#OpLiberation II
Greeting Anons,
It has come to our attention that the governments and authorities aiming to seize the internet, and to censor our voices, are willing to go to great lengths to achieve absolute control.
Anonymous alongside the millions of other worldwide citizens, who are standing up to this injustice will not give up fighting for our freedom. We will not stop!
AnonPR is launching Phase II of opIndependence. Phase II is designed to voice our opinions individually, contacting every United States politician until they side with us, the people.
This operation is a completely legal non-hacking operation. This will be executed with traditional activist strategies’ and a new term we like to call IRLDDoS ( In Real Life Distributed Denial-of-Service Attack ).
Imagine if thousands of concerned citizens from all over the country began calling, faxing, emailing – simply confronting these politicians who are willing to support these bills and laws that are set to destroy our very way of life, and freedom as we know it. This all takes initiative, and passion.
Join Us
Join The Cause
Join AnonPR (Anonymous Public Relations)
This could be a short term or long term operation that will need dedicated and motivated individuals who want to fight for a better tomorrow. By joining, acting as one, we can and will defeat the injustice and wrong doings from our very own governments. Please note that phase III of this operation will be international.
Phase II — Officially Begins
Where the media can’t twist our words, EXPECT US — AnonPR
“A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.”
Mahatma Gandhi
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Meet Telecomix, The Hackers Bent On Exposing Those Who Censor And Surveil The Internet
Hack the planet: Once focused on Sweden, Telecomix’s hacktivists have been expanding their international membership—and their targets.

One morning in mid-August, seven months into the Arab Spring protests and government crackdowns in which thousands have been killed, something strange happened on Syria’s Internet. As users aimed their Web browsers at Google and Facebook, they instead saw a page of white Arabic script scrawled across a black background.
“This is a deliberate, temporary Internet breakdown. Please read carefully and spread the following message,” it read. “Your Internet activity is monitored.”
Then the page switched to a white screen filled with instructions on using free encryption and anonymity software like Tor and TrueCrypt to evade surveillance and censorship. Emblazoned above the text was a round, mysterious symbol: a star inside an omega, hovering over a pyramid surrounded by lightning bolts. Below it were written the words: “This is Telecomix. We come in peace.”
Telecomix, a loose-knit team of international hacktivists, had been scanning the Syrian Internet in a massive sweep, dividing 700,000 target connections among its members in Germany, France and the U.S., probing for hackable devices with software tools like Nmap and Shodan. They compromised vulnerable Cisco Systems-produced network switches to find other devices’ passwords, snooped on open cameras revealing street scenes and even officials’ desks, and at one point retrieved the log-in credentials for 5,000 unsecured home routers, which they used to insert the surveillance warning (shown below) into browsers across the country.
As the globally-distributed hackers combed Syria’s networks and posted their findings in a crowd-sourced document, one American member of the group, who uses the handle Punkbob, spotted a Windows FTP server filled with data he recognized: logs from a Proxy SG 9000 appliance built by the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company Blue Coat Systems. In Punkbob’s day job at a Pentagon contractor, he says, the same equipment had been used to intercept traffic to filter and track staff behavior. The Syrian machine’s logs showed the Internet activity of thousands of users, connecting the sites they attempted to visit and every word of their communications with the IP addresses that pointed directly to their homes. In short, he had discovered American technology being used to help a brutal dictatorship spy on its citizens.
“At first we were just poking around, but when I saw that, I had this feeling of dread,” says Punkbob, who requested that Forbes not use his real name. “To see exactly what Syria was tracking and who was providing the technology to do it.…That was when it felt real.”
Since Telecomix published 54 gigabytes of those logs, the resulting attention has forced Blue Coat to admit that its gear had been used by Syria, a potential violation of international sanctions against that country. The company didn’t respond to Forbes’ request for an interview, citing an ongoing internal review and a related Commerce Department probe. (Note that the investigation didn’t deter private equity firm Thoma Bravo and the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan from a recent deal to take Blue Coat private for $1.3 billion.) The disclosure of Blue Coat’s gear in Syria has touched off revelations that hardware from other U.S. firms, including NetApp and HP, was also used by blacklisted regimes. The industry now faces tough new questions about tech firms’ responsibility for how their products are deployed—and by whom.
Telecomix sees its Blue Coat discovery as a turning point in the group’s mission: Founded to fight for free speech, it now aims to also expose those who fight against that ideal, including any Western tech firm aiding the wrong side. “I hope that the Blue Coat thing was the start of something much bigger,” says Chris Kullenberg, a lean and lip-pierced Swedish political science grad student at the University of Gothenburg and a Telecomix founder. “The goal is to put political pressure on these companies. It started with rage and frustration. What can we do? Well, we can hack a few boxes and expose this to the world. That’s the motivation that drives hackers deeper and deeper into the networks.”

Telecomix’s hackers broke into 5,000 Syrian home routers and set them to show users this warning Web page about government surveillance.
Telecomix likely broke Syrian law. But some more traditional activists appreciate their work. “It crosses a line we wouldn’t be comfortable crossing,” says Brett Solomon, president of the digital human rights group Access Now. “But sometimes it takes someone like Telecomix to put a spanner in the works.”
Actively hacking networks is a new game for Telecomix’s Web revolutionaries. But unlike the hacker group Anonymous, which began with juvenile pranks before attacking Scientologists, opponents of WikiLeaks and defense contractors, Telecomix was born political. The group was created at a Gothenburg conference in 2009 to oppose the European Union’s so-called Telecoms Package, industry-influenced laws that would have cut Internet access for anyone repeatedly downloading copyrighted files. “In a sense, corporations have always been the enemy,” says Kullenberg.
The hackers dug up and published the phone numbers of every EU Parliament member, then convinced the copyright-flouting Swedish download site the Pirate Bay to post a link on its home page. At the time, the site received 20 million monthly visitors. The Parliament’s phones were jammed for days, and the statute was eventually dropped.
After that initial victory, the group’s pseudonymous chatrooms slowly filled with likeminded hacktivists, and a strange, Internet meme-laden culture developed around them: Telecomix members call each other “agents” or “Internauts.” Its symbols, like the one shown on the Syrian warning message, integrate obscure socialist, technological and pirate icons. Ask them to identify the group’s leader, and they’ll name Cameron, an interactive artificial intelligence bot that they’ve designed to read and learn from their chatroom conversations and respond to questions. (“His commands are fuzzy,” admits Icelandic Telecomix agent Smari McCarthy. When I type a question to Cameron asking it to tell me Telecomix’s mission, for instance, it responds, “The mission is Christmas?”)
Bizarre sense of humor aside, the group remains serious about its work; The populist uprisings of the Arab Spring have only brought its goals—and its enemies—into sharper focus. A few days into the January 25 protests in Egypt Hosni Mubarak shut down all but one of his country’s Internet service providers. “Telecomix members consider themselves citizens of the Internet,” says one American Telecomixhacker who goes by the nickname the Doctor. “So we took that as a personal affront.”
Agents arranged with the hacker-friendly Internet provider French Data Network to fire up modem banks and give users free dial-up connections. Then the group faxed thousands of leaflets to Egyptian universities, offices and cybercafes, explaining how to skirt the blackout.
Soon Telecomix’ chatrooms became a kind of dissident IT support helpline, with Middle Eastern activists appearing on its IRC channels to ask for advice about securing their connections or avoiding surveillance. Increasingly, they came from Syria, many bringing graphic videos and pictures of police violence they wanted Telecomix’s agents to help them distribute.
Telecomix’s scanning of the Syrian Net began as reconnaissance to prepare for an Egypt-style Internet shutdown. Stumbling onto the Blue Coat logs was a fateful fluke. When the hackers realized what they’d found, they downloaded close to 100 gigabytes of data, using the Tor anonymization network to cover their tracks, a process that took weeks over Syria’s thin bandwidth.
In October Telecomix released hundreds of millions of lines of text listing hundreds of sites the Syrian government was blocking, from porn to Facebook to Chatroulette, along with enough users’ communication logs to show that the regime was using their Blue Coat gear to not only filter but also monitor dissidents’ activities. Blue Coat’s scandal demonstrates the complexity of regulating surveillance technology. The firm claims it hadn’t known about its devices in Syria, arguing they must have found their way into the country through a reseller in the United Arab Emirates.
“Blue Coat is mindful of the violence in Syria and is saddened by the human suffering and loss of human life that may be the result of actions by a repressive regime,” it wrote in a statement. “We don’t want our productsto be used by the government of Syria or any other country embargoed by the United States.” But critics like cryptography guru Bruce Schneier and Tor developer Jacob Appelbaum point out that Blue Coat devices link back to its servers for licensing and updates, implying the company may have turned a blind eye to its Syrian users.
Some Telecomix agents say they’ve also spotted equipment sold by Fortinet in Syria. Fortinet responds that it “has in place a policy prohibiting shipping its product to countries where shipment is embargoed.” And what about resellers who pass it on to those countries? “At that point it’s out of our hands,” a spokesperson says.
In some cases, companies have argued that the line between ethical and unethical use of their products is simply too blurry to distinguish. Cisco, whose network switches Telecomix identified in Syria, was previously hauled before Congress in 2008 after a leaked PowerPoint suggested it pitched Chinese police on using its equipment to track members of the banned Falun Gong regime.“Cisco’s routers and switches include basic features that are essential to the fundamental operation of the Internet by blocking hackers from interrupting Internet services and protecting users from viruses,” Cisco’s General Counsel told a Senate Subcommittee on human rights in 2008. He denied the PowerPoint represented company policy, but conceded that “those same basic features – without which the Internet could not function effectively-can unfortunately be used by network administrators for censorship purposes.”
Hazy as the line may be, it’s clear some companies have crossed it. Marketing documents published by WikiLeaks show 160 firms advertising surveillance gear, often in Arabic as well as English. British firm Gamma International brags that it can spy on users of Gmail, Skype and iTunes; its sales pitch was found in the files of the Egyptian government after Mubarak fled.
Telecomix is determined to remain a watchdog against Western firms aiding foreign Big Brothers. Two Swedish members, Chris Kullenberg and Jonatan Walck, have registered a site called Internaut.cat where they plan to publish future disclosures of the group’s findings, using Sweden’s strong media laws to shield their sources.“ We’re at a point now where Internet users are becoming aware of what’s being done to them,” says the Doctor. “Companies that sell gear designed to track people should expect to be outed.”

Hacktivist gear: a one-handed keyboard, mini-PC and Linux phone with a Telecomix decal.
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Q:what s the point?
Pardon my ignorance… But the point of what???
Anonymous Attacker Package and More by Maxpain
Same Issue is Discussed with Microsoft Security Response Center by Developer of This tool.
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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ANONYMOUS Revolution 2012 New Message What we are capable of!
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Ever a little short on proxies?

Hello everyone here and today I wrote a little post to fetch a list of all the free proxies from hidemyass.com and dump them into a file in ip:port fashion delimited by a colon.
After running this script you should have a file named ip.lst in the same directory this script was run in. Enjoy!
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Anonymous - A Storm Is Coming
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Here’s a brief history about the revolution going on world wide. This is mass awakening. Let the energies flow!!
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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Battle Plan
Introduction
This guide will help you to determine whether a certain course of action is the best option for the operation you are working on, or whether it may not be as effective as you thought it would be. It is important that you take the time to read this guide prior to deciding whether to pursue an operation - don’t rush it - in many situations, there’s no hurry at all in organising an operation. It is better to be thoroughly prepared than to jump into a mess headfirst and regret it later.
1. Tips for setting up an operation
- You will likely have started an operation because you disagree with something. Rather than trying to fight the people that caused this, try to focus on what the thing is that you disagree with, and preventing that from happening (or, if that is your goal, spreading awareness). Revenge seldom has the intended result. Clearly think of what the issue is, and how it can be resolved.
- Even if you think you’ve read carefully, read everything on this form twice, and think about it a second time. The human brain has a habit of ‘caching’ answers to questions, and that may not always give you the best answer to a question. By thinking about it again, you force your brain to give a ‘real’ answer.
- Have clear communication channels. Even though Anonymous as a whole is a decentralised entity, it’s typically a good idea to centralise the main organisational aspects of an operation, even if there is no set hierarchy. This makes it easier for people that are unfamiliar with how Anonymous works, to participate and learn more about both your operation, and Anonymous as a whole. An IRC channel is usually a good start, as is a Twitter feed. Try to stay away from websites that offer you free blogs, web hosting, or forums, unless you really know what you’re doing - these websites tend to freeze your account at the first hint of controversy.
- Take the time to set up an operation. Most causes do not require you to respond in one or two days, so it’s perfectly fine to spend a few days on organisation and planning, before you actually do anything.
- Don’t just mentally answer these questions! You should actually write down or type out the answers, to make sure you’re not overlooking something.
2. Defining the main goals of your operation
Important: When defining the goal or goals of your operation, you should not take into account the ideas you have to carry out the operation! Doing so anyway will result in the common human habit of putting the cart before the horse (also known as ‘reversed reasoning’), which will cause your operation to be less efficient than it could have been. In short: start from a blank canvas.
2.1 The cause of your operation
- What ‘undesired circumstance’ caused you to set up this operation? Examples: the extradition of someone, the closing down of a website, arrests of activists, etc.
- Who is responsible for this undesired circumstance? This can be a person or an organisation.
- If an organisation was responsible, were there any specific employees or members of that organisation that coordinated the decision? If yes, are they responsible for it or were they in a situation where they had no real choice?
- Are there any further consequences of this undesired circumstance that will not go away, even if the undesired circumstance itself is gone?
2.2 The solution for your cause
- What has to happen for the undesired circumstance to go away? Examples: the dismissal of a court case, the denying of an extradition request, etc.
- If there were any further consequences that would not go away, even if the undesired circumstance itself would be gone, what would have to happen for these consequences to go away?
3. Defining possible solutions and courses of action
Take some time to think of ways to achieve what you mentioned in question 2.2.1. You should answer the following questions for each of the possible solutions you came up with. Try to avoid all solutions that have been attempted before by other operations, and only use those solutions as a last resort. Ideally, your solution should be original and tailor-made for this operation.
3.1 Basic details for the solution
- What does the solution consist of?
- Who can take part in the activities for this solution?
- How long does it take to carry out this solution? A rough estimate is good enough.
- What organisational structure is needed to carry out this solution? Examples: no hierarchy, a central leader, democratic voting, etc.
- What communication channels do you need for this solution? Examples: a forum, a Twitter feed, an IRC channel, etc.
3.2 Consequences of the solution
- What will happen if you carry out this solution successfully?
- What will happen if the solution is attempted, but fails in some way?
- What are the risks for participants? Be honest here, don’t try to romanticise your solution.
- Compare the answer to 3.2.1 with the answer you gave to 2.2.1. Do the answers match?
- If the answers do not match, this solution will not be optimal and it is likely you’ve put the cart before the horse, which is likely to make your operation fail. Try again with a different solution.
4. Summary of your operation
You can fill in this part to make it clear to participants what they are getting involved in, what the goals are, how they can help, and what they should watch out for.
- What will participants be doing?
- What are the risks of participating?
- What is the intended goal?
- How does your solution reach the goal?
- Is there a backup plan?
- Where can participants go to communicate? Examples: the IRC channel, Twitter feed, forum, etc.
- How will you spread the word about your operation? What resources do you have at your disposal?
Good luck with your operation!
Guide courtesy of our friends at the Cryto Coding Collective
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
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To You
“Don’t exist. Live. Get out, explore. Thrive. Challenge authority. Challenge yourself. Evolve. Change forever. Become who you say you always will. Keep moving. Don’t stop. Start the revolution. Become a freedom fighter. Become a superhero. Just because everyone doesn’t know your name doesn’t mean you dont matter.
Are you happy? Have you ever been happy? What have you done today to matter? Did you exist or did you live? How did you thrive?
Become a chameleon-fit in anywhere. Be a rockstar-stand out everywhere. Do nothing, do everything. Forget everything, remember everyone. Care, don’t just pretend to. Listen to everyone. Love everyone and nothing at the same time. Its impossible to be everything,but you can’t stop trying to do it all.
All I know is that I have no idea where I am right now. I feel like I am in training for something, making progress with every step I take. I fear standing still. It is my greatest weakness.
I talk big, but often don’t follow through. That’s my biggest problem. I don’t even know what to think right now. It’s about time I start to take a jump. Fuck starting to take. Just jump-over everything. Leap.
It’s time to be aggressive. You’ve started to speak your mind, now keep going with it, but not with the intention of sparking controversy or picking a germane fight. Get your gloves on, it’s time for rebirth. There IS no room for the nice guys in the history books.
THIS IS THE START OF A REVOLUTION. THE REVOLUTION IS YOUR LIFE. THE GOAL IS IMMORTALITY. LET’S LIVE, BABY. LET’S FEEL ALIVE AT ALL TIMES. TAKE NO PRISONERS. HOLD NO SOUL UNACCOUNTABLE, ESPECIALLY NOT YOUR OWN. IF SOMETHING DOESN’T HAPPEN, IT’S YOUR FAULT.
Make this moment your reckoning. Your head has been held under water for too long and now it is time to rise up and take your first true breath. Do everything with exact calculation, nothing without meaning. Do not make careful your words, but make no excuses for what you say. Fuck em’ all. Set a goal for everyday and never be tired.”
― Brian Krans
On YourAnonNews
We are Anonymous.
We are Legion.
We do not forgive censorship.
We do not forget the denial of our free rights as human beings.
Expected us to Give An EPiC Fight
NO©
☢☠☢
Share by MasterPirate ™ ✔
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