what is best for everyone (seems rather undemocratic if you ask me)? Isn't this how the Nazis took over in Germany in the early 30s, by using mob tactics, hysteria, scapegoating, and violence?

      Isn't it funny that member of both anonymous, and the Klu Klux Klan, hide their identities by wearing hoods? Why would members of a group want to hide their identities?

      Nothing but a bunch of self promoting goons, who feel that everyone else on BART is part of the "guilty system," a bunch of miniature Adolf Eichmanns, and it is anonymous' task to punish them.
      • A Yahoo! User 8 mths ago
        no shit, answers, my goodness.... (_*_)
    • Joe  •  8 mths ago
      I'm sick and tired of these guys. I get off school and have to deal with these d-bags. Having cell phone service on BART is a privilege not a right.
      • Nash 8 mths ago
        you must be a dirt COP. Wait, we will stop all those pensions in 2 yrs my friend.
      • Julian Garcia 8 mths ago
        He retard ok when you do need a cop because your ass is bleeding out on the floor ok good luck thats the fucking problem with people today. WHO FUCKING CARES GET A FUCKING JOB LIKE EVERY OTHER AMERICAN. go ahead be a bum and keep protesting havnt you realized you have made no progress at all they dont give a fuck about what you think all your doing is interrupting the daily working lives of americans and its fucking ridiculous
    • USC  •  8 mths ago
      Police State USA
    • WilliamL  •  8 mths ago
      These gus/gals are A**HOLES THAT NEED TO BE LOCKED UP FOR A very LONG TIME!!!!!
    • 88powerslave  •  8 mths ago
      People are sick of being screwed by there own so called government. Tell ya getting there myself. More power to them. Screw the big government.
      • Eric A 8 mths ago
        Yeah, screw the big government (I guess that includes President Obama also) by interfering with public transportation, and other people's lives. Completely logical, and makes perfect sense.
    • Eric A  •  8 mths ago
      I think that the big question is, why do the local news stations keep giving anonymous such a disproportionate amount of attention, even going so far as making anonymous' tantrums their lead story, when their are much bigger issues occurring in the area? It almost seems as though the local news outlets have a vested interest in fanning the flames of crisis, conflict, and controversy for the sake of generating ratings. If these people didn't have an audience, they wouldn't even bother putting on their little show.
    • Griffyn Elvyncraft  •  8 mths ago
      Well, of course Anonymous is a threat to DHS and the rest of the establishment. Any time an individual or group exposes the lies and corruption of the real terrorists and criminals which is the government and the people who own and control government, they become a threat. Not to the people, the citizens which the activists are trying to help, but a threat to the government and government's owners who they're trying to expose. Anonymous isn't an organization. It is an ideal. Ideals cannot be destroyed especially when those ideals are to protect our civil liberties and defend the people from the tyranny of big government. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
    • Havoc  •  8 mths ago
      In the bay area....? Never heard of these guys .__.
    • Anonymous  •  8 mths ago
      If they protest while blocking public transportation or related, then it really pisses me off. Look at how many people are trying to get home after a long day of work (including myself). By blocking a entrance to a station, you are delaying people from getting home which then points to the fact that they have to walk to the next station to board. And it makes trains/buses/etc... overpack too because everyone is trying to get onto the train or whatever from one station (depending on which station they are closer to). I remember the 2nd protest that they had to close down civic center, powell, montgomery, and embarcadero too. So everyone had to move down to basically van ness if they want ot take the train home. So if its a protest about bart, protest at the headquarters, not in front of bart station entrances or near public transportation or in a way that will block transportation. Can't people not use their cellphones for 20 mins? Or use it after they leave the station? come on...
    • Attila  •  8 mths ago
      Lock them all up, and make them wear their stinking masks until they rot off their faces.
      And I don't care which one rots first, face or mask!
    • John  •  8 mths ago
      Anonymous post information from people and hack in to get it. I cant stand the government, but you have no right to my information, as readily available as it may be. You are criminals and should be treated as such. Every week you protest and try to disrupt Bart. People are trying to make an honest living. I cant stand what the government is today, but stealing information and disrupting hard working people is the wrong way to go. Not too mention, I feel better when I am on Bart and Bart Police are there. Then again, I normally dont act like an idiot and keep a low profile.
    • Snowflake  •  8 mths ago
      I
    • Tony  •  8 mths ago
      BUSH & CHENEY created the fiasco we are in now, all of it.... and all the Right Wing cry babies do is blame President Obama.... Get a life.............
    • Garvman  •  8 mths ago
      anyone.... look up monsanto and see how cheny is or used to be vice president of this company that patents seeds for cultivation for profit and screws our farmers for profit. cheny and bush are pieces of sheeeeit.
    • Garvman  •  8 mths ago
      f#^% paypal, and f@(# monsanto..... you blind a$$h0&#es....... they steal our money and our crops and screw our farmers........what side are you guys on you dip$h17s......
    • John  •  8 mths ago
      this is pure BS, we as US citizen have the right to protest. HLS has NO right to interfere with that right. The (Non) patriot act can not and should not stop people from protesting unjust police action, (as is the case with the bart wannabee police). Bart needs to put real police in their stations, not these neo-Nazi wannabees.... The so called bart police are ill-trained, psychologically inept at dealing with the public, and at least, should not be allowed to carry any form of deadly force......