Civil society  groups  are not the only ones flooding into social media….  
liberation technologies can also empower less libertarian groups.  it's a 
popcorn article, but nonetheless useful to reflect upon as a goes to the heart 
of the debate between defending individual liberties and ensuring collective 
community security.

Rafal




http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/mexicos-drug-cartels-are-using-the-internet-to-get-up-to-mischief


MEXICO'S DRUG CARTELS LOVE SOCIAL MEDIA
By Joseph Cox


Members of Mexico's drug cartels are really starting to harness the power of 
the internet, using it to run positive PR campaigns, post selfies with their 
pistols and hunt down targets by tracking their movements on social media.

Antoine Nouvet from the SecDev Foundation, a Canadian research organisation, 
has been working with drug policy think-tank the Igarapé Institute on a project 
called the Open Empowerment Initiative. The project looks into "how cyberspace 
is empowering individuals and rewiring relations in Latin America" and has 
uncovered a wealth of information about how cartels are using the internet to 
their own nefarious ends.



Some gold weapons posted on a cartel member's Facebook page

The first point Antoine touched on was how cartels have utilised cyberspace in 
much the same way as a TV company's PR department might: "They advertise their 
activities, they conduct public relations initiatives and they have basically 
turned themselves into their own media company," he explained. "Colombia's 
cartel groups or drug traffickers in Myanmar in the 1990s were very 
sophisticated at public relations, but they didn't have this massive 
broadcasting platform."

Not all cartels want to be seen as the bad guys these days. After Hurricane 
Ingrid tore across north-eastern Mexico in September of this year, the Gulf 
Cartel uploaded a video to YouTube that showed them distributing aid to those 
in need. It quickly went viral and has racked up nearly half a million views.

The video-sharing site has also been used as a platform for cartel 
announcements that, for obvious reasons, aren't usually broadcast by mainstream 
media. For example, a speech by a leader of the Knights Templar Cartel – a guy 
known as "La Tuta" – has had over 900,000 views, 60 times the amount of hits 
received by the Mexican President's September 2013 State of the Union Address 
(which is dragging its feet around the 15,000 mark).



The Knights Templar Cartel's Facebook page

The Knights Templar (or "Caballeros Templarios", in Spanish) are particularly 
seasoned when it comes to social media. The group used to run a Facebook page 
under the immediately transparent pretence of being a "small business", which 
gathered over 10,000 Likes and regular messages of support until it was shut 
down earlier this year.

Of course, there's another way of garnering attention online when your group 
page gets closed by the mods: incessantly posting selfies of yourself with 
guns. Antoine pointed me in the direction of a guy calling himself "Broly", who 
lists his employment history as Knights Templar and has posted photos of his 
high performance 4x4, his gang of weapon-toting colleagues and many, many more 
that are just him pouting and holding firearms.



"Broly" pouting

Other cartel profile highlights include a Twitter account of a prominent member 
of an "enforcer gang", which contains photos of his gold-plated machine guns; a 
profile purporting to represent the Sinaloa cartel with pictures of what looks 
like a pet tiger; and an Instagram photo of a cartel member holding an AK-47 
out the window of a sports car. All of these cartel profiles are public – 
something that must be starting to get slightly humiliating for the law 
enforcement agencies pumping millions of dollars into catching them.



"Broly" and his friends

Cartels also have analysts working for them, monitoring social media "to find 
out what Mexicans are saying and keeping an eye on the movement of troops in 
and out of a city", according to Antoine. Doing so means the bosses can direct 
their own forces appropriately without picking up any unwanted attention on the 
ground. Cartels are also using encryption techniques like Onion routing to stay 
one step ahead of the law. "They are aware of the need to cover their tracks in 
cyberspace," Antoine said.

It's important to note that the cartels' application of this kind of approach – 
although relatively new – is far from crude. In May of this year, one half of 
the duo behind Blog del Narco – the most read and influential blog on Mexico's 
drug war – disappeared. His partner, who goes under the pseudonym "Lucy", told 
the Guardian he had called her phone, before saying "run" and hanging up 
immediately. The pair had agreed to use "run" as a codeword for fleeing the 
country when things got really dangerous, but it's unknown whether Lucy's 
partner ever made it out as he hasn't been heard from since. 

If the cartels did get to him before he made it across the border, they 
wouldn't have done so easily. "It has been done by advanced means: reverse 
hacking and finding out the identity of the people who are behind what are 
often anonymous posts online," Antoine explained. "It takes some technological 
savvy to find out who's behind them and then to track them down and kill them 
in real space."

It's similar technology that would account for the rise of a whole new kind of 
crime: "express kidnappings", which are typically planned and carried out in a 
number of hours rather than days and usually don't involve anyone being taken 
hostage at all.



A car filled with weed

According to Antoine, "New technologies such as smart-phones are leaving people 
very vulnerable to kidnappings." After hackers have compromised a device 
belonging to a target, the target receives a call telling them that their 
relative has been taken hostage – a claim legitimised with location data and 
other information taken from the phone. They're also told that they're being 
watched, with the criminals tracking their whereabouts through GPS. The victim 
is then told that they must not hang up, before being directed to an ATM and 
getting in a taxi to head to a meeting point where they've been told to hand 
over the money.  

Once they arrive, the criminals can simply take what they want and drive away, 
all without leaving the comfort of their keyboard. Of course, this technology 
could also be used by cartels to very easily trace an assassination target, or 
even for the hitman to take the lazy approach and lure the mark out to wherever 
they wanted, before putting a bullet between their eyes and driving off without 
undertaking any of the traditional groundwork.      

Whatever the outcome, it's achievable with very few resources and was 
impossible before the increase of cheap, readily available smart-phones.



A photo of a cartel member's suped-up 4x4

However, with the cartels becoming more reliant on the internet, it could also 
easily become an Achilles' heel. "At the moment it gives them an edge," Antoine 
told me, "but it could backfire very quickly."

This vulnerability was already demonstrated when hacker collective Anonymous 
conducted attacks on the Zetas cartel in 2011, accessing their private data and 
threatening to reveal members' names. However, the cartel quickly retaliated by 
"hiring" its own security specialists, and Anonymous backed down after one of 
its members was allegedly abducted. 

Clearly, cartels aren't packing their members off to computer science evening 
classes at the local community college, and it's likely the more specialised 
experts have been kidnapped. "They may be engaging young computer scientists in 
Mexico and giving them a good salary, but if they still require a skill, they 
just kidnap someone who has it," Antoine explained. "As of 2012, we had at 
least 36 cases of engineers who were snatched by the cartels, including an IBM 
employee, never to be seen again."

But even if they're kidnapping the best of Mexico's technological talent, this 
greater dependence on the internet could be the cartels' eventual downfall. 
"Technology that benefits the cartels suddenly turns out to be one of their key 
vulnerabilities," said Antoine. "And that could be the case in Mexico if the 
government adopts better skills and laws to counter them in cyberspace."




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