You got me to click but the title is misleading. "Paypal convinced 7000 people to attack Paypal" sounds like entrapment but it's just a quote from the defendant in the FBI's case -- a way to say that Paypal brought the DDoS on themselves by their own unjust actions. The defendant is a completely innocent 19-year-old woman who was bullied by FBI thugs, and that would have been an equally compelling and more accurate headline.
I find it hard to understand how being a Mod of an IRC channel where a crime is being organized and committed could be interpreted by anyone as innocence.
If a bunch of thugs planned and organized at Mr. Smith's house before walking down to the local grocery store and through some illegal tactic prevented people from shopping, Mr. Smith is guilty of 'aiding and embedding' and 'conspiracy to commit a crime'. Even if it's not your house that they organize at, if you are in the conversation with a group of people who are planning a crime, you are guilty of `a` crime. Not particularly the same crime as the people who committed the planned crime, but you are guilty of a crime.
Then she goes on the record and admits to everything they need to convict her, brilliant.
I'm not a lawyer but I don't think you are either. You seem to think that if you hear of a crime being committed you are obligated to report it. I do not believe you are right, it is legal to not be a snitch, if nothing else there is the 5th amendment right to keep your mouth shut. There's also the right to free assembly.
On a side note let me ask you a question. What do you think about the fact that the WikiLeaks website has been attacked constantly for a couple years now including with many DDOS attacks, but the FBI has not opened an investigation into it, in fact it doesn't seem to be on anyone's radar? On the other hand this short-lived attack on paypal has been investigated aggressively with several raids and arrests, why would that be? Anonymous isn't attacking wikileaks, who in the US has an incentive to take down WikiLeaks?
A mod on irc is not a mere bypasser. It is, to some extent, someone who maintains the network.
If we assume that the network's sole purpose is to help anonymous, she is, technically, supporting anonymous.
I won't assume these (the problem is a bit more complex,of course). But that's the line of thought the FBI is following, and I can understand it. The woman in the article doesn't strike me as an obvious innocent.
A mod on irc is not a mere bypasser. It is, to some
extent, someone who maintains the network.
No, just no. There's a fundamental difference between a channel and a network operator. The former has absolutely zero to do with network maintenance - it's simply someone who happens to have a specific flag (+o) set on a specific channel.
A network operator (often called Opers) is someone who has - as the name implies - administrative privileges over the network or parts thereof.
However, if we now follow the line of argument that a network operator should be held liable for the actions of his or her users, we're in the same boat as the people who claim that ISPs or other service providers should be held liable for the action of their users - which is ridiculous.
she is, technically, supporting anonymous.
In what way is that a crime? Anonymous is simply a decentralized, anarchistic and extremely loose collective of people who have chosen to affiliate themselves with it. You cannot hold people who affiliate themselves with it liable for the actions (legal or not) of others with the same affiliation.
The problem is that no one in organizations like the FBI can even grasp the notion of a collective that does not rely on authority or centralization. It's like quantum physics are to a mere mortal - utterly incomprehensible.
It's a bit unclear from the article whether the woman is a channel moderator, an IRCop (her statements seem to imply so, or someone physically hosting the network.
(The source of her problems seems to be the ips hosting the network). Besides, the question I would ask is "If an ISP's main purpose is hosting illegal activities, can we prosecute him ?"
Regarding the decentralized nature of Anonymous, well, okay. What does that change ? If we consider that Anonymous is an organisation (does it need fixed members to be called an organisation ?) that uses illegal/questionable methods, supporting it (as an organisation, I'm not talking about people in it) is illegal. IANAL, but I suppose it could be seen as incitation or support to illegal behaviour.
All those are claims, that can and most likely will be analyzed by a jury, and people who are better informed than us. My point was just that I think saying she is innocent from the beginning is a bit exaggerated. She did questionable things.
It's a bit unclear from the article whether the woman is a channel moderator
I only corrected the claim that moderators have any administrative privileges, unrelated to the case at hand.
If we consider that Anonymous is an organisation
Except it isn't, that was my point. Anonymous is more akin to something like a subculture. Do we prosecute everyone who considers himself, for example, a Punk, just because some other members of the Punk movement have done questionable things?
and people who are better informed than us.
And that is the problem. No one of the people who make decisions in these cases even understand Anonymous, how are they supposed to be "better informed" than us?
WRT your side note Wikileaks apparently hold data that could embarrass many governments and hurt many corporations. Really you'd have to ask which countries and global corps don't have an interest in getting inside Wikileaks.
Have Wikileaks sought investigation of DDoS attacks, I'm going to guess not. I think the FBI would jump at a chance to investigate the internals of Wikileaks to work out were attacks are coming from - for many reasons. Whilst PayPal are being directly financially affected and, on the other hand, are extremely likely to have reported and sought investigation of every instance of substantial cyber attack against them.
>there is the 5th amendment right to keep your mouth shut
The 5th does not work like that: you have a right to refuse to yourself and your spouse, but not anyone else. That is why prosecutors (and Congress) sometimes grants a witness immunity: it removes the witness's right to plead the 5th and thereby compels the witness to testify or go to jail.
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[ 6.6 ms ] story [ 56.1 ms ] threadi can't attest to its legitimacy, i just did a google search.
If a bunch of thugs planned and organized at Mr. Smith's house before walking down to the local grocery store and through some illegal tactic prevented people from shopping, Mr. Smith is guilty of 'aiding and embedding' and 'conspiracy to commit a crime'. Even if it's not your house that they organize at, if you are in the conversation with a group of people who are planning a crime, you are guilty of `a` crime. Not particularly the same crime as the people who committed the planned crime, but you are guilty of a crime.
Then she goes on the record and admits to everything they need to convict her, brilliant.
On a side note let me ask you a question. What do you think about the fact that the WikiLeaks website has been attacked constantly for a couple years now including with many DDOS attacks, but the FBI has not opened an investigation into it, in fact it doesn't seem to be on anyone's radar? On the other hand this short-lived attack on paypal has been investigated aggressively with several raids and arrests, why would that be? Anonymous isn't attacking wikileaks, who in the US has an incentive to take down WikiLeaks?
If we assume that the network's sole purpose is to help anonymous, she is, technically, supporting anonymous.
I won't assume these (the problem is a bit more complex,of course). But that's the line of thought the FBI is following, and I can understand it. The woman in the article doesn't strike me as an obvious innocent.
A network operator (often called Opers) is someone who has - as the name implies - administrative privileges over the network or parts thereof.
However, if we now follow the line of argument that a network operator should be held liable for the actions of his or her users, we're in the same boat as the people who claim that ISPs or other service providers should be held liable for the action of their users - which is ridiculous.
In what way is that a crime? Anonymous is simply a decentralized, anarchistic and extremely loose collective of people who have chosen to affiliate themselves with it. You cannot hold people who affiliate themselves with it liable for the actions (legal or not) of others with the same affiliation.The problem is that no one in organizations like the FBI can even grasp the notion of a collective that does not rely on authority or centralization. It's like quantum physics are to a mere mortal - utterly incomprehensible.
Regarding the decentralized nature of Anonymous, well, okay. What does that change ? If we consider that Anonymous is an organisation (does it need fixed members to be called an organisation ?) that uses illegal/questionable methods, supporting it (as an organisation, I'm not talking about people in it) is illegal. IANAL, but I suppose it could be seen as incitation or support to illegal behaviour.
All those are claims, that can and most likely will be analyzed by a jury, and people who are better informed than us. My point was just that I think saying she is innocent from the beginning is a bit exaggerated. She did questionable things.
Have Wikileaks sought investigation of DDoS attacks, I'm going to guess not. I think the FBI would jump at a chance to investigate the internals of Wikileaks to work out were attacks are coming from - for many reasons. Whilst PayPal are being directly financially affected and, on the other hand, are extremely likely to have reported and sought investigation of every instance of substantial cyber attack against them.
The 5th does not work like that: you have a right to refuse to yourself and your spouse, but not anyone else. That is why prosecutors (and Congress) sometimes grants a witness immunity: it removes the witness's right to plead the 5th and thereby compels the witness to testify or go to jail.
RICO was passed in 1970.