FBI Raids Target Members of Anonymous Hacker Group
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The FBI reportedly raided multiple homes in California, Florida, New Jersey, and New York on Tuesday morning as part of a coordinated nationwide crackdown on the illegal activities of the hacker group known as Anonymous. The residential searches resulted in the seizure of computers, and more than a dozen suspected Anonymous members were arrested, according to news reports.
One recent Twitter posting by the hacker group suggests that at least some members of Anonymous avoided immediate arrest. "We just saw a bunch of party vans driving by -- they did not recognize us," the tweet said. "Sailing off shore again, seeking shiny booty."
It remains to be seen whether Tuesday's raids will have any significant long-term impact on the number of high-profile attacks perpetrated for political and ideological purposes. "Hactivism isn't new, but combined with the rising likelihood of success and the greater damage from successful attacks, we should expect to see it more often," Forrester Research Vice President Jonathan Penn wrote in a recent blog.
Challenges Remain
The hacker group LulzSec, which currently has more than 333,000 followers on Twitter, generally prefers to project the more playful persona of a group of merry pranksters. By contrast, the principal message enunciated by Anonymous, which has about 122,000 Twitter devotees, reads like pages torn from the script of the movie V: "We do not forgive, we do not forget, unite with us," according to one of the group's latest tweets.
As Tuesday's FBI raids and arrests demonstrate -- together with the 15 suspected Anonymous members busted in Italy and Switzerland earlier this month -- participation in hacker groups isn't without consequences. The problem is that loose-knit organizations like Anonymous and LulzSec, which at times have worked together, have no leaders that law-enforcement officials can target and bring down.
Instead, these and other cyber activist groups...
2011-07-20 05:32:50