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Anonymous declares war on Islamic State after Paris attacks
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Anonymous declares war on Islamic State after Paris attacks

In a video posted to YouTube after last Friday's attacks in Paris, a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask read a statement calling the attackers "vermin" and warning the Islamic State to prepare for "many cyberattacks."

Anonymous

Members of the hacker collective Anonymous have declared war on the Islamic State, after the radical terrorist group claimed responsibility for the horrific attacks in Paris that killed over 120 people.

In a video posted to YouTube the day after Friday’s attacks, a man wearing a Guy Fawkes mask read a statement calling the attackers “vermin” and warning the Islamic State to prepare for “many cyberattacks.”

Speaking in French, the man said Anonymous would “hunt down” the attackers just as its members did after the terrorist attack in January 2015 on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, according to an English translation of the video:

On Friday 13 November our country France was attacked in Paris for two hours, by multiple terrorist attacks claimed by you, the Islamic State.

These attacks cannot go unpunished. That's why Anonymous activists from all over the world will hunt you down. Yes you, the vermin who kill innocent victims, we will hunt you down like we did to those who carried out the attacks on Charlie Hebdo.

So get ready for a massive reaction from Anonymous. Know that we will find you and we will never let up. We are going to launch the biggest ever operation against you. Expect very many cyberattacks. War is declared. Prepare yourselves.

Know this: the French people are stronger than you and we will come out of this atrocity even stronger.

Anonymous sends its condolences to the families of the victims.

We are Anonymous. We are legion. We don't forgive, we don't forget. Expect us.

The video had been seen over 1.8 million times as of 7:30 pm GMT on Monday (16 November).

The video did not explain when or how those “cyberattacks” would happen, but on Monday, self-described Anonymous members said on Twitter that the attacks had begun.

After the attack on Charlie Hebdo in January, Anonymous members launched an #OpISIS to hack pro-Islamic State websites and social media accounts.

Another round of similar ops appears to be underway – #OpISIS and #OpParis.

By its nature, Anonymous is decentralized, and multiple Twitter accounts affiliated with Anonymous are taking credit for cyberattacks against the Islamic State.

One Twitter account, @opparisofficial, tweeted Monday that over 3800 pro-Islamic State Twitter accounts had been taken down.

https://twitter.com/opparisofficial/status/666186861199552512?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Reuters reported that Anonymous members claimed to have identified 39,000 pro-ISIS accounts and reported them to Twitter, which supposedly took down 25,000 of those accounts.

Another Twitter account, @AnonyOpNews, Tweeted that Anonymous’s attacks on the Islamic State (also called ISIS, ISIL, and Daesh) would involve naming members of the terrorist group, similar to what Anonymous members did in an op against members of the Ku Klux Klan earlier this month.

https://twitter.com/AnonyOpNews/status/666137365316956160?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

And yet another Twitter account, @GroupAnon, declared war with the Islamic State, and stated that members of Anonymous are “better hackers.”

Despite Anonymous’s apparent intentions to join what is a global effort to defeat the Islamic State, it’s not clear that their tactics are effective, and they may even be counterproductive.

Some foreign policy analysts have said Anonymous taking out Islamic State websites and social media accounts could hurt intelligence-gathering by military and intelligence agencies that track the Islamic State through its online activities.

People all over the world took to social media on Friday after the terrorist attacks in Paris to express grief, anger and solidarity with France.

One of the most popular responses on social media – a simple, hand-drawn sketch of the Eiffel Tower resembling the peace symbol, created by a French graphic designer named Jean Jullien – went viral in the hours after the attacks.

https://twitter.com/jean_jullien/status/665305363500011521?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Anonymous has been known to misfire with its approach, such as misidentifying people in its #OpKKK last month with no connection to the hate group, and using illegal tactics such as distributed denial-of-service attacks.

Jullien’s stroke of the pen is, in my opinion, the more powerful and far-reaching response to the terrorist attacks.

Screenshot of Anonymous video via YouTube.

4 Comments

I for one hope that ISIS will accept the challenge and retaliate against Anonymous. What could be better than pest attacking each other ?

The more online tracks they leave by doing so, the easier it will be for cops to catch both of them later on.

Wished I could give this post an infinite amount of up votes. I wholeheartedly agree, and I find it ironic that the kettle is calling the tea black. Anonymous are cowards and cyber bullies nothing more nothing less.

IC3 and the US FBI have issued a vaguely stated warning, “Hacktivists Threaten to Target Law Enforcement Personnel and Public Officials,” that I think is referring to Anonymous but who are never mentioned by name. http://www.ic3.gov/media/2015/151118.aspx But after all they are anonymous, so maybe that explains it.

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