Reliance net users who tried to access popular
services like Facebook and Twitter were in for a rude shock on Saturday, when
they were instead redirected to a page containing a strongly worded statement
against attempts by the Indian government to censor the Internet.
“Anonymous
REVENGE / WE OWN YOU
Told you not to mess with free speech
and lesser with Anonymous
Government
of India, you know what you did wrong. you caused out twitter account to be
blocked now we will show you what anonymous is capable of doing.
———————————————-
We
give you 24Hours at maximum to give our twitter account back and apologize
Give
@OpIndia_Revenge BACK
———————————————–
IF
NOT
We
will unleash hell and shiver on you
Greeting
government of India, you were bad really bad. One of the worst governments the
world has. Yet we tried our best not to go too tough on you, and then you
decided to cross over us, bad guys bad idea.
We
tried to do a slow, non violent protest and government decided to cover out
mouths we will not sit idle while our freedom is take away. We will continue
our non-violent protest and guess what you will never beat us, ever.
When we started to speak truth, the
government of India forced our online twitter account @Opindia_revenge to be
suspended.”
The Twitter account @OpIndia_Revenge which is
referred to in the statement, is owned by Anonymous India. On Friday the group
had put a list of websites and links that were allegedly blocked on RCom
network even though there was no legal mandate for them to do so.
The attack on the RCom DNS servers comes on the
back of a series of hacker attacks on Indian websites, purportedly by
Anonymous. Last week it attacked a number of government websites including that
of the Supreme Court of India, after the Madras High Court passed an order
blocking file sharing sites, and even video sharing sites like Vimeo.
The Madras High Court order has generated a great
deal of anger among India’s online community, who have described it as a short
sighted attempt by the courts and entertainment companies to censor something
that they do not fully understand. The blanket ban takes no heed of open
copyright licenses such as Creative Commons, under which millions of users
share their work with one another. It also stops people who have uploaded
content on to these sites from accessing their own content.
In the wake of the attack on the RCom servers,
media agencies who tried to talk to Reliance had to be satisfied with the vague
response, “Reliance Communications refused to comment on the blocking of
websites. “We have investigated the matter and confirm that all RCOM servers
and websites are intact and have required preventive measures in place for
intrusions”.
Anonymous, which is a loosely strung collective of
hackers has traditionally fought what can be best described as ‘virtual
guerilla’ wars against what it perceives to be organized attempts to take away
Internet freedom. Most prominently in 2010, it launched an operation called
“Avenge Assange” in which it attacked the websites of thousands of online
payment gateways that blocked users from contributing to
the Wikileaks foundation. In 2009, it launched an alternative site
for Iranians angered by the controversial re-election of President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad to vent their frustrations and organize protests.
It has also attacked websites of the Malaysian
government, Sony Entertainment and the Syrian defence ministry website.
source: firstpost
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