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occupyallstreets:

Stratfor CEO Speaks About The Anonymous Hack
Speaking to an audience on Tuesday at this year’s South by Southwest convention, Strategic Forecasting CEO George Friedman suggested that by publishing archives of U.S. diplomatic cables, the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks actually “makes war more likely.”
And in a surprising claim, Friedman added that his company tended to engage in an “orgy of speculation” following major world events — such as the killing of Osama bin Laden and the possibility of a sealed grand jury indictment against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — which is why Stratfor never published that information: because, he said, those claims are simply not true.
Friedman’s speech Tuesday marked the first time he has spoken in public about a devastating hack his company suffered at the end of 2011, which resulted in their entire email archives landing in the possession of WikiLeaks.
Opening his talk, Friedman was almost immediately interrupted by two activists with Occupy Austin, who “mic checked” him and offered the crowd a message about how Stratfor worked as a private spy agency on behalf of wealthy corporations. The crowd reacted negatively to the protesters, booing them loudly. Friedman quickly fell silent, waiting for security to usher them outside.
Continuing, he said that the hack on Stratfor was so completely thorough that their servers were “completely destroyed,” and that even he does not have a copy of the company’s emails anymore.

“I plan to ask the FBI to give me [a copy],” Friedman quipped.

He went on to suggest that hackers who attacked Stratfor had simply done it “for the lulz,” which Friedman called a “nihilistic” concept that he worried may be gaining traction on today’s Internet.
That led him to WikiLeaks, which he claimed to be inflating Stratfor’s profile tremendously by selectively publishing their emails. Reminiscing about the complexity of human conversation, and how that has been lost in the age of the Internet, he added that by elevating a single email from Stratfor, or diplomatic cables from WikiLeaks, as the subject of legitimate reporting, members of the press offer “complete falsification” due to a lack of human context.

“If you’re going to have diplomacy, you must have secrecy,” he said before suggesting that WikiLeaks had only served to “destroy life long relationships” between diplomats continents apart.

Again touching upon the need for more human context in online communications, he added that WikiLeaks, along with the rise of hacker groups like “Anonymous” and “LulzSec,” ultimately advances the Internet’s death march toward repression, instead of broader transparency.
He went on to warn that corporations and governments are much more powerful than Anonymous and WikiLeaks, meaning “they will win” in the ongoing power struggle simply by changing the rules of the conflict — I.E., changing the Internet itself.

“It’s not going to go on anymore because large corporations are getting hacked and it’s costing them large amounts of money, and these guys are powerful enough to make changes,” he warned.

Source

This gave me a lot to think about, especially the last few paragraphs…hmmm…
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occupyallstreets:

Stratfor CEO Speaks About The Anonymous Hack

Speaking to an audience on Tuesday at this year’s South by Southwest convention, Strategic Forecasting CEO George Friedman suggested that by publishing archives of U.S. diplomatic cables, the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks actually “makes war more likely.”

And in a surprising claim, Friedman added that his company tended to engage in an “orgy of speculation” following major world events — such as the killing of Osama bin Laden and the possibility of a sealed grand jury indictment against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — which is why Stratfor never published that information: because, he said, those claims are simply not true.

Friedman’s speech Tuesday marked the first time he has spoken in public about a devastating hack his company suffered at the end of 2011, which resulted in their entire email archives landing in the possession of WikiLeaks.

Opening his talk, Friedman was almost immediately interrupted by two activists with Occupy Austin, who “mic checked” him and offered the crowd a message about how Stratfor worked as a private spy agency on behalf of wealthy corporations. The crowd reacted negatively to the protesters, booing them loudly. Friedman quickly fell silent, waiting for security to usher them outside.

Continuing, he said that the hack on Stratfor was so completely thorough that their servers were “completely destroyed,” and that even he does not have a copy of the company’s emails anymore.

“I plan to ask the FBI to give me [a copy],” Friedman quipped.

He went on to suggest that hackers who attacked Stratfor had simply done it “for the lulz,” which Friedman called a “nihilistic” concept that he worried may be gaining traction on today’s Internet.

That led him to WikiLeaks, which he claimed to be inflating Stratfor’s profile tremendously by selectively publishing their emails. Reminiscing about the complexity of human conversation, and how that has been lost in the age of the Internet, he added that by elevating a single email from Stratfor, or diplomatic cables from WikiLeaks, as the subject of legitimate reporting, members of the press offer “complete falsification” due to a lack of human context.

“If you’re going to have diplomacy, you must have secrecy,” he said before suggesting that WikiLeaks had only served to “destroy life long relationships” between diplomats continents apart.

Again touching upon the need for more human context in online communications, he added that WikiLeaks, along with the rise of hacker groups like “Anonymous” and “LulzSec,” ultimately advances the Internet’s death march toward repression, instead of broader transparency.

He went on to warn that corporations and governments are much more powerful than Anonymous and WikiLeaks, meaning “they will win” in the ongoing power struggle simply by changing the rules of the conflict — I.E., changing the Internet itself.

“It’s not going to go on anymore because large corporations are getting hacked and it’s costing them large amounts of money, and these guys are powerful enough to make changes,” he warned.

Source

This gave me a lot to think about, especially the last few paragraphs…hmmm…

(via anarcho-queer)

    • #stratfor
    • #sxsw
    • #anonymous
    • #lul sec
    • #anti sec
    • #antisec
    • #lulsec
    • #anon
    • #wikileaks
    • #diplomacy
    • #internet
    • #politics
    • #security
    • #hack
    • #hacking
    • #computer hacking
  • 1 year ago > anarcho-queer
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46 Notes/ Hide

  1. anime-hentai likes this
  2. geodetea reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    This gave me a lot to think about, especially the last few paragraphs…hmmm…
  3. tigertwo1515 reblogged this from lastroadtotruth
  4. lastroadtotruth reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  5. geodetea likes this
  6. guerrillatech reblogged this from freeusapress and added:
    The Internet is doing to capitalism what industry did to feudalism.
  7. guerrillatech likes this
  8. freeusapress reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  9. wak3thefuckup reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  10. drseux likes this
  11. mediajorge likes this
  12. yajebbs likes this
  13. buzzkillscg reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    Nations build friendships out of secrecy? Excuse the fuck out of me while I go over here and call bullshit. It’s always...
  14. anathemas-sanctus likes this
  15. freedomnexttime reblogged this from browngurlwfro
  16. yadadafeel reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  17. trotskitty reblogged this from paxamericana
  18. pandahspunk likes this
  19. yellittothemasses reblogged this from liberal-focus and added:
    He went on to suggest that hackers who attacked Stratfor had simply done it “for the lulz,” which Friedman called a...
  20. socialdemocracy reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  21. themesfin reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  22. inspirement likes this
  23. inspirement reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  24. sighphi reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  25. sighphi likes this
  26. liberal-focus reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    I call BS. Just because...puppet stands up...says this...
  27. thisiscloudcountry likes this
  28. themovedmind likes this
  29. mildlyimpressive likes this
  30. red-3y3s likes this
  31. browngurlwfro reblogged this from paxamericana
  32. expose-the-light likes this
  33. edward24-7 reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    This clown got to speak at SXSW?
  34. fariyah likes this
  35. anarcho-queer posted this
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