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Anonymous Outing KKK Members (1 Viewer)

Madeline Rogero is a Democrat, half hispanic, and a rumored lesbian. This list is weird.
I haven't been following this closely, but I think Anon has disavowed the lists that have been posted up to this point Has there been an OFFICIAL™ list from them?
Correct, they have made it clear that none of the lists posted are their doing and will not vouch for any names on those lists.

 
Anon is smarter than that. They said they've been watching the Klan for a long, long time. I don't see a guesstimate here. They won't risk their collective reputation. I believe it will be solid, irrefutable, and most likely, glorious.
They're humans ... humans eff up. Humans also make enemies ... this looks like a great way to strike a blow to Anonymous' credibility.

 
People need to do research. This list was not from anonymous. It was from some random hacker. The Hill reported it correctly not sure why so few others are.
Just to be clear I did not include that list of names in post #1 nor did I introduce it to this thread.
I know and I don't blame people here for getting it wrong, I blame lazy reporters for giving them bad info.

 
BTW I am not a big fan of these kinds of hacks. Doxing is problematic at best I don't care how good your intentions are. Even when the target is an organization I vehemently disagree with. Too many ways to get it wrong and ruin an innocent life.

 
BTW I am not a big fan of these kinds of hacks. Doxing is problematic at best I don't care how good your intentions are. Even when the target is an organization I vehemently disagree with. Too many ways to get it wrong and ruin an innocent life.
Meh, the legitimacy usually gets vetted as good as any other source of leaked information. The AM thing was handled pretty well I thought.

 
BTW I am not a big fan of these kinds of hacks. Doxing is problematic at best I don't care how good your intentions are. Even when the target is an organization I vehemently disagree with. Too many ways to get it wrong and ruin an innocent life.
Meh, the legitimacy usually gets vetted as good as any other source of leaked information. The AM thing was handled pretty well I thought.
That's easy to say if you aren't the one getting hosed. They aren't just leaking information. They are making an accusation.

They have proven too eager in the past and botched a few of these already. Better to just get it right the first time.

 
NCCommish said:
General Malaise said:
NCCommish said:
Tom Servo said:
People need to do research. This list was not from anonymous. It was from some random hacker. The Hill reported it correctly not sure why so few others are.
Just to be clear I did not include that list of names in post #1 nor did I introduce it to this thread.
I know and I don't blame people here for getting it wrong, I blame lazy reporters for giving them bad info.
In addition Anonymous should refrain from announcing that they are going to be releasing a list of names in a few days. Do the research, make sure your list is bulletproof, and release the list alongside your announcement. Now we have random people publishing lists and lazy news organizations running with it.

 
NCCommish said:
General Malaise said:
NCCommish said:
Tom Servo said:
People need to do research. This list was not from anonymous. It was from some random hacker. The Hill reported it correctly not sure why so few others are.
Just to be clear I did not include that list of names in post #1 nor did I introduce it to this thread.
I know and I don't blame people here for getting it wrong, I blame lazy reporters for giving them bad info.
In addition Anonymous should refrain from announcing that they are going to be releasing a list of names in a few days. Do the research, make sure your list is bulletproof, and release the list alongside your announcement. Now we have random people publishing lists and lazy news organizations running with it.
Good point

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Unless your real name is Meatwad, you're at least safe here.

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Unless your real name is Meatwad, you're at least safe here.
What?

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
I believe they announced they would be searching for evidence to try to bring people to justice. And I don't know whether they're involved or not, but since that announcement some pretty huge underage sex trafficking rings have been brought down and/or brought up on charges in the UK and US.
 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
I believe they announced they would be searching for evidence to try to bring people to justice. And I don't know whether they're involved or not, but since that announcement some pretty huge underage sex trafficking rings have been brought down and/or brought up on charges in the UK and US.
There are always plenty of busts going around because cops and feds are out looking for these creeps. If Anon had anything to do with it, they would be proclaiming it from the rooftops. Maybe they should call up the old crew from 'Perverted Justice' to see how things are really done.

 
I know zip to nothing about this story but from the posts, especially the gay Democratic mayor of Lexington KY (college town), I'm guess what these dark web posse cowboys have stumbled upon is a mailing list, not a membership list, and these can include a variety of names and addresses pulled or gathered over time. These lists are also often sold for political campaigns.
The timing is little fishy too seeing as tomorrow is election day. I wouldn't put it past someone creating fake membership lists/data and then "leaking" it. Hard to believe the KKK would allow a gay man or a red man in their secret club. Equally hard to believe those guys would want to join said club.
Never underestimate self-loathing. Just look at all the gay and female and poor Republicans.

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.


It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group — whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask — has done.
Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.
8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested — showing up in person — many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.

4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.

3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.

2. The Steubenville rape case — in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media — obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.

1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Seems like projection to me.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
You mad bro?

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.


It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group — whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask — has done.
Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.
8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested — showing up in person — many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.

4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.

3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.

2. The Steubenville rape case — in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media — obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.

1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
So let me get this straight....it is a good thing to take down the websites that espouse viewpoints that go against your own? What does that even accomplish?

I will say that their highest impact hit was the Steubenville thing, but lets face it, that is small potatoes....it had the same level of impact as the 'bacon jalepeno mac and cheese' guy.

Everything else on that list is a bunch of B.S. Oh no!!! They took down somebody's website for a couple days!!!!! They are gonna shut down North Korea!!!!

Also, look at the timeframe. All of those 'accomplishments' from 2008 - 2015!!! Pathetic.

I will be impressed when they really out people who are actually doing horrible things, not just talking about them. I can certainly agree that Westboro Baptists are among the worst of the worst, but lets be real...shutting down their website for a couple days is really doing nothing. If they were real rebels or 'hackers', they would find out where some of the members lived and then would hire hit squads to do bodily harm or worse. Better yet, since the members of Anon are so dangerous and edgy, they should skip hiring the hit squad and just do the visits themselves. Once the Baptists realize they are on a hitlist for their deplorable actions, many would quit or go into hiding. That is some change that I feel we all can get behind, simply because it is actual change!

What these guys are doing right now falls somewhere in between auto fellatio and circle jerking with pets.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Nope, its just a general comment directed at any folks who are taking this info as reliable in any way. If none of those types exist on this board, so be it. Like I said, I glazed through most of the comments for the sake of time.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
You mad bro?
I'll cut you. :rant:

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Surely someone in here is stupid. MR is only asking how stupid those folks are.

 
NCCommish said:
Tom Servo said:
People need to do research. This list was not from anonymous. It was from some random hacker. The Hill reported it correctly not sure why so few others are.
The takeaway I meant to emphasize is that if you're going to dox someone, you better show your work. The kind of politician who did the kind of things described in the article would have a very low chance of being a Klansman.

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.


It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group — whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask — has done.
Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.
8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested — showing up in person — many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.

4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.

3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.

2. The Steubenville rape case — in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media — obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.

1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
So let me get this straight....it is a good thing to take down the websites that espouse viewpoints that go against your own? What does that even accomplish?

I will say that their highest impact hit was the Steubenville thing, but lets face it, that is small potatoes....it had the same level of impact as the 'bacon jalepeno mac and cheese' guy.

Everything else on that list is a bunch of B.S. Oh no!!! They took down somebody's website for a couple days!!!!! They are gonna shut down North Korea!!!!

Also, look at the timeframe. All of those 'accomplishments' from 2008 - 2015!!! Pathetic.

I will be impressed when they really out people who are actually doing horrible things, not just talking about them. I can certainly agree that Westboro Baptists are among the worst of the worst, but lets be real...shutting down their website for a couple days is really doing nothing. If they were real rebels or 'hackers', they would find out where some of the members lived and then would hire hit squads to do bodily harm or worse. Better yet, since the members of Anon are so dangerous and edgy, they should skip hiring the hit squad and just do the visits themselves. Once the Baptists realize they are on a hitlist for their deplorable actions, many would quit or go into hiding. That is some change that I feel we all can get behind, simply because it is actual change!

What these guys are doing right now falls somewhere in between auto fellatio and circle jerking with pets.
I think physical harm or threatening physical harm is against most laws. Anon seems to be against evil. :shrug:

 
5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.
Wrong. th3j35t3r took them down permanently 25 February 2011.

TANGO DOWN ALL YOUR DOMAINS. www.godhatesfags.com www.godistheterrorist.com www.westborobaptistchurch.com www.yourpastorisawhore.com - #USMC

 
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A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.

It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask has done.

Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.

8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested showing up in person many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.



4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.



3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.



2. The Steubenville rape case in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.



1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
So let me get this straight....it is a good thing to take down the websites that espouse viewpoints that go against your own? What does that even accomplish?

I will say that their highest impact hit was the Steubenville thing, but lets face it, that is small potatoes....it had the same level of impact as the 'bacon jalepeno mac and cheese' guy.

Everything else on that list is a bunch of B.S. Oh no!!! They took down somebody's website for a couple days!!!!! They are gonna shut down North Korea!!!!

Also, look at the timeframe. All of those 'accomplishments' from 2008 - 2015!!! Pathetic.

I will be impressed when they really out people who are actually doing horrible things, not just talking about them. I can certainly agree that Westboro Baptists are among the worst of the worst, but lets be real...shutting down their website for a couple days is really doing nothing. If they were real rebels or 'hackers', they would find out where some of the members lived and then would hire hit squads to do bodily harm or worse. Better yet, since the members of Anon are so dangerous and edgy, they should skip hiring the hit squad and just do the visits themselves. Once the Baptists realize they are on a hitlist for their deplorable actions, many would quit or go into hiding. That is some change that I feel we all can get behind, simply because it is actual change!

What these guys are doing right now falls somewhere in between auto fellatio and circle jerking with pets.
Granted, it doesn't compare with your accomplishments on these subjects, but I think it's nice that they try.
 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.


It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group — whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask — has done.
Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.
8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested — showing up in person — many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.

4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.

3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.

2. The Steubenville rape case — in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media — obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.

1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
So let me get this straight....it is a good thing to take down the websites that espouse viewpoints that go against your own? What does that even accomplish?

I will say that their highest impact hit was the Steubenville thing, but lets face it, that is small potatoes....it had the same level of impact as the 'bacon jalepeno mac and cheese' guy.

Everything else on that list is a bunch of B.S. Oh no!!! They took down somebody's website for a couple days!!!!! They are gonna shut down North Korea!!!!

Also, look at the timeframe. All of those 'accomplishments' from 2008 - 2015!!! Pathetic.

I will be impressed when they really out people who are actually doing horrible things, not just talking about them. I can certainly agree that Westboro Baptists are among the worst of the worst, but lets be real...shutting down their website for a couple days is really doing nothing. If they were real rebels or 'hackers', they would find out where some of the members lived and then would hire hit squads to do bodily harm or worse. Better yet, since the members of Anon are so dangerous and edgy, they should skip hiring the hit squad and just do the visits themselves. Once the Baptists realize they are on a hitlist for their deplorable actions, many would quit or go into hiding. That is some change that I feel we all can get behind, simply because it is actual change!

What these guys are doing right now falls somewhere in between auto fellatio and circle jerking with pets.
So your argument is essentially against non-violent protests and in favor of murder? Seems about right

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Nope, its just a general comment directed at any folks who are taking this info as reliable in any way. If none of those types exist on this board, so be it. Like I said, I glazed through most of the comments for the sake of time.
There is no info released yet.
 
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This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Nope, its just a general comment directed at any folks who are taking this info as reliable in any way. If none of those types exist on this board, so be it. Like I said, I glazed through most of the comments for the sake of time.
There is no info released yet.
Forget it. He's rolling.

 
This whole thing is idiotic. So...follow me here...a person's email address appears on a subscriber list and that means the person is a card carrying member?

How stupid are some of you? Anyone can sign up for an email list. I could easily obtain the personal emails of site administrators of FBGs and sign them all up for the KKK mailing list. I could also make them 'members' of a hundred other sites that are populated by weirdos and dolts. Does that mean they are members of the KKK?

If they are going to 'unmask' people, we need to see actual correspondence that links people to these hate groups. Geez, use your heads!!!!
Did you just read the first post or 2 and skip to the end?
No I read the actual "news" story that "outed" people who are supposedly in the KKK. Just putting my two cents in and really don't care to wade through two pages of what is most likely 75% gibberish.
Oh, somehow I thought "How stupid are some of you?" was in reference to people here. If you didn't bother reading the posts then how are "some of you" stupid? Pretty much everyone here has raised doubts about the info.
Surely someone in here is stupid. MR is only asking how stupid those folks are.
http://e.lvme.me/g4q9a75.jpg

 
A side note on Anonymous: these guys are a bunch of tools that so far have produced very little compared to the boasting of many of its members. A couple of months ago they were going to uncover a bunch of pedos (Operation Deatheaters) and I actually got excited to see who they would uncover because there is really nothing worse than a child molester. Anyways, long story short, I could not find that they outed even a single person!!! What a joke. This looks like more of the same from this group of toolios.
Oh contraire, my westboro baptist frère.

It's easy to think of the hacking group Anonymous as a group of punk troublemakers, raising hell online.

Some have even debated whether their extra-legal protests should be labeled terrorist acts.

But that would overlook some of the genuinely good deeds the group whose members identify themselves with the Vendetta mask has done.

Whether it's retaliating against kiddie porn sites, helping to identify Chinese military cyber-attacks, or targeting the digital properties of various hate groups, Anonymous can sometimes be a force for good.

8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist radio show host Hal Turner. The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology," its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion which allegedly imprisons its dissident members. They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites, gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested showing up in person many church events.

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant. Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's website in February 2011 in protest.



4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography in October 2011. Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.



3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues. Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.



2. The Steubenville rape case in which images of the high school victim were disseminated in social media obviously got a lot of attention earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video, tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.



1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea." It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign," "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant "uncensored internet access" to its citizens. On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
So let me get this straight....it is a good thing to take down the websites that espouse viewpoints that go against your own? What does that even accomplish?

I will say that their highest impact hit was the Steubenville thing, but lets face it, that is small potatoes....it had the same level of impact as the 'bacon jalepeno mac and cheese' guy.

Everything else on that list is a bunch of B.S. Oh no!!! They took down somebody's website for a couple days!!!!! They are gonna shut down North Korea!!!!

Also, look at the timeframe. All of those 'accomplishments' from 2008 - 2015!!! Pathetic.

I will be impressed when they really out people who are actually doing horrible things, not just talking about them. I can certainly agree that Westboro Baptists are among the worst of the worst, but lets be real...shutting down their website for a couple days is really doing nothing. If they were real rebels or 'hackers', they would find out where some of the members lived and then would hire hit squads to do bodily harm or worse. Better yet, since the members of Anon are so dangerous and edgy, they should skip hiring the hit squad and just do the visits themselves. Once the Baptists realize they are on a hitlist for their deplorable actions, many would quit or go into hiding. That is some change that I feel we all can get behind, simply because it is actual change!

What these guys are doing right now falls somewhere in between auto fellatio and circle jerking with pets.
And you have done exactly what in that time period, except for set fire to Carl's house?

 
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