In a cyber attack known as Operation Payback, a group of online activists called Anonymous targeted the websites of companies that had treated WikiLeaks like a bad smell. Visa, MasterCard, Paypal and Amazon have all had their websites, and in some cases their services, affected. Welcome to the world of the chaotic good. It is chaotic. But is it good?
These companies all considered that their association with WikiLeaks damaged their brand image, a reflection prompted in some cases by a helpful call from the US state department. In essence they are trying to have it both ways: pretending in their marketing that they are free spirits and enablers of the cyber world, but only living up to that image as long as they don't upset anyone really important. At Amazon there is real confusion between the two roles: it refused to host WikiLeaks but continued to sell an eBook of the leaked cables online.
The hacktivists of Anonymous may be accused of many things – such as immaturity or being run by a herd instinct. But theirs is the cyber equivalent of non-violent action or civil disobedience. It disrupts rather than damages. In challenging the credit card companies and the web hosts in this way, they are reminding these businesses that their brand reputation relies not only on how the state department sees them, but also on how they maintain their independence in the eyes of their users.
Not all the targets of the internet activists are the right ones. The website of the Swedish prosecution authority, which is currently attempting to extradite Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, on rape charges, and the website of Claes Borgström, the Stockholm lawyer representing the two women who made the allegations, were also brought down. As our interview with Mr Borgström makes clear, these women are going through hell: first for being the alleged victims of sexual assault, and second for being accused of involvement in some form of CIA honeytrap. The women's right to anonymity has been abandoned online as bloggers rake through their CVs. In Sweden, as in other countries, the burden of proof lies with the prosecution, and the test, beyond reasonable doubt, is set high. Far better would be to let the legal systems in Sweden and Britain take their course.
In times when big business and governments attempt to monitor and control everything, there is a need as never before for an internet that remains a free and universal form of communication. WikiLeaks' chief crime has been to speak truth to power. What is at stake is nothing less than the freedom of the internet. All the rest is a sideshow distracting attention from the real battle that is being fought. We should all keep focus on the true target.
Editorial
The Guardian, Fri 10 Dec 2010 00.01 GMT
my earlier comment is more appropriate to this post, i believe, so i'm moving it here:
ReplyDeleteyears ago, like 2002 or something, i was part of an online community of poets writing experimental poetry. much of it was, as a necessity of the time, political and critical of the then-current political situation. we were posting everything on a yahoo group. much of the writing was dark, sarcastic, and subversive. someone in the group didn't like certain things that were said/posted, and complained to yahoo. POOF! the entire group and all the archives were quietly and unceremoniously removed from yahoo. no notice, no response to inquiries about what had happened. nothing but a hollow, ringing silence from yahoo. everything was lost to the aether. gone without a trace, much of which had been typed straight into the interface on yahoo, leaving no back-up versions behind. i lost a large amount of political comment/satire/artwork that i had made. hours of effort and thought erased without any warning or recourse. i complained loudly to everyone around me, about how this very event was indicative of new dangers to human culture by corporations with dangerous amounts of control over the communication infrastructure and no clear oversight by any legal authority whatsoever. NO ONE GAVE A SHIT. sure, i should have been more careful about backing everything up. sure, it was a free service, so what right did i have to expect that yahoo "owed" us at least a response to our concerns, if not the obligation to bring their concerns to our group before pulling the plug. now the masses of people on facebook, the control of the email infrastructure by companies like google and microsoft, the serving of web pages by amazon, and the extra-legal maneuvering by the us government through financial mechanisms such as visa, mastercard and paypal is making more and more clear to the world that the underlying support structures for our communication infrastructure is not so much regulated by the passing of and interpretation of legal frameworks based in representative legislation as much as regulated by the brute force of corporate boards and drummed up media hysteria. we keep playing deeper and deeper into the hands of those corporate interests, and unless we make demands for a bare minimum digital bill of rights, we will be at their mercy. i don't know what the way out of this unfortunate situation needs to be, but i've seen too much what these power abuses spell out for our liberty and collective power as global citizens. i'm very worried.