Update on the situation with Matthew Keys, who is facing charges in a case involving Anonymous. Matt, a SFB contributor, faced criticism last week over his reporting of unvetted information on police scanners in relation to the Boston Marathon story, which he defended on Facebook last night. (No reason was given for the firing, but we didn’t work with Matt on the story.) Whatever the case, we wish our friend the best. — Ernie @ SFB
EDIT: Philip Bump offers a roundup on the situation for The Atlantic Wire.
We are aware of the charges brought by the Department of Justice against Matthew Keys, an employee of our news organization. Thomson Reuters is committed to obeying the rules and regulations in every jurisdiction in which it operates. Any legal violations, or failures to comply with the company’s own strict set of principles and standards, can result in disciplinary action. We would also observe the indictment alleges the conduct occurred in December 2010; Mr. Keys joined Reuters in 2012, and while investigations continue we will have no further comment.A statement by Reuters’ corporate affairs manager David Girardin, made to Politico in response to this morning’s news. source
Matthew Keys, a deputy social media editor at Thomson Reuters, has been charged in an indictment for allegedly conspiring with members of the hacker group “Anonymous” to hack into a Tribune Company website, the Justice Department announced today.
Keys, a former web producer for the Tribune Co-owned television station KTXL FOX 40, in Sacramento, Calif., was charged with providing members of the group with log-in credentials for a computer server belonging to the Tribune Co., according to the DoJ’s press release.
In case you’d like to read the indictment, here it is.
Quick statement: Matt’s a good friend, and we’ve worked closely together for a couple of years, bouncing ideas off of one another and the whole bit. I talked to him three hours ago. The rest of the staff had no knowledge of this situation, and we offer no other statement other than to hope that one of our favorite people is OK. Good luck, Matt. — Ernie @ SFB
EDIT: Reworded to clarify.
Anonymous has observed for some time now the trajectory of justice in the United States with growing concern. We have marked the departure of this system from the noble ideals in which it was born and enshrined. We have seen the erosion of due process, the dilution of constitutional rights, the usurpation of the rightful authority of courts by the “discretion” or prosecutors. We have seen how the law is wielded less and less to uphold justice, and more and more to exercise control, authority and power in the interests of oppression or personal gain.A message posted to the hacked website of the U.S. Sentencing Commmission • Decrying the death by suicide of internet pioneer Aaron Swartz, whose family and friends have suggested was hounded towards suicide by an especially harsh prosecution being brought against him, for a large-scale downloading and alleged free releasing of academic articles (he faced a possible 35 years in prison, and 13 felony counts). Now, hacker group Anonymous has threatened vengeance over Swartz’s tragic death, having hacked the U.S. Sentencing Commission site and issuing a further threat that they’ve obtained information from secret government networks that they may release in retribution. The incident is being viewed as a “criminal investigation,” according to an FBI executive assistant director, Richard McFeely: “We are always concerned when someone illegally accesses another person’s or government agency’s network.” source
It’s a disgusting video … it’s stupidity. But you can’t arrest somebody for being stupid.Jefferson County Sheriff Fred Abdalla • Explaining why no new charges will follow the recently leaked video of former Steubenville High School football player Michael Nodianos making jokes about the alleged rape of an unidentified 16-year-old student. Nodianos’ former teammates Trent Mays and Ma’lik Richmond are currently the only two people facing charges for the alleged sexual assault, though neither is being tried as an adult. Sheriff Abdalla’s announcement was intensely booed by those gathered for “Occupy Steubenville” on Saturday, and we doubt the decision will do much to alleviate tensions in a town increasingly divided by this controversy. source
Now, a grand spectacle has come to Bahrain - the F1 Bahrain Grand Prix has begun and we have decided to add to that spectacle.
As in the past, we have DDOSed websites of the Bahrain government. And as the media has already reported, we have DDOSed or defaced a number of sites associated with F1, which has gone ahead with its event in a country that has been the subject of a brutal government for over a year. On top of it all, we have decided to contribute some additional excitement to the day by hacking F1’s servers and taking the personal information of those attending the race, among other things.
Click on to read the full press release. The race went on despite the disruption by Anonymous, but the Formula 1 site also went down for large portions of the day. The end effect? The race got overshadowed by the online protest.
PACs are commonplace for companies that lead a big, growing market and Netflix is no exception. Our PAC is a way for our employees to support candidates that understand our business and technology. It was not set up for the purpose of supporting SOPA or PIPA.Anonymous Netflix spokesperson • In a statement emailed to TPM, responding to the news that “hacktivist”-group Anonymous is calling for a boycott of the company after it announced it would be creating it’s own political action committee. According to the spokesperson, FLIXPAC was not created in order to support or rebuild SOPA/PIPA, but instead to allow the company to influence debates on “network neutrality, bandwidth caps, usage based billing and reforming the Video Privacy Protection Act.” He also called Anonymous’ claims baseless, saying, “SOPA/PIPA are dead anyway.” source (via • follow)
Eight months ago, I published a statement in which I revealed, after close monitoring of a top-secret chat room used by high-ranking members of the Anonymous movement, that one Anonymous/LulzSec ring leader Sabu was a computer security analyst living in the New York metropolitan area.
Today, FOX News published a report based on court documents and interviews with law enforcement officials that corroborated this information, identifying Sabu as a father of two (which was originally published in my statement, but the information about children was removed about an hour later) living in — guess where? New York.
I also remember Pastebin documents many months ago which also referred to Sabu by name, and his address was verifiable with public information, but at the time there were blanket denials about it being the same guy. So it’s kind of amusing to see that all that info was right.
The group’s reputation among foreign policy writers, analysts, and practitioners is poor; they are considered a punchline more often than a source of valuable information or insight. As a former recipient of their “INTEL REPORTS” (I assume someone at Stratfor signed me up for a trial subscription, which appeared in my inbox unsolicited), what I found was typically some combination of publicly available information and bland “analysis” that had already appeared in the previous day’s New York Times. A friend who works in intelligence once joked that Stratfor is just The Economist a week later and several hundred times more expensive. As of 2001, a Stratfor subscription could cost up to $40,000 per year.
However, it’s worth noting that Fisher’s thesis, which seems to be based on hearsay and conjecture alone rather than hard evidence, is getting debated heavily in the comments, with some suggesting he’s naïve. “The entire vibe of your piece is so snarky and so obviously full of anti-Wikileaks sentiment that it’s hard to know whether to take you seriously or not,” one commenter writes.
» The second-most-common password online: Anonymous had an easy time hacking the Syrian president’s e-mail Monday, finding that the password was as easy as QWERTY (except one line up on the keyboard). Many of the 78 accounts at the Syrian Ministry of Presidential Affairs had this porous password. Among the finds? An e-mail prepping Assad for his interview with Barbara Walters, where he infamously denied involvement in the killing of his own citizens. Read more about the incident over at Haaretz. (ht Mashable)
The FBI might be curious how we’re able to continuously read their internal comms for some time now.A tweet from an Anonymous member • Discussing how the group managed to listen in on a phone call between the FBI and Scotland Yard, discussing Ryan Cleary, a reported member of Anonymous. The group managed to listen on the call by having access to their internal e-mails, and using a password for the call distributed in one of the e-mails You can watch the video featuring the call’s audio over here, and our boy Matthew Keys has a pretty good wrap-up of the issues involved in the story. source (via • follow)