Anonymous
hacks US Sentencing Commission website for Swartz
Hacktivist
movement Anonymous has hijacked the US Sentencing Commission website
as a personal vendetta to retaliate against the justice system that
threatened to imprison web activist Aaron Swartz, who recently
committed suicide, for decades.
RT,
26
January, 2013
The
website was hacked early Saturday and a message was placed saying
that “a line was
crossed”
when Swartz killed himself two weeks ago.
“Two
weeks ago today, Aaron Swartz was killed. Killed because he faced an
impossible choice. Killed because he was forced into playing a game
he could not win — a twisted and distorted perversion of justice —
a game where the only winning move was not to play,”
the statement read.
Screenshot
from www.ussc.gov
Anonymous
now threatens to release secret information that they have reportedly
copied from several governments’ computer systems they were able to
access.
The
hackers also put up their video statement and a list of files named
after US Supreme Court justices on the hacked website.
Earlier,
Anonymous gained access to MIT’s website and the Department of
Justice, DOJ.gov website, using distributed denial-of-service (DDoS)
attacks to avenge the passing of Swartz.
Aaron
Swartz, who co-founded both the website Reddit and the activism
organization Demand Progress, was due to appear in federal court
during the coming weeks because the United States says he illegally
downloaded millions of academic papers from the website JSTOR,
presumably for public distribution, while logged onto the computer
network of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. If convicted,
Swartz could have been sentenced to upwards of 35 years in prison and
a US$1 million fine.
The
26-year-old Harvard fellow openly discussed his bouts with depression
in the past, but Swartz’s parents and advocates alike have
suggested that a serious legal fight that has dominated the
activist’s life in recent years played a role in his passing.
In
a statement published shortly after his death, the activist’s
family said,
“Aaron’s death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the
product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and
prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in the
Massachusetts US Attorney’s office and at MIT contributed to his
death.”
Others,
including Kim Dotcom, the founder of the now-defunct file-storage
site Megaupload, also believe that Aaron Swartz became a political
target, and that is what led to his tragic death.
"There
is no reasonable cause behind going after a young genius like him in
the fashion they did,"
Dotcom told
RT
in an interview.
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