http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/09/world/09wiki.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=a2


Hackers Attack Those Seen as WikiLeaks Enemies

By JOHN F. BURNS and RAVI SOMAIYA
Published: December 8, 2010

LONDON — In a campaign that had some declaring the start of a
“cyberwar,” hundreds of Internet activists mounted retaliatory attacks
on Wednesday on the Web sites of multinational companies and other
organizations they deemed hostile to the WikiLeaks antisecrecy
organization and its jailed founder, Julian Assange.

Within 12 hours of a British judge’s decision on Tuesday to deny Mr.
Assange bail in a Swedish extradition case, attacks on the Web sites
of WikiLeaks’s “enemies,” as defined by the organization’s impassioned
supporters around the world, caused several corporate Web sites to
become inaccessible or slow down markedly.

Targets of the attacks, in which activists overwhelmed the sites with
traffic, included the Web site of MasterCard, which had stopped
processing donations for WikiLeaks; Amazon.com, which revoked the use
of its computer servers; and PayPal, which stopped accepting donations
for Mr. Assange’s group. Visa.com was also affected by the attacks, as
were the Web sites of the Swedish prosecutor’s office and the lawyer
representing the two women whose allegations of sexual misconduct are
the basis of Sweden’s extradition bid.

The Internet assaults underlined the growing reach of self-described
“cyberanarchists,” antigovernment and anticorporate activists who have
made an icon of Mr. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian.

The speed and range of the attacks also appeared to show the
resilience of the backing among computer activists for Mr. Assange,
who has appeared increasingly isolated in recent months amid the furor
stoked by WikiLeaks’s Web site posting of hundreds of thousands of
secret Pentagon documents on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Mr. Assange has come under renewed attack in the past two weeks for
posting the first tranche of a trove of 250,000 secret State
Department cables that have exposed American diplomats’ frank
assessments of relations with many countries, forcing Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton to express regret to world leaders and
raising fears that they and other sources would become more reticent.

The New York Times and four other news organizations last week began
publishing articles based on the archive of cables made available to
them.

In recent months, some of Mr. Assange’s closest associates in
WikiLeaks abandoned him, calling him autocratic and capricious and
accusing him of reneging on WikiLeaks’s original pledge of
impartiality to launch a concerted attack on the United States. He has
been simultaneously fighting a remote battle with the Swedish
prosecutors, who have sought his extradition for questioning on
accusations of “rape, sexual molestation and forceful coercion” made
by the Swedish women. Mr. Assange has denied any wrongdoing in the
cases.

American officials have repeatedly said that they are reviewing
possible criminal charges against Mr. Assange, a step that could lead
to a bid to extradite him to the United States and confront him with
having to fight for his freedom on two fronts.

The cyberattacks in Mr. Assange’s defense appear to have been
coordinated by Anonymous, a loosely affiliated group of activist
computer hackers who have singled out other groups before, including
the Church of Scientology. Last weekend, members of Anonymous vowed in
two online manifestos to take revenge on any organization that lined
up against WikiLeaks.

Anonymous claimed responsibility for the MasterCard attack in Web
messages and, according to one activist associated with the group,
conducted waves of attacks on other companies during the day. The
group said the actions were part of an effort called Operation
Payback, which began as a way of punishing companies that attempted to
stop Internet file-sharing and movie downloads.

The activist, Gregg Housh, who disavows a personal role in any illegal
online activity, said that 1,500 supporters had been in online forums
and chat rooms organizing the mass “denial of service” attacks. His
account was confirmed by Jose Nazario, a senior security researcher at
Arbor Networks, a Chelmsford, Mass., firm that tracks malicious
activity on computer networks.

Most of the corporations whose sites were targeted did not explain why
they severed ties with WikiLeaks. But PayPal issued statements saying
its decision was based on “a violation” of its policy on promoting
illegal activities.

Almost all the corporate Web sites that were attacked appeared to be
operating normally later on Wednesday, suggesting that any economic
impact was limited. But the sense of an Internet war was reinforced
when Netcraft, a British Internet monitoring firm, reported that the
Web site being used by the hackers to distribute denial-of-service
software had been suspended by a Dutch hosting firm, Leaseweb.

A sense of the belligerent mood among activists was given when one
contributor to a forum the group uses, WhyWeProtest.net, wrote of the
attacks: “The war is on. And everyone ought to spend some time
thinking about it, discussing it with others, preparing yourselves so
you know how to act if something compels you to make a decision. Be
very careful not to err on the side of inaction.”

Mr. Housh acknowledged that there had been online talk among the
hackers of a possible Internet campaign against the two women who have
been Mr. Assange’s accusers in the Swedish case, but he said that “a
lot of people don’t want to be involved.”

A Web search showed new blog posts in recent days in which the two
women, identified by the Swedish prosecutors only as Ms. A. and Ms.
W., were named, but it was not clear whether there was any link to
Anonymous. The women have said that consensual sexual encounters with
Mr. Assange became nonconsensual when condoms were no longer in use.

The cyberattacks on corporations Wednesday were seen by many
supporters as a counterstrike against the United States. Mr. Assange’s
online supporters have widely condemned the Obama administration as
the unseen hand coordinating efforts to choke off WikiLeaks by denying
it financing and suppressing its network of computer servers.

Mr. Housh described Mr. Assange in an interview as “a political
prisoner,” a common view among WikiLeaks supporters who have joined
Mr. Assange in condemning the sexual abuse accusations as part of an
American-inspired “smear campaign.”

Another activist used the analogy of the civil rights struggle for the
cyberattacks.

“Are they disrupting business?” a contributor using the name Moryath
wrote in a comment on the slashdot.org technology Web site. “Perhaps,
but no worse than the lunch counter sit-ins did.”


John Markoff and Ashlee Vance contributed reporting from San Francisco.

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