Unmasked - Ars Technica [4]
On January 20, the coder wrote back, “I’m not compiling that shit on my box!” He even refused to grab a copy of the source code from message boards or other IRC users, because “I ain’t touchin’ any of that shit as those are already monitored.”
“Dude,” responded Barr. “Anonymous is a reckless organization. C’mon I know u and I both understand and believe generally in their principles but they are not a focused and considerate group, the[y] attack at will and do not care of their effects. Do u actually like this group?”
The coder said he didn’t support all they did, but that Anonymous had its moments. Besides, “I enjoy the LULZ.”
“Dude—who’s evil?”
At one time, Barr supported WikiLeaks. When the site released its (edited) “Collateral Murder” video of a US gunship killing Reuters photographers in Iraq, Barr was on board. But when WikiLeaks released its huge cache of US diplomatic cables, Barr came to believe “they are a menace,” and that when Anonymous sprang to the defense of WikiLeaks, it wasn’t merely out of principle. It was about power.
“When they took down MasterCard do u think they thought alright win one for the small guy!” he asked. “The first thought through most of their malcontented minds was a rush of power. That’s not ideals.”
He continued in this philosophical vein:
But dude whos evil?
US Gov? Wikileaks? Anonymous?
Its all about power. The Wikileaks and Anonymous guys think they are doing the people justice by without much investigation or education exposing information or targeting organizations? BS. Its about trying to take power from others and give it to themeselves.
I follow one law.
Mine.
His coder asked Barr how he slept at night, “you military industrial machine capitalist.”
“I sleep great,” Barr responded. “Of course I do indoor [enjoy?] the money and some sense of purpose. But I canget purpose a lot of places, few of which pay this salary.”
The comments are over the top, of course. Elsewhere, Barr gets more serious. “I really dislike corporations,” he says. “They suck the lifeblood out of humanity. But they are also necessary and keep us moving, in what direction I don’t know.
“Governments and corporations should have a right to protect secrets, senstive information that could be damage to their operations. I think these groups are also saying this should be free game as well and I disagree. Hence the 250,000 cables. WHich was bullshit… Society needs some people in the know and some people not. These folks, these sheep believe that all information should be accessible. BS. And if they truly believe it then they should have no problem with me gathering information for public distribution.”
But Anonymous had a bit of a problem with that.
The hunter and the hunted
As Barr wrapped up his research and wrote his conference presentation, he believed he had unmasked 80-90 percent of the Anonymous leadership—and he had done it all using publicly available information.
“They are relying on IP for anonymity,” he wrote in a draft of his presentation. “That is irrelevant with social media users. U use IRC and FB and Twitter and Forums and Blogs regularly… hiding UR IP doesn’t matter.”
Barr would do things like correlate timestamps; a user in IRC would post something, and then a Twitter post on the same topic might appear a second later. Find a few of these links and you might conclude that the IRC user and the Twitter user were the same person.
Even if the content differed, what if you could correlate the times that someone was on IRC with the times a Facebook user was posting to his wall? “If you friend enough people you might be able to correlate people logging into chat with people logging into Facebook,” Barr wrote.
The document contained a list of key IRC chatrooms and Twitter accounts. Facebook groups were included, as were websites. But then Barr started naming names. His notes are full of comments on Anonymous members. “Switch”