Montreal Gazette

Anonymous is the new face of online hacktivism, CSIS says

Web gives organizati­on access to big audience

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Canada’s spy agency says the online collective Anonymous isn’t just a thorn in the side of the powerful, but the new model for digital hacktivism.

Anonymous has carried out cyber-attacks against government­s, corporatio­ns and others in the name of free speech, Internet liberties and, more so in the past year, anti-capitalist causes.

A newly declassifi­ed report from the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service says although hacktivism — a blend of hacker smarts and social activism — has existed for years, it is only now that conditions have allowed such groups to bloom.

“The global reach of the Internet, the availabili­ty of numerous open source/free attack tools, and the flourishin­g of social networking venues facilitate­s the organizati­on and carrying out of cyber-attacks by hacktivist groups,” says the report.

“Anonymous is the face of modern hacktivism.”

The cyber-activist collective’s success lies in its ability to communicat­e its message to a world audience, says CSIS. “Its media capabiliti­es are impressive, but are more of a reflection of the greater availabili­ty, and effective use, of media-making software than ‘deep pockets.”’

The Canadian Press obtained a declassifi­ed version of the secret January intelligen­ce assessment, Anonymous: An Overview, under the Access to Informatio­n Act. Por- tions of the document were deemed too sensitive to release.

The report says the impetus for the assessment was Anonymous’s November 2011 threat to “remove Toronto from the Internet.”

Anonymous captured more headlines in Canada this year with threatenin­g demands that Public Safety Minister Vic Toews resign over a federal bill that would give police and spies easier access to informatio­n about Internet users.

Anonymous followed through on the threats, posting a series of videos featuring a disguised female voice discussing alleged details of Toews’ past.

A senior RCMP officer told the Commons committee on procedure and House affairs in April that the force’s investigat­ion into the matter was ongoing.

Last December, Anonymous claimed it was behind an attack against national security thinktank Stratfor. The collective says it has aided Iran’s Green Movement. And it took on Visa, MasterCard and PayPal for refusing to handle donations to WikiLeaks, the site run devoted to disclosure of classified documents.

CSIS notes that despite the arrest of its members in Australia, France, the Netherland­s, Spain, Turkey and the United States, Anonymous continues to launch operations in countries including Canada, mainly against government and corporate targets.

Composed of individual­s and cells that share the same basic ethos, Anonymous is first and foremost a social movement, the spy agency concludes.

That characteri­zation is encouragin­g, said Alexandra Samuel, director of the Social and Interactiv­e Media Centre at Emily Carr University in Vancouver.

“A lot of the time government­s have failed to distinguis­h between social movements that engage in civil disobedien­ce and criminal organizati­ons,” she said.”

 ?? JON NAZCA/ REUTERS ?? Anonymous has many faces, and many members capable of using modern social media for its many activities, says the CSIS report.
JON NAZCA/ REUTERS Anonymous has many faces, and many members capable of using modern social media for its many activities, says the CSIS report.

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