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Canada Privacy Security Your Rights Online

Canadian Government Servers Compromised By Anonymous 79

An anonymous reader writes: There was a cyber-attack on Wednesday by the activist group Anonymous, aimed at the Canadian government. Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney says no personal information was compromised. Anonymous claimed responsibility for the attack in protest against the recent passing of the government's anti-terror Bill C-51. "Today, Anons around the world took a stand for your rights. Do we trade our privacy for security? Do we bow down and obey what has become totalitarian rule? Don't fool [yourselves]. The Harper regime does not listen to the people, it acts only in [its] best interests." the group wrote in an online post.
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Canadian Government Servers Compromised By Anonymous

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  • Yeah, fuck Harper (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 18, 2015 @07:37AM (#49935769)

    I for one, welcome our Anonymous Canadian Overlords.

    • Agreed.

      So say all Canadians.

  • by jandersen ( 462034 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @07:37AM (#49935771)

    So, Anonymous protest against a law that targets hackers by ... hacking? And this will demonstrate to the government and the public that this law is not warranted? Please explain the logic in this, because I can't spot it.

    • Same logic as protesting the taking of guns by revolution.

    • by phayes ( 202222 )

      At least we know what /. articles we'll be seeing in a few months: Anonymous hacker XYZ convicted to Y years of prison for participating in last year's attack of Canadian computer infrastructure...

      • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @08:01AM (#49935847) Homepage

        Anonymous hacker XYZ convicted to Y years

        So is his middle name a number, or is he going to get sentenced to Jeff years in prison?

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward

          I am going to change my middle name to "-10" to make myself safe from this.

        • by phayes ( 202222 )

          No middle name, it's just a letter & he'll be sentenced to the base 10 ascii code representation of that letter -- Uppercase if he's lucky...

      • With a sentence that is so out of touch with reality and the associated "crime" that it boggles the mind, based on evidence not worth the name.

        • by phayes ( 202222 )

          Yeah, well for some people, even video footage of people discussing who and how to DDOS / deface is insufficient evidence. Not because evidence is insufficient to convince a jury to convict but because they are ideologically opposed to any limits to their imagined "electronic freedom".

    • I guess it's the same way that hacking the PSN and handing out users credit card details was protecting us from the evil sony corp who charges too much for software...... The short answer is: there used to be a loosely affiliated group of like minded crackers and coders who congregated in the dark corners of the intertubes, IRC and other seldom traveled paths. They became hacktivists. Then they began a government operation to provide the pretext to enact the laws the "anon" group stands against. Problem
    • by Dr Caleb ( 121505 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @08:57AM (#49936085) Homepage Journal

      No, the law isn't about hacking. Bill C-51 gives the government power to share information about citizens between departments. It also authorizes heavier surveillance, stronger powers of arrest, while not adding any accountability.

      http://www.michaelgeist.ca/201... [michaelgeist.ca]

    • try using logic to convince someone to use logic
    • It demonstrates to the government that their bullshit laws are just that: Bullshit. They accomplish nothing save taking away essential liberties.

  • when you were needed most by your country?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_machine_%28homosexuality_test%29

    Fruit machine (homosexuality test)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    "Fruit machine" is a term for a device developed in Canada that was supposed to be able to identify homosexual people, or (offensively and derogatorily) "fruits". The subjects were made to view pornography, and the device measured the diameter of the pupils of the eyes (pupillary response test), perspiration, and pulse for a supposed erotic response.

    The "fruit machine" w

    • So wait, the Blade Runner intro was based on a Canadian gaydar? Canada, we gave the world the canadarm and the fruit machine.
  • by drrilll ( 2593537 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @07:48AM (#49935805)
    If I ever need Anonymous to take a stand for my rights, I will shine a Guy Fawkes mask onto the clouds. Until then I am more than capable of managing what I do and do not want to stand for. Do not presume to speak or act for me.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Whoops - they had an opinion - they forgot to check with you first to see whether it matches yours. Because you apparently think that your opinion trumps their right to have a different one. But the truth of the matter is, while you're certainly entitled to have your own opinion and stand for whatever you like, no one else really gives a shit but you.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    You mean the countless layers of ineffective bureaucracy at Shared Services Cana-duh [facebook.com] can't help?!

  • The days when a security breach is big news is so over. When the US Government can lose control over the employment records of every, single employee, this kind of playing around by Anonymous is just kind of sad.

  • Shit title (Score:5, Informative)

    by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki&gmail,com> on Thursday June 18, 2015 @08:32AM (#49935983) Homepage

    Shit article, shit title. It was a DDOS, and in terms of impact pretty much nothing happened. IP based stuff went into failover, and there wasn't even a pick up in phone call-ins apparently.

  • "The cyberattack and cyber security is an issue that we take very seriously,"

    "We are increasing our resources and polices to be better equipped to face cyberattacks, whether they are coming from hackers from a group, potentially, that has said they did it today, [or] state-sponsored or terrorist entities."

    if they took "cyber security" very seriously, they wouldn't need to increase their resources and they wouldn't have been hacked.

  • The Liberals voted for it (although they claim they were against it). If they had been in power, odds are Canadians would have gotten the shaft as well. The fact is that the political establishment only serves itself. It does not care about the citizens, or anyone outside of the establishment. Politicians lie through their teeth, or are so brow beaten by the fear, sorry, "security" establishment that they will happily throw away rights and liberties, because "terrorists". They'll tout completely discredited

    • by Gramie2 ( 411713 )

      A small, ineffective, mostly powerless part

      What? The NDP is the official opposition! And not doing all that badly in the polls! [huffingtonpost.ca] Tom Mulcair has pledged to bring in proportional representation if elected, if you want something that "actually represents Canadians".

      I'm not affiliated with the NDP in any way (I've voted for them once out of about five elections), but Mulcair has impressed me.

      • by Coolfish ( 69926 )

        A small, ineffective, mostly powerless part

        What? The NDP is the official opposition! And not doing all that badly in the polls! [huffingtonpost.ca] Tom Mulcair has pledged to bring in proportional representation if elected, if you want something that "actually represents Canadians".

        I'm not affiliated with the NDP in any way (I've voted for them once out of about five elections), but Mulcair has impressed me.

        So what? What did the official opposition do to stop this bill? What could they have done? Nothing, and nada. Small, almost completely ineffective in getting anything done. My point stands.

        I doubt that proportional representation will have much impact. Certainly it's a less awful idea than First Past the Post (FTFP), but the fact that we are still dealing with politicians remains.

        When you go vote - do you read up on the position of the person you're going to elect? Does that matter, if they can go and chang

  • It does nothing to stop the C51. The right thing to do is to donate to the opposition party that would against C51. They need the money the could get to deliver their messages to the voters. Alternatively, compromise the political party in power, expose their scandals, etc. This is no more than public stunt that does nothing to anyone other than earning a few headline news article, at best.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      > It does nothing to stop the C51.

      It got (some) people *talking* about C51. Without hurting anyone, or doing any actual damage. (Some civil servants - including me - couldn't surf the web for an hour, and Canadian citizens couldn't look at the oh-so-exciting web sites provided by the government.)

      I agree that supporting parties opposed to the bill is a good idea, but I don't think that an awareness-raising publicity stunt was that bad an idea either. C51 has already passed, we are beyond stopping it; t

  • Troubling (Score:4, Informative)

    by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Thursday June 18, 2015 @10:27AM (#49936623) Journal

    Bill C51 is particularly troubling... it has already been passed into law and as such may prove very difficult to get rid of by any later prime minister that disagrees with it without a majority government.

    The most particularly troubling aspect of C51 is that it empowers CSIS to break almost *ANY* law... short of inflicting enduring physical bodily harm on someone, or acts of sexual violation... in the course of disrupting anything that they believe, rightly or wrongly, to be a terrorist threat, including violating even civil and constitutional rights. That means they can imprison people because of their race, or simply because of what that person believes, for example, even if that person has done absolutely nothing wrong. if CSIS has any reason at all to suspect that such factors link them to committing any act that corresponds with a terrorist threat, a phrase that by itself is so loosely defined (in fact, it isn't even defined in this law... in fact, it appears almost intentional to have left it undefined so that CSIS could apply the term as they saw fit), that even picketing or almost any other form of entirely peaceful assembly that might happens to disrupt some activity that the government is wanting to push forward could qualify.

    It's interesting to consider, however, that because CSIS also outlaws the the distribution of terrorist propoganda, if, for example, Westboro Baptist Church were Canadian, then by Bill-C51, the government would have to ban the Christian bible, since WBC uses that text to justify many of their insane acts, and the bill explicitly outlaws the dissemination of literature that encourages acts of terrorism.

    • Re:Troubling (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gramie2 ( 411713 ) on Thursday June 18, 2015 @10:43AM (#49936725)

      Tom Mulcair was on the CBC yesterday [www.cbc.ca], and I have to say (as a non-committed voter who has voted NDP, Green, Liberal and --in a sad episode of my youth-- some Family somethingorother anti-abortion party) that I like the things he says and the way he says them. No hype, no theatrics, just intelligent arguments and thoughtful principals.

      With Harper, we will get a precipitous slide into government by the rich, for the rich; with Trudeau, a gentler slope but the same trajectory. I truly believe that Mulcair will try to roll back some of the encroachments on individual rights and liberty, and actually start us headed towards environmental responsibility.

      Is it possible that Mulcair will fall victim to the same hubris and vested interests as other politicians? Of course. But why not start out with at least a little hope for positive change?

      • Don't let the NDP's smooth talking fool you.

        Unless you're a factory worker making less than the Canadian average income, they'll likely fund their spending on cash from your wallet. As you're on slashdot, can format your posts to be readable and don't have any egregious spelling errors, I suspect you will end up in the payer's pile.

        We once again have a overflowing cup of political leadershiT. Czar Harper, Comrade Mulcair and Untested Trudeau. The wheel of fate is broken and stuck pointing at, "Here tha
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Better we pay a bit more tax and stop destroying our environment, our scientific establishments, historical data for fisheries and forests, ... I'm sorry what were we talking about?

          Harper's evils are actually evil. Mulcair might misstep, but it'd be in a very Canadian, "let's get things right and face facts" way. Trudeau is a wild card all right.

      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        Mulclair also stands for selling out *workers* rights - of all things - just to suck up to the separatists.

    • by Livius ( 318358 )

      The right groups -- fundamentalist Christians, separatists, money launderers, etc. - will be somewhat less targeted.

  • "What is a denial-of-service attack? Most commonly, these events occur when mischief makers or hackers simply flood a target computer with more traffic than it was built to handle. ref [timescolonist.com]
    --

    Please stop using the word cyber on a tech site ..

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