How one man tracked down Anonymous—and paid a heavy price

Tagged: hackers, Off Topic, Technology
Source: Ars Technica - Read the full article
Posted: 2 years 14 weeks ago

"Aaron Barr believed he had penetrated Anonymous. The loose hacker collective had been responsible for everything from anti-Scientology protests to pro-Wikileaks attacks on MasterCard and Visa, and the FBI was now after them. But matching their online identities to real-world names and locations proved daunting. Barr found a way to crack the code. In a private e-mail to a colleague at his security firm HBGary Federal, which sells digital tools to the US government, the CEO bragged about his research project. "They think I have nothing but a heirarchy based on IRC [Internet Relay Chat] aliases!" he wrote. "As 1337 as these guys are suppsed to be they don't get it. I have pwned them! :)" But had he?"

 

Comments

falmatrix2r
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Joined: 09/26/2010
Posts: 574

anti-scientology all the way = very good

I have a gaming PC and all gaming consoles and it definately doens't get you laid!
My youtube channel: http://www.youtube.com/falmatrix2r
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GraysonPeddie
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Joined: 10/29/2006
Posts: 544

No wonder you can get very emotional when it comes to exploiting Anonymous' identities.

Barr should have not been angry in the first place.

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