Subject: RE: Anon |
From: "Timothy A Ellis" <Timothy.Ellis@SutherlandGlobal.COM> |
Date: 1/4/11, 17:34 |
To: "Barrett Brown" <barriticus@gmail.com> |
Sounds great, you can bring me up to speed on the latest Anon
happenings.
Actually, let me rephrase that so that I can say you can keep me
abreast of the latest Anon happenings.
Never miss a chance to use “abreast” in casual conversation.
If you see Scott before I get there, please let him know it’s
going to take me a bit to get my computer repaired and/or replaced, but it will
be done tonight and I will be present as soon as it is.
From: Barrett Brown [mailto:barriticus@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2011 1:59 PM
To: Timothy A Ellis
Subject: Re: Anon
Great, I'll be on all evening
then. Have been hanging out in Anon IRC to advise them anyway.
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 8:50 AM, Timothy A Ellis <Timothy.Ellis@sutherlandglobal.com>
wrote:
I’ll send over a link as soon as HuffPo
gets around to publishing.
Scott and I are meeting tonight to
discuss financing arrangements so you should pop in if you’re around. We don’t
have a hard and fast time, we’re just checking in to IRC any time after 7 when
we get available.
From:
Barrett Brown [mailto:barriticus@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, January 03, 2011 6:36 PM
To: Timothy A Ellis
Subject: Re: Anon
This is
great, submit it and send link when it's up.
On
Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 5:21 PM, Timothy A Ellis <Timothy.Ellis@sutherlandglobal.com>
wrote:
Here’s what I’ve got – let me know your
thoughts.
There is no more fundamental assault on
human liberties than seeking to control the very thoughts which define us as
individuals and as a species. Despite this, attempts to do so are so
commonplace as to be almost unremarkable.
It is, perhaps, this ubiquity which
blinds us to the ongoing struggles of places like Tunisia. In a tragically
familiar story, the government of Tunisia has made a mockery of democracy,
gripped with corruption and political repression. As reported by <a
href="http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2011/01/201113102452251132.html"
target="_hplink">Al-Jazeera,</a> "[a]ny criticism of
the President can lead to persecution and imprisonment, torture is routine and
opposition parties are almost nonexistent. Not a single human rights monitoring
group is allowed to operate legally and freely in the country."
Tunisia has additionally sought to
control access to Wikileaks cables referencing the African nation, going so far
as to <a href="http://thenextweb.com/me/2010/12/07/tunisia-blocks-wikileaks-everyone-referencing-it/"
target="_hplink">block access to any source </a>even
referencing the information distribution site. These events have not happened
in isolation - the citizenry of the nation have <a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gly3tXD8WF5737WC-Kl19E58ux1w?docId=bd0bae9167b1412abc7f50296e89b12f"
target="_hplink">been up in arms</a> about dire economic
conditions, corruption, and police brutality in the service of state
repression.
Enter Anonymous. This loosely-organized
band of defenders of the free flow of information took this assault on
Wikileaks and informational freedom personally, and - as is their wont -
decided to act. Tunisian government websites have been under attack since
Sunday (1/2/2011), either taken over to display messages from Anonymous or shut
down entirely.
It is telling that these partisans of informational
freedom have chosen to fight fire with fire - they would deny access to the
free flow of information to those who have sought to do the same. This puts
Anonymous in the enviable position of having an unassailable moral high ground.
Accept that the free flow of information is an essential right, and Anonymous
is standing up for that right by turning its denial back on those who first
violated it. Or, believe that the free flow of information is not an inherent
right - in which case Anonymous has done no wrong.
What is perhaps the most important point
to take from this episode, however, is simply that organizations such as
Anonymous and Wikileaks exist with the power and capacity they have. There have
always been groups willing to take on the state's attempts to monopolize the
flow of information - now, they are increasingly able. For anyone with an
interest in the preservation of genuine democracy - a form of government by
consent which depends on accurate and freely-accessible information - there can
be no more reassuring thought.
From:
Barrett Brown [mailto:barriticus@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, January 02, 2011 9:19 PM
To: Timothy A Ellis
Subject: Anon
Never in human history has there been a
period that compares to our own in the degree to which the terminology employed
at the end of a twenty-year period would have been entirely incomprehensible at
its beginning. This is, or should be, the first sign that something is afoot.
All significant human activity is the result of human collaboration, and over
this same period the potential for human collaboration has exploded in a manner
that has never before been seen. This is the second sign, and the fact that
these developments and their implications have been greeted with the usual mix
of silly and inane commentary for which our career media personnel have become
known even to themselves is in turn a perfect indication of why this period has
been so necessary, and why many of us are working to ensure that the dynamics
now in play continue to accelerate.
Wikileaks, a force that was
ignored by a news media incapable of identifying important trends until such
time as it became impossible to disregard, has ushered in a new period of human
history in which state actors have lost the privacy that they never deserved in
the first place. Anonymous, a similarly misunderstood harbinger of the coming
age, has taken a series of actions to defend that organization, including
information campaigns and DDOS attacks on national governments - including
Tunisia, as of this writing - that have welcomed the new age with tighter
controls on what their citizens are allowed to see. As someone who has worked
with and promoted certain factions of Anonymous for a number of years, I would
like to explain what it is that is happening and why it will continue until
such time as individual liberty escapes its controversial status.
Throughout history, the
majority has been consistently wrong and consistently willing to initiate
violence in service to the local flavor of foolishness. Not long ago, many took
for granted the divine right of kings - and some still do, of course. Today,
many in the West believe that anything is moral just so long as it is done in
some accordance with the will of the voting population of a particular
nation-state; to some, even a king’s intent will suffice. Actions of
extraordinarily lesser negative impact on the innocent, taken by any
organization that lacks the arbitrary status of a “state,” are meanwhile
denounced with a fervor that the more fair-minded might reserve for those who
routinely cause the deaths of women and children - for instance, the large
majority of American voters who have exercised their “rights” to topple one
dictator while propping up others, and who pat themselves on the back for their
participation in a civic entity that has made such a mockery of the rule of law
that those of us who were born too late to see the America that once existed no
longer feel any loyalty to its government whatsoever.
This is the context that has
turned Anonymous from a Dadaist cultural phenomenon into a geopolitical
harbinger. Its first notable target was the violent white supremacist and FBI
informant Hal Turner; its second was the Church of Scientology and the
degenerate manner in which it deals with critics and apostates; its third was
the government of Australia on the occasion of a proposed internet censorship
policy that would have opened the door for further state control of expression,
as such policies always do.
Over time, Anonymous has
changed. Some of us are no longer anonymous, for one thing; my associate Gregg
Housh was outed by the Church of Scientology after they discovered he was one
of the five participants who launched the Chanology raids via a YouTube
proclamation, and thus now gives interviews to those outlets that care to know
more; my associate Sean Carasov killed himself last month after a great deal of
legal harassment from the “Church” that helped to ensure that his career would
never see a revival. Others have been arrested as well, and more will be
arrested in the future. This will stop nothing. And the typically flawed
reception that the movement has received from those who will justify most any
government action will not change the fact that we have entered a new age in
which individuals around the world can form their own entities to counter those
that now exist, and will do so increasingly as the implications of our time
become more widely understood. And they will indeed be made understood, soon
and forever after, to all who choose to listen.
--
Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302
This
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Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302
This email message is for the sole use of the intended
recipient(s) and may contain information that is confidential, privileged,
proprietary and protected from disclosure by applicable law. Any unauthorized
review, use, duplication, disclosure or distribution is strictly prohibited. If
you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email
and immediately destroy all copies of this message, including electronic and
hard copies. Thank you for your cooperation.
--
Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302