Anonymous’s war on internet restrictions wages on in
Eurasian country known as the Republic of Turkey. Anonymous is known
for their stance on internet freedom, claiming that the internet is a
free place where people can view whatever information and sites they
wish. The Turkish government has now become a target for the international hacking group due to new restrictions that are about to be enacted on internet usage.
The government of Turkey has set up a system that forces internet
users to sign up for one of the four filtering packages. These filters
will restrict internet sites and the government claims it is for the
protection of younger web browsers. They claim that there are a lot of
dangerous and harmful websites out there that young people need to be
sheltered from. Anonymous, however, disagrees.
The international hacking group claims that the Turkish government is
just using the protection of young web users as a façade and that its
real purpose is to monitor web activity of all users.
Anonymous is not alone in their beliefs. There are numerous critics
that claim the government is trying to suppress dissent by restricting
web access. Many Turkish citizens have taken to the streets with banners
and signs to protest the national net filter that is going to take
place. In support of the Turkish people, Anonymous has also taken
action.
On June 10th Turkish government websites became the target
of Anonymous’s justified attacks. They DDoSed these websites with an
application known as LOIC (Low Orbit Ion Cannon). DDoS is a computer
term for distributed denial of service attack. When it is one person it
is a DoS, when it is multiple people acting, it is a DDoS. The main goal
of a DDoS attack is to render the website (or service) unusable. The
most common method of DDoSing is by flooding the intended target with so
many requests that it simply cannot process them all and the entire
site bogs down so that any user attempting to access the site will
experience significant lag and will likely timeout. Anonymous
successfully DDoSed several Turkish government websites, forcing them to
go completely offline. The government, however, wasn’t going to give up
without a fight.
Just days after the websites were attacked, Turkish government
officials found a way to possibly trace LOIC users. As a result 32
arrests were made in various cities around Turkey. Nine of the
individuals detained, who were also minors, have already been released
and cleared of charges. The rest are still being questioned.
The government doesn’t plan to enact these internet restrictions
until August 22 of this year, but already they are faced with a strong
resistance from both its citizens, outside critics, and internet hacking
groups from around the globe. Unfortunately for the Turkish government
their internet restrictions will likely attract the attention of more
hacking groups like Anonymous and they may face a more aggressive
resistance as the deadline draws near.
So are Anonymous and other hacking groups justified in their attempts to free the internet from “filtering” and “restrictions”? Indeed they are.
While hacking and cyber-attacks are illegal, the Turkish government is
not likely to listen to the peaceful rallies and protests of its
citizens. Hopefully the government overturns their decision to restrict
internet usage. The façade that they are using to cover up their true
intentions is easily dismissed; parents are responsible for their
children and should monitor their internet usage, the government has no
business interfering and limiting internet usage of its citizens. The
internet should be a free place where knowledge and information are at
the disposal of the user, no restrictions should be put in place by
government or any institute other of authority.
Home »Unlabelled » Anonymous Fights For Turkish Citizens – “Let Internet Be A Free Place”, They Say
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