Hacking group Anonymous targets Russia in cyber war

Twitter accounts purporting to represent Anonymous claimed responsibility for taking out websites belonging to the Russian government, banks, news outlets, and a gas company through distributed denial of services (DDoS) attacks.

A video posted to an Anonymous-associated YouTube account over the weekend featured a hooded figure wearing a Guy Fawkes mask warning Putin that the power of Anonymous would be “bearing down” on the Russian President.

“It’s only a matter of time until we uncover the dirt you have been trying to hide from the community you have lied your way into leading,” the mask-wearing figure said.

“From the depths of your closet, no skeleton will be left unturned. We are now asking you to restore the rights of the Ukrainian people and resign as an elected official.”

By Sunday, reports emerged that the maritime tracking data of a $100 million luxury yacht supposedly owned by Putin had been altered so the destination read “Hell” with an estimated arrival on 1 April.

The yacht’s callsign had also been changed to “FCKPTN”.

By nature, it is difficult to accurately attribute activity to Anonymous, given the collective’s lack of a central authority and single-source of truth – a feature that is very much part of Anonymous’s design, allowing it to operate as an amorphous group of skilled cyber activists.

In mid-2020 Anonymous made its return in the wake of George Floyd’s killing after years of dormancy, running DDoS campaigns against the Minneapolis Police Department and allegedly disrupting police radio communications.

Likewise, there are unconfirmed reports that Russian military radio communications are being intercepted, along with Russian TV channels, as hackers do their part to help Ukraine.

Shane Bell, a cyber security analyst with consultancy firm McGrathNicol, said that it was difficult to attribute cyber activity to Anonymous unless you’re part of the collective but said some of the actions are similar to previous campaigns when it was a more active hacktivist group.

“We’re seeing similar things to how they went after Scientology back in the day,” he told Information Age.

“Fundamentally if you look back through the history of Anon they were initially in it for the lolz, they would draw attention to themselves by making it funny.”

DDoS attacks are an important tool in Anonymous’s arsenal, Bell said, in part because it’s attention grabbing – web services going offline is an unavoidably public event – but also because DDoS is crude and resource-intensive, which is befitting for a decentralised collective.

“DDoS has also been an effective technique in drawing attention as a bit of slight of hand,” Bell said.

“You’re saying ‘look over here’ when something might be happening elsewhere as well.”

 


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