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9. Revealing China’s responsibility in U.S cyber attacks

In 2011, security firm Mandiant released an explosive report
that linked the Chinese military to a number of cyber attacks made on the U.S.
What’s more, Anonymous had a key part in the exposure of the information.

Profiles of individual hackers came to light when Anonymous hacked major forum rootkit.com.
It published the data of 40,000 users online, information that Mandiant said
they were ‘fortunate’ to have.

8. In December 2006, Anonymous took down the website of white supremacist
radio show host Hal Turner.
The attack ended up with Turner paying some very expensive bandwidth
bills and dropping a lawsuit a year later.

7. Beginning in January 2008, Anonymous kicked off "Project Chanology,"
its attack on the Church of Scientology, a cult-like religion
which allegedly imprisons its dissident members.
They launched denial of service attacks against the organization's websites,
gamed the link-sharing site Digg to more prominently
display anti-Scientology pages, and even physically protested —
showing up in person — many church events.
Scientology Media/Flickr

6. Anonymous released user information from a major hacking forum
in February 2011, and security firm Mandiant was able to use this
data to link the Chinese military to cyber-attacks against the U.S. this year.

5. The Westboro Baptist Church is notoriously hateful and intolerant.
Anonymous successfully took down the Westboro Baptist Church's
website in February 2011 in protest.

4. Operation DarkNet was the group's campaign against child pornography
in October 2011.
Because pornographers were incredibly effective at using technology
to hide themselves, Anonymous used technology to put them out of business.
(The people in this image are fictional representations of hackers,
not pedophiles, obviously.) Flickr/hackNY

Detailed: Anonymous completed a mass operation against child pornography,
claiming that it had managed to take down 40 sites or groups
that used the Tor network to conceal the users’ locations.

They also published the details of users on the web.
The posting of the details in particular was criticised by technology experts.
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at security firm Sophos,
told the BBC it had the potential to hinder police efforts
to prosecute through lack of evidence.

‘Take-downs of illegal websites and sharing networks should be done
by the authorities, not net vigilantes,’ he said.

3. On August 13, 2012, tensions were rising in Uganda as the country's
laws were increasingly intolerant on LGBT issues.
Anonymous defaced two Ugandan government sites in protest.

2. The Steubenville rape case — in which images of the high school victim
were disseminated in social media — obviously got a lot of attention
earlier this year. Anonymous released incriminating video,
tweets, and emails belonging to accused players on the school's football team.
http://espn.go.com/video/clip?id=9029359

1. Just this month, Anonymous began "Operation Free Korea."
It's the group's effort to get "controversial leader Kim Jong-un to resign,
" "install free democracy," "abandon nuclear ambition," and grant
"uncensored internet access" to its citizens.
On April 3, Anonymous released all 15,000 usernames and passwords
for the government's web services and threatened to wipe its data.
A South Korean security guard works to turn back vehicles as they
were refused to enter to Kaesong, North Korea.

sources:
businessinsider
metro.co.uk
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