The establishment media has characterized the leader of LulzSec ratting out his hacktivist comrades as betrayal,
but the incident reveals something far more sinister – government is
responsible for creating and unleashing computer hacker groups. Hector Xavier Monsegur, said to be the leader of LulzSec, worked for
the FBI, according to news reports. He was reportedly arrested in Puerto
Rico last June, pleaded guilty to hacking charges, and then began
working with the FBI – or so the cover story would have it.
Monsequr, aka Sabu, decided what targets to attack and who would
participate in the attacks, more than likely at the direction of this
FBI handlers. It is believed he participated in the Anonymous effort to
hack HBGary, the security firm that works closely with the CIA, NSA, FBI, and the Pentagon.
Sabu’s Lulz Security, commonly abbreviated as LulzSec, claimed
responsibility for taking the CIA website offline. It also attacked Fox
News, PBS, Sony, and a number of gamer sites. LulzSec claims to have
hacked local InfraGard chapter sites, the organization affiliated with
the FBI, and released the emails and passwords of a number of users of
senate.gov.
LulzSec and Anonymous attacks have provided the government with an
excuse to push their cyber security agenda and propaganda campaign,
including the proposal for a “kill switch” that would have allowed Obama
to shut down the internet (due to public outrage, the proposal was dropped from a House bill in February).
Government and corporate groups cited LulzSec and Anonymous lawlessness
last June to push the so-called Protect IP Act (known as PIPA). The
introduction of a House version of the bill, dubbed SOPA (Stop Online
Privacy Act), was met with public outrage and widespread activism that
forced Congress to reconsider the legislation.
In October, Mother Jones
revealed that the FBI is notorious for creating supposed terrorist
groups from scratch and then framing patsies in order to claim the
government is protecting the United States from terrorists and also
breathe life into an otherwise moribund war on mostly nonexistent
terrorism.
Sabu’s role as an FBI provocateur working inside LulzSec reveals the
government is attempting to do the same in order to push its so-called
cybersecurity agenda. The establishment is eager to pass a raft of
legislation to closely regulate the internet, strip the medium of its
anonymity, and close it down as an activism and alternative media tool.
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