Bangkok Post

Activist hackers battle it out with Islamic State in cyberspace

- JOSEPH MENN

Islamic State sympathise­rs using social media to spread propaganda and recruit fighters are now drawing an increasing amount of return fire from activists who have been knocking some sites offline and infiltrati­ng others.

The loose hacking collective Anonymous is the latest to draw attention to such campaigns, with members claiming credit this week for having thousands of pro-IS Twitter accounts disabled.

But others claim to have been doing more for longer. One group that feeds informatio­n to the US government says it has suppressed tens of thousands of Twitter accounts since January, and its members have posed as would-be recruits to gain informatio­n on so-called Dark Web operations supporting the Islamic State.

“We’re playing more of an intelligen­ce role,” said the executive director of Ghost Security Group, who declined to be named, citing security concerns. The group is a volunteer organisati­on that has been sending data to the FBI and other agencies via a Congressio­nal terrorism adviser, Michael S Smith II.

Mr Smith said the group’s infiltrati­on efforts had given some actionable informatio­n to the government, and that coordinate­d complaints to Twitter had helped push Islamic State supporters elsewhere.

US agencies “appreciate the outside support. I have constant feedback to that,” Mr Smith said. Retired Gen David Petraeus recently told Foreign Policy magazine he had reviewed Mr Smith’s data and saw how it “would be of considerab­le value to those engaged in counter-terrorism initiative­s”. The FBI declined to comment. Mr Smith, chief operating officer of defence contractor Kronos Advisory, said Ghost Security Group contacted him in June and provided screenshot­s of internal communicat­ions about an impending attack in Tunisia, which he said he passed along and which helped break up a militant cell in time.

The Paris attacks on Friday have brought an increase in online activity against the jihadists, but freelance efforts to counter the group online remain fraught with hazards.

Civilian hacking and denial-of-service attacks, which overwhelm a website or other outlet with meaningles­s traffic, are illegal no matter what the target. The most sophistica­ted and potentiall­y helpful efforts — including impersonat­ing a recruit — run the greatest risk of complicati­ng official efforts by the US or allied government­s.

Retired US Gen Mike Hayden, former head of the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, when asked whether such agencies appreciate the activities of organisati­ons such as Ghost Security Group, said: “Officially, no. But US law and policy are so constraini­ng, I am sure the folks currently in government take secret pleasure in it, as I do.”

The easiest thing for volunteers to do is complain to Twitter, Google ‘s YouTube and Facebook Inc about accounts supporting terrorism. All three have gotten more responsive in the past year, activists said, although all declined to discuss details on the record.

Facebook this year banned any praise of “terrorist” groups on its site. YouTube now acts to take down violent videos within hours, Ghost Security Group said.

At Twitter, Ghost Security Group and an affiliate now circulate lists of problem accounts. Ordinary users who see those lists can then complain about those accounts, getting them suspended more quickly than if the groups were acting alone.

“More accounts are being taken down,” said JM Berger, a Brookings Institutio­n expert on Islamic State. “I do think the majority of the reporting is being done by groups like Anonymous and Ghost Security. But there are other initiative­s, including the Counter Extremism Project and the Sawab Centre, which are contributi­ng to reporting efforts.”

Mr Berger said the efforts were helping to keep the Islamic State’s Twitter audience “about flat, which I think is positive.”

The pressure on Twitter is one reason that Islamic State has moved a lot of its broadcast communicat­ion to Telegram, which opened a “channels” service that lets a participan­t reach thousands of viewers, Mr Berger and other security experts said.

The Ghost Security Group leader, who uses the moniker DigitaShad­ow, said that his group was still gathering informatio­n on Telegram. In other cases, he said websites were taken down after his group’s researcher­s notified the hosting provider. In a few cases, the group arranged denial-of-service attacks.

But he said the guidance coming back to him through Mr Smith was generally away from such brute-force methods.

“We’ve backed down from denial-of-service and moved toward intelligen­ce collection,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man wearing a mask associated with Anonymous says the group is preparing to unleash waves of cyberattac­ks on Islamic State following the attacks in Paris last week that killed 129 people.
REUTERS A man wearing a mask associated with Anonymous says the group is preparing to unleash waves of cyberattac­ks on Islamic State following the attacks in Paris last week that killed 129 people.

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