Anti-WikiLeaks
hackers claim responsibility for DDoS attack on RT website
18 August, 2012
“Yes.
We are behind the DDoS attack on #RT_com,”
AntiLeaks wrote on Twitter.
AntiLeaks
registered a Twitter account on August 4, when it claimed
responsibility for taking down the WikiLeaks site.
“Tango
down http://wikileaks.org #Wikileaks #Cowards”
AntiLeaks boasted on Twitter two weeks ago.
The
group called Julian Assange “a new breed of terrorist” and said
it had launched its attack in response to his attempt to gain asylum
in Ecuador.
The
attack coincided with WikiLeaks’ release of a new portion of emails
supposedly acquired by the hacktivist group Anonymous from the server
of consulting firm Stratfor. The latest leaks concern the alleged
existence of a clandestine US-based
surveillance system called TrapWire,
which collects images from surveillance cameras across the US and
uses them to track individuals and preemptively identify possible
threats to national security.
An attempt to censor RT?
In
reaction to the DDoS attack on RT.com, WikiLeaks slammed the attempt
”to
censor”
RT, saying the channel is “an
important alternative voice in the West.”
An
“anti-WikiLeaks
group is claiming to be behind the DDoS takedown of Russia's
international broadcast network, RT, which has been supportive,”
the whistle-blowing group said on its Twitter.
The
hackers that attacked RT.com put a #FreePussyRiot hashtag in the end
of their tweet, as if they were expressing their support for the
three members of punk band Pussy Riot whose verdict
was passed on Friday.
But
many web users doubt this could be the real reason behind the attack.
“When
the DDOS attack started, all hash tags on AntiLeaks' Twitter were
related to Assange and WikiLeaks,”
wrote user Alex_Gianturco at a
related board at reddit.com.
“When
Pussy Riot started trending, they deleted past tweets and pretended
to be DDoSing RT for Pussy Riot instead.”
Moreover,
the DDoS attack actually disrupted RT’s extensive reporting on the
final day of Pussy Riot trial. RT has been following the band’s
case on a daily basis since their infamous “punk prayer” at
Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral in February.
Some
other comments suggested the site was brought down over the
CIA-related scandal as RT was among the sources to report the
exposure of TrapWire in the US.
“Look
like AntiLeaks is just trying to divert attention to away from
Assange and TrapWire,”
wrote user SND3 at reddit.com.
Over
10,000 computers were used in a similar attack on WikiLeaks, Kristinn
Hrafnnsson, the group's spokesperson, told RT.
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