Author Topic: Hackers strike to support wikiLeaks..Take down Mastercard website  (Read 515 times)

225for70

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Hackers are attacking MasterCard for there part in taking Wikileaks out of the financial grid.  Who would have thought of all the potential consequences from this Wikileaks site a few months ago..


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703493504576007182352309942.html?mod=WSJ_hp_MIDDLETopStories


Hackers Strike Back to Support WikiLeaks

By CASSELL BRYAN-LOW in London And SVEN GRUNDBERG in Stockholm

A growing number of companies, prosecutors and banks that have tangled with controversial website WikiLeaks and its detained founder, Julian Assange, have suffered online attacks, apparently from hackers bent on extracting revenge for the document-leaking organization.

The attacks expanded on Wednesday, a day after Mr. Assange was arrested and denied bail in London in connection with sexual misconduct accusations in Sweden. In the wake of that, a wide range of organizations—from MasterCard to a Swedish prosecutors' office—reported technical difficulties with their websites that appear to stem from denial of service attacks, where computers flood a server to prevent it from displaying a webpage.

The attacks appeared aimed at companies or financial institutions that withdrew Internet-support or other services from WikiLeaks, and entities connected to the accusations against Mr. Assange.

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Reuters
Among them were MasterCard, which pulled services from WikiLeaks in recent days and PostFinance, a Swiss bank that closed Mr. Assange's account recently because he allegedly provided a false address. The Swedish Prosecution Service also said its website had been overloaded because of a denial of service attack. The prosecutors' office said it reported the incident to Swedish police. The website for Claes Borgstrom, the lawyer representing the two women making the accusations against Mr. Assange, also crashed.

By around mid-morning European time Wednesday, MasterCard was suffering from attacks to its consumer website, slowing its functioning. Around the same time, several Twitter posts appeared crowing that the credit-card company's site was suffering.

"http://www.mastercard.com/ is DOWN! #ddos #wikileaks Operation:Payback," said one post under the name "Anon_Operation," whose Twitter page is identified as part of Operation Payback, a campaign against "anti-piracy & anti-freedom entities."

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MasterCard, in a statement Wednesday, said its consumer website was "experiencing heavy traffic," but that it was working to restore normal service and its credit-card processing services weren't affected. There is "no impact whatsoever on our cardholders' ability to use their cards for secure transactions," the Purchase, N.Y.-based company said.

On Monday, MasterCard had said it was working to suspend payments to WikiLeaks "until the situation is resolved."


In an interview with Jerry Seib, former U.S. National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley lashed out at Wikileaks for damaging U.S. diplomacy with its recent document dump. He also praised the Obama administration's handling of Iran and North Korea.

Its rival Visa Europe, which handles visa payments worldwide to European companies, followed suit Tuesday by suspending payments to WikiLeaks "pending investigation into whether it contravenes Visa operating rules, including compliance with local laws in the markets where we operate."

Simon Kleine, a spokesman for the credit-card processor, on Wednesday said the company's website was "operating as normal" but declined to discuss whether it had been the victim of attacks.

Mr. Assange is in custody in London after being arrested Tuesday on an international warrant issued by Sweden, where he is accused of rape, molestation and unlawful coercion by two women the nomadic WikiLeaks founder had sexual encounters with during a stint there last summer.

According to a description of the allegations read in a London courtroom on Tuesday, Swedish authorities said one of the women alleges that Mr. Assange forcibly held her arms and legs, preventing her from moving, and had sexual intercourse with her without using a condom despite knowing it was a prerequisite for her. The other woman alleges that Mr. Assange had sex with her while she was asleep, again failing to wear a condom despite knowing she required it.

Mr. Assange has denied the accusations and he isn't charged in either case.

Mr. Assange's personal legal problems come against the backdrop of its showdown with the U.S. government over WikiLeaks' release of thousands of classified documents. The U.S. considers the documents "stolen," though no charges have been filed against WikiLeaks or Mr. Assange. But the situation has caused additional fallout for WikiLeaks, as an array of service providers—including MasterCard, eBay Inc.'s PayPal and Amazon.com Inc.—terminated their relationships with WikiLeaks.

That is now causing problems for the likes of Switzerland's PostFinance, which on Monday said it closed Mr. Assange's account because he falsely claimed he lived in Geneva. Attacks on its website began about three hours later and continued for about twenty-four hours, making it difficult to access.

PostFinance spokesman Alex Josty said on Wednesday that the website was operating more normally, which he believed to be a combination of the attacks subsiding and defensive measures the company had put in place. PostFinance, which is a unit of logistics and mail company Swiss Post, which is based in Bern, Switzerland, said the security of its customer data hadn't been affected.

Spokespeople for PayPal and Amazon couldn't immediately be reached.

—Niclas Rolander contributed to this article.
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Re: Hackers strike to support wikiLeaks..Take down Mastercard website
« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2010, 10:16:57 AM »
lol

INFOWARS!

225for70

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Re: Hackers strike to support wikiLeaks..Take down Mastercard website
« Reply #2 on: December 08, 2010, 12:24:22 PM »
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Wikileaks: Stop Us? You'll Have to Shut Down the Web
Julian Assange Jailed on Charges: Politically Motivated, or Just Convenient?

146 comments By DEVIN DWYER and JIM SCIUTTO
Dec. 8, 2010
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The arrest and detention of Julian Assange Tuesday on charges of rape and sexual assault was at the least a convenient development for government leaders who've sought ways to contain the leader of the controversial website Wikileaks.


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But in an exclusive interview with ABC News' Jim Sciutto, Wikileaks' spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson insisted Assange's arrest won't alter the site's calculated release of thousands of secret government cables, which still continues according to plan. The site published a new slate of cables Wednesday.

"It is not derailing us in any way," said Hrafnsson, adding that a group of five to six people is running Wikileaks' operations in Assange's absence. "This is a turning tide and starting a trend that you can't really stop unless you want to shut down the Internet."

Meanwhile, supporters of Assange are saying the timing and nature of the personal allegations against him are more than coincidence – they're "politically motivated." And the confluence of recent events gives at least the appearance that could be true.

In mid-August, two Swedish women told prosecutors and news outlets they had each had consensual sex with Assange, but that he didn't use a condom against their wishes and subsequently refused to get tested for sexually-transmitted disease. Their complaint led to a warrant on charges of sexual molestation.


But now prosecutors allege Assange forcibly raped at least one of the women and sexually assaulted the other -- significantly more serious allegations than what investigators initially pursued.

Assange, 39, was formally charged and held without bond in London on one count of rape, two of sexual assault, and one of coercion. He has denied the allegations and insists the sex with both women was consensual.

"Fortunately, the international corralling was successful," Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said shortly after Assange's arrest. "Assange has hurt international diplomatic relations and I hope he is questioned and tried as established by law."

Assange's brainchild, Wikileaks, is also weathering its most intense attacks to date. The site has been bumped from its servers without notice and mysteriously cut off from key funding sources after PayPal and major credit card companies, Visa and MasterCard, pulled the plug pending "further investigation."

"We are getting seriously close to censorship in the U.S., and that must surely go against the fundamental values the country is based upon," said Hrafnsson.

But State Department spokesman PJ Crowley said via Twitter "the U.S. government did not write to PayPal requesting any action regarding #WikiLeaks. Not true."

Swiss authorities Monday closed a Swiss bank account tied to Assange, freezing tens of thousands of dollars used to fund the Wikileaks operation, his lawyers said.

"It wouldn't be surprising in the least that Wikileaks and political pressure from the U.S. and other affected governments has at least something to do with the current charges in Sweden," said American University law professor Stephen Vladeck, an expert in national security and international criminal law. But "whether it's because of that pressure [that he faces charges] is something I think we can't know."
Wikileaks: Stop Us? You'll Have to Shut Down the Web
Julian Assange Jailed on Charges: Politically Motivated, or Just Convenient?
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No Charges Yet for Assange Over Wikileaks
The apparent onslaught against Assange comes in spite of the fact that he has not been formally charged by any government for Wikileaks' activities.


MORE VIDEO
       

 
WATCH: Julian Assange Arrested in London
 
WATCH: Wikileaks' Julien Assange Ready to Turn Himself In
 
WATCH: Wikileaks Founder Suggests U.S. Is Out to Kill Him
"It may be that what Julian has done is a crime," said Clay Shirky, an Internet and technology consultant and author, referring to Assange's role in the dissemination of a massive cache of classified government files. "In that case, the right answer is to bring the case to a trial."

"The leaders of Myanmar and Belarus, or Thailand and Russia, can now rightly say to us 'You went after Wikileaks' domain name, their hosting provider, and even denied your citizens the ability to register protest through donations, all without a warrant and all targeting overseas entities, simply because you decided you don't like the site,'" he said. Shirky's comment clearly suggests that governmental pressure may be behind the recent setbacks for Assange.


Attorney General Eric Holder has promised a vigorous investigation and prosecution of those involved with the Wikileaks leak. But Vladeck says the law under which Assange could most likely be tried -- the Espionage Act -- is "politically and legally fraught," explaining why government prosecutors have not yet laid out any charges.

"One of the flaws in the Espionage Act is that it draws no distinction between the leaker or the spy and the recipient of the information, no matter how far downstream the recipient is," Vladeck said. "So there's no difference in the statute between Assange and someone at home who opens up something that Assange has posted on his website knowing that it's classified. It's why this is such a problem."

Army Private Bradley Manning is alleged to have downloaded vast numbers of secret diplomatic cables and military documents while working as an intelligence analyst, committing the greatest security breach in U.S. history using little more than a memory stick and a Lady Gaga CD.

Wikileaks has pledged to release more than 250,000 documents, most, if not all of which, are believed to have been obtained by Manning. Already the site has published classified military records pertaining to the death toll in Iraq, and secret diplomatic cables about relations with foreign governments.

"In the entire history of the Espionage Act there's been exactly one case when the government went after someone other than the thief – and that prosecution fell apart," he said.