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In January 2015, Anonymous released a video and a statement via Twitter condemning the attack on Charlie Hebdo, in which 12 people, including eight journalists, were fatally shot. The video, claiming that it is "a message for al-Qaeda, the Islamic State and other terrorists", was uploaded to the group's Belgian account. [170]
A Twitter account affiliated with Anonymous struck back with information regarding Belmar's location, phone number, family members, and their accounts on social media. [178] That same account also released information claiming to be the dox of the officer who shot Brown, but wound up being incorrect.
Operation Payback's main site was attacked later that day, and they subsequently moved their website from tieve.tk to anonops.net. [ 57 ] [ 58 ] During the damages phase of the LimeWire trial, the RIAA attempted to switch from seeking statutory damages per-work to seeking them per-infringement, but did not quote a total damage amount, nor a ...
In 2016, after Brown was released from prison, he posted crude videos and conspiracy theories online and was accused of harassing women, which he denied. [11] [12] [23] In 2017, Brown launched the Pursuance Project, which aimed to unite transparency activists, investigative journalists, FOIA specialists and hacktivists in a fully encrypted ...
The Church issued a copyright violation claim against YouTube requesting the removal of the video. In response to this, Anonymous formulated Project Chanology. Calling the action by the Church of Scientology a form of Internet censorship , members of Project Chanology organized a series of denial-of-service attacks against Scientology websites ...
Jake Leslie Davis (born 27 October 1992), [1] known professionally as Topiary, is a British hacktivist.He has worked with Anonymous, LulzSec, and other similar groups. [2] He was an associate of the Internet group Anonymous, [3] which has publicly claimed various online attacks, including hacking HBGary, [4] Westboro Baptist Church, and Gawker. [5]
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[10] [11] Topiary ran the LulzSec Twitter account on a daily basis; following the announcement of LulzSec's dissolution, he deleted all the posts on his Twitter page, except for one, which stated: "You cannot arrest an idea". [6] [12] Police arrested a man from Shetland, United Kingdom suspected of being Topiary on 27 July 2011. [13]