Beyond Anonymous: Where Hacktivism is going in 2020 – The Parallax

Hacktivism is alive and well, if a bit weird, in 2020, says Gabriella Coleman, a cultural anthropologist specializing in hacker culture at McGill University.

At the end of June,Twitter banned the accountof the hacker collective Distributed Denial of Secrets (DDoSecrets) and blocked links to BlueLeaks, the groups data trove of 270 gigabytes of data containing internal records from more than 200 police departments.

The hacktivist collective Anonymous also returned to prominence, as its members took actions to support Black Lives Matter protesters, including getting legions of Korean pop-music super fans to participate in social-media disruptions.

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BlueLeaks shows that theres still a lot of interest in activist hacking, Coleman says. In the context of the English-speaking world, DDoSecrets is the hinge between the WikiLeaks and Anonymous era, and the contemporary movement. They created a platform to keep leaking alive. If it wasnt for them, it would be much dimmer. Its still dim because its such a high-risk behavior.

High-Risk BehaviorWhile high-risk technical hacks arent currently dominating headlines, the Twitter hijack and BlueLeaks episodes reveal that hackers are still looking to access secure data and their reasons remain varied.

One thing that might temper planned hacktivist actions could be the hammer of the state, in the form of aggressive law enforcement, says Coleman, author of Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous.

DDoSecrets has said theyre prepared for the U.S. government to come after them, but Coleman isnt so sure. The question is whether BlueLeaks will be stamped out in the next few months. But the blocking and censorship makes them more visible, she says.

This story was originally commissioned by Dark Reading. Read thefull story here.

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Beyond Anonymous: Where Hacktivism is going in 2020 - The Parallax

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