Anonymous Claims Retaliation Attacks On DOJ, RIAA, Universal After MegaUpload Bust

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Updated 6:57 pm ET, Thursday, December 19

For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

That seems to be the maxim of the shady online hacktivisit collective Anonymous at least, as several Twitter accounts that identified themselves as members of the loose-knit hacker group on Thursday boasted of taking down the websites of the U.S. Justice Department, the Recording Industry Association of America and Universal Music in retaliation for the U.S. government shutting down MegaUpload.com and charging its founders with extensive copyright violations.

Indeed, at the time of this post’s publication, all of the websites were offline.

“Tango down! http://universalmusic.com & http://www.justice.gov// #Megaupload,” the Twitter account @AnonOps tweeted on late Thursday evening.

“Justice.gov & universalmusic.com TANGO DOWN! You should have EXPECT US! #Megaupload,” the account tweeted shortly thereafter.

“Anonymous/Megaupload backlash update: http://RIAA.ORG is now Tango Down | #OpPayback #OpMegaupload #SOPA #PIPA,” tweeted another account, @YourAnonNews.

The bust of MegaUpload.com (the “Megabust,” as it was) was heralded by the Justice Department in a news release Thursday afternoon as one of “the largest criminal copyright cases ever brought by the United States.”

The Justice Department said that its indictment charged 7 people affiliated with the companies Megaupload and Vestor for “generating more than $175 million in criminal
proceeds and causing more than half a billion dollars in harm to copyright owners.”

The indictment also references correspondence between Megaupload executives and employees and Universal Music Group, in which UMG appeared to be negotiating the terms under which it would allow its content to be licensed for Megaupload’s “Megabox.”

Within hours, the Justice Department‘s website was knocked offline and was still down at the time this post was published. Universal Music’s website also appeared to be offline.

Meanwhile, the Justice Department’s news release was also posted by someone on the website Pastebin, a simple text uploading website frequented by Anonymous and used to dump information gleaned from hacks.

But going after the Justice Department’s website probably isn’t the brightest idea, given that the feds believe that DDoS attacks are a crime and have charged members of the group Anonymous for such efforts in the past.

There is no evidence in this case that DDoS was used, but it is a signature method of Anonymous hackers. TPM was briefly taken offline in September 2011 due to a DDoS attack which came after we published photos of Anonymous suspects charged earlier in the year.

Lawyers for some of the defendants in previous cases involving DDoS attacks have maintained that such techniques are the equivalent of civil rights era sit-ins or jamming phone lines.

More to follow. Stay tuned.

First update: The website of the MPAA also appears down at this time, and the @AnonOps Twitter account also claimed responsibility.

Second update: It’s also worth pointing out the the DOJ has previously successfully used a “Stored Communications Act” order to force Twitter to hand over account user information in criminal investigations. The Boston Police Department also recently successfully used a “secret subpoena” to obtain Twitter user account information. So whoever is behind the Anonymous accounts is potentially at risk of having that happen to them, too.

Third update: The U.S. Copyright Office is also down, and another Anonymous Twitter account has also taken credit.

Fourth update: Anonymous Twitter accounts are also threatening to take down the FBI, the White House, and the music label BMI, according to various sources around the Web. All of those websites remain online at the time of this posting. Sam Biddle at Gizmodo reported he gained access to an IRC Chat for the Operation, dubbed #OpMegaupload, and copied a revealing quote from an Anonymous member “Danzu: STOP EVERYTHING, who are we DoSing right now?”

Fifth update: An FBI spokesperson told TPM that “the FBI is monitoring the matter,” but declined further comment.

Sixth update: One Anonymous Twitter account claims this is the “largest attack ever by Anonymous — 5,635 People Confirmed Using #LOIC to Bring Down Sites!” LOIC stands for “low orbit ion cannon,” a commonly used piece of freeware that enables users to simply begin running it and join a botnet to participate in a DDoS attack.

Seventh update: The MPAA posted an update on Twitter confirming its website and “many others” were targeted in attacks and that the “hacker group Anonymous is claiming responsibility.” The MPAA further states that “We are working with law enforcement to identify those responsible,” and that the industry “has always been a strong supporter of free speech…The Internet is home to creativity, innovation and free speech. We want to keep it that way. Protecting copyrights and protecting free speech go hand in hand.”

Eighth update: The FBI website is now offline as well.

Ninth update:: DOJ is treating website issue as a “malicious act.”

With reporting from Ryan J. Reilly.

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