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cDc-Hacktivismo FAQ v1.0


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2001 05:03:01 -0500 (CDT)

Forwarded by: Grandmaster Ratte' <deadcow () cultdeadcow com>

The Hacktivismo FAQ v1.0

What is Hacktivismo?  What is the cDc?  And most importantly, who is a
Dwarf Named Warren?  In this inaugural FAQ you'll be treated to the
kind of privileged information that would normally cost you over a
thousand dollars at the Black Hat Briefings.  And you don't even have
to hang around with a bunch of lame CTOs to get it.  Hacktivismo.  
It's the biggest thing since John Holmes' pecker.  Love it.  Rub it.  
Share it with your friends.


Q: What is Hacktivismo?

A: Hacktivismo is a special operations group sponsored by the CULT OF
THE DEAD COW (cDc). We view access to information as a basic human
right.  We are also interested in keeping the Internet free of
state-sponsored censorship and corporate chicanery so all opinions can
be heard.

Q: What is the CULT OF THE DEAD COW?

A: The cDc is the most influential group of hackers in the world.  
Grandmaster Ratte' and Franken Gibe spawned the herd in 1984 in
Lubbock, Texas.  We publish the first and longest running e-zine in
the history of the Internet, are a thorn in Billion Gates ass, and are
the only reason worth getting out of bed in the morning.  We're also
very good at card tricks and dancing.

Q: Why is CULT OF THE DEAD COW always capitalized?

A: It's cooler that way.

Q: When was Hacktivismo formed?

A: Oxblood Ruffin, the cDc's Foreign Minister, began developing
Hacktivismo at Defcon [http://defcon.org] in the summer of 1999, based
on drunken conversations with Reid Fleming and AJ Effin Reznor.  Our
first recruit was Bronc Buster who started programming in January 2000
with Mr. Pink, who has since left the group.

Q: Is Hacktivismo the same as the CULT OF THE DEAD COW?

A: No. The CULT OF THE DEAD COW is a group where new members are
inducted rarely, and only after rigorous debate, temper tantrums, and
a big group hug afterwards.  Hacktivismo is an autonomous group within
the cDc where members are invited to join by Oxblood after they've
done a lot of work on Hacktivismo projects.

Q: How many members does Hacktivismo have?

A: As of July 1, 2001 we had five official members.

Oxblood Ruffin - Baudfather & Founder, Rolodex Expert
Bronc Buster - Network Wrangler, Gravy Maven, Charter Member
The Pull - Research Beast, Lone Star Hellion, Charter Member
The Mixter - Hole Poker, Lederhosen Enthusiast, Charter Member
Drunken Master - Code Sifu, Merlot Soak, Charter Member

We also have twenty-eight people participating in the Peekabooty
Project [see below].  Our numbers include I.T. professionals, lawyers,
human rights workers, and students.  We live in the United States,
Canada, Europe, Israel, Taiwan, Korea, and the Peoples Republic of
China. Hacktivismo also has informal layers of support that collect
network intelligence and will assist with application distribution,
and document translation.  The one thing that can be said of the
Hacktivismo network is that it is truly international.  We're the
United Nations of hacking, except without the bickering and
cheapskates who won't pay up.

Q: What do the people in Hacktivismo do when they aren't fighting for
international human rights?

A: Different people do different things to relax.  Bronc Buster signed
up for some ballet classes a while back, and The Pull is learning how
to play the French horn.  Once the whole Hacktivismo crew rented a
Hummer and went to see Bridget Jones Diary in Niagara Falls. We loved
the movie so much that we all bought ice cream and control panties
right after the show.  We're just plain folks; some plainer than
others.

Q: Do you have t-shirts?

A: Right now, only for our members and the people we want to sleep
with.  But shortly Hacktivismo will initiate its Cotton for Cadres
Campaign wherein we shall make our revolutionary, 100% cotton
undergarment available for purchase.  Our t-shirt is black; a restful,
pastel black with a lovely white graphic symbolizing creativity,
youthful exuberance, and hackerly daring-do.  It is guaranteed to find
you love and riches.  Start saving now.

Q: Why do you use El Dia de los Muertos [Day of the Dead] imagery?

A: For two reasons. 1) It's hella cool; and 2) It's important to
remember the dead. The Day of the Dead festival in Mexico is something
like our Halloween, but it is a religious celebration.  Everyone goes
to graveyards and has picnics and fun.  It's like a great big party
with salsa and skeletons.

It may seem like a bit of a stretch, but we chose this imagery to
honor the victims of human rights abuses.  Sometimes it's hard to
imagine that people could be imprisoned, or worse, for things we take
for granted.  They should never be forgotten.

Q: What does Hacktivismo mean?

A: Hacktivismo is Spanish for "hacktivism", a neologism formed by
combining the words hacking and activism.  We chose Hacktivismo to
differentiate us from other groups who claim to be hacktivists but
don't really know their ass from a brick.

Q: What do you mean by the word "hacktivism", then?

A: The provenance of hacktivism winds back to Omega - a longstanding
member of the cDc - who started using it as a joke to describe on-line
protest actions.  Oxblood appropriated the word and began using it
with a straight face; then many journalists, fading stars of the Left,
and eventually script kiddies picked up on it, all claiming to know
what hacktivism meant.  It has been a noun in search of a verb for
some time now.  Oxblood once defined hacktivism as "an open-source
implosion", and now he's added "disruptive compliance" to its range of
description.

Q: What the hell are you talking about?  I'm just looking for a simple
answer here.

A: Hold your kimono, cupcake.  O.K., hacktivism is the use of
technology to advance human rights through electronic media.

Q: You mean you aren't interested in advancing human rights in the
real world, on the ground?

A: Sure, but that's not where our competence lies.  We're hackers, not
social justice activists.  Let's put it this way.  Some groups and
individuals are well suited to fight for social and economic progress
around the world.  If as a result of an initiative in Africa, for
instance, economic standards were raised and more people could obtain
computers -- that would be a good thing.  But what kind of Internet
would they eventually have access to?  One where censorship or the
proliferation of vulnerable software left them at risk?  We're not
willing to sit by and watch that happen.  We think of hacktivism and
the Internet the same way that homeopathist's think of the body: you
have to introduce a little poison to create health.  Code has
consciousness and healing power whether you like it or not.

R: That sounds a little booga-booga.

A: Free your mind, dude.  Reach forward and touch your monitor.  Can
you feel the love? No?  Well maybe if your screen weren't so goddamn
dirty you could.

Q: What is Hacktivismo's mission statement?

A: We don't have one as such, but we do believe in Article 19 of the
Universal Declaration on Human Rights (UDHR) as one point of
departure.  It reads, "Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion
and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without
interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas
through any media and regardless of frontiers."  The entire text of
the UDHR can be located at http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html.  
We also like Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) that can be located at
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_ccpr.htm.

Q: What is the Hacktivismo Declaration?

A: We decided to release a document that condemned state-sponsored
censorship of the Internet.  Hopefully people will read it and think
it's a good thing, or a total piece of crap.  Getting some sort of
discussion going around information rights is the primary objective.  
You can read the Hacktivismo Declaration on the cDc website.

Q: It's pretty legalistic.  What gives?

A: You should try writing one of these things.  The main purpose was
to cite some internationally recognized documents that equate access
to information with human and political rights; to state unequivocally
that reasonable access to lawfully published material on the Internet
is a basic human right; that we're disgusted with the political
hypocrisy and corporate avarice that has created this situation; and,
that we're stepping up to the plate and doing something about this.

Q: Do you think all information should be accessible?

A: No.  That's why we talk about "lawfully published" information in
the Hacktivismo Declaration.  Essentially that cuts out things like
legitimate government secrets, kiddie porn, matters of personal
privacy, and other accepted restrictions.  But even the term "lawfully
published" is full of landmines.  Lawful to whom?  What is lawful in
the United States can get you a bullet in the head in China.  At the
end of the day we recognize that some information needs to be
controlled.  But that control falls far short of censoring material
that is critical of governments, intellectual and artistic opinion,
information relating to women's issues or sexual preference, and
religious opinions.  That's another way of saying that most
information wants to be free; the rest needs a little privacy, even
non-existence in the case of things like kiddie porn.  Everyone will
have to sort the parameters of this one out for themselves.

Q: What's up with that line about "public morals" in the Hacktivismo
Declaration?  Are you trying to get a date with Tipper Gore?

A: Cute.  You are referring to paragraph 3, Article 19 of the ICCPR
that we quote in the preamble before the actual declaration.  All we
can say is that we didn't write this -- a bunch of lawyers at the
United Nations did.  But in its defense, this is the kind of general
provision that makes it clear that things like kiddie porn do not
qualify as freedom of expression.

Q: What's the relationship between Hacking and Human Rights?

A: We believe that reasonable access to information on the Internet -
and across all media - is a basic human right.  We are trying to
intervene to reverse the tide of state-sponsored censorship of the
Internet through the inventive use of code.  This is what Oxblood is
referring to when he uses the term "disruptive compliance".  It's the
opposite of "civil disobedience".  We favor using disruptive
technologies that comply with the spirit and original intent of the
Internet.  The Internet is a commons with its own field of operation.  
It's all about freedom and bringing the world together.  The number of
politicians who just don't get this astounds us.  They should learn
how to use email and a few other basics before they come up with any
more restrictive/vindictive legislation.

Q: What is Peekabooty?

A: Something that even control panties will not be able to suppress.  
Firstly, let us say what it is not: It is not file sharing, it is not
Gnutella, and it is not Napster in a trench coat.  Peekabooty is a
distributed collaborative privacy network.  It allows clients to evade
most forms of DNS filtering and make Web page requests directly to a
distributed server cloud that processes the requests and trans-serves
content back to the requesting client.

Q: Will Peekabooty neutralize state-sponsored censorship of the
Internet?

A: It will help some folks, and for a while.  But eventually all of
the bad people with horrible breath and ugly clothing will try to shut
Peekabooty down.  We know for a fact that the Chinese government -
actually, the geriatric and nepotistic martinets who butcher their own
citizens is a more accurate description - are waiting for Peekabooty
to come out so they can throw all of their evil Commie resources
against it.  But we have three things going for us: 1) We have a
morally superior position; 2) Peekabooty will be released open source
and will mutate beyond recognition; and, most importantly 3) The
International Hacker Community is on our side.  Still, we expect some
of this to be tough sledding.

Q: So you're saying it's possible that Peekabooty might eventually get
shut down?

A: It's not impossible, we'll see.  The only thing we know is that
history will applaud us if we succeed, and eventually forgive us if we
fail.  But it will never forgive us if we fail to even try.

Q: When will it be released?

A: When it's ready.

Q: Will it be open source?

A: Hells yeah.

Q: How will you distribute it?

A: Peekabooty will spread faster than herpes at spring break.  There
is no vaccine.  There is no cure.

Q: What can I do to help?

A: It's your duty to Peekabooty.  This is a revolution you can
download, so get on the stick and run Peekabooty when it's available.

Q: What does the name mean?

A: Oxblood was staying in Harlem at Grandmaster Ratte's, and one day
while he was waiting in front of G. Ratte's apartment, Oxblood saw a
little girl on the sidewalk.  She was standing in front of her mother
who had her back to him.  The little girl kept popping her head around
her mother's hip to play peek-a-boo, which was kind of funny because
the girl was completely hidden by her Mom's spandex-wearing,
fuscia-colored, mile-wide ass, as she stood in front.  And all of a
sudden the word Peekabooty flashed into Oxblood's mind, like an
epiphany, or something else really important.  And he had a vision of
an innocent smiling into the fat ass of repression, and the
possibilities seemed endless.  So he started calling the app
Peekabooty.

Q: Why are you doing this?

A: Hacking is a contact sport.  We're trying to maintain contact with
as many people as possible.  The world is far too small a place to
disconnect millions of people from one another.  And governments that
attempt to separate and divide the world rather than bring it together
are on a collision course with the inevitable.  There's an arrogant
and misguided notion that somehow dictators will be able to exploit
the Internet to improve their economies, yet put a chokehold on
content they don't like.  Good luck, nitwits.

Q: Who cares if Iraq or Cuba censors the Internet?  It ain't nothin'
to me.

A: Substitute the word control for censor.  The fact that dictators
are ham-fisted and obvious is only a testament to their arrogance and
contempt for humanity.  All governments want to control the Internet
in one form or another.  The United States, Germany, France, the
United Kingdom, and Australia - just to name a few - have all enacted
legislation governing use of the Internet, some of it very bad.

Q: How do I become a hacker?

A: Get in touch with Carolyn Meinel at http://www.happyhacker.org.  
She is the world's greatest haxor.  Granny Meinel will sell you her
haxoring book, and possibly even her incontinence knickers -
maintained by backdoor special_assed, JP Varanisnatch - from which she
retrieves the dark secrets of her trade.

Q: What?

A: That was a joke.  Everyone who knows those, um, security experts,
is rolling on the floor right now.

(c) HACKTIVISMO/cDc communications 2000-2001
FAQ compiled by Oxblood Ruffin, A Dwarf Named Warren, 
and Little Marie.



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