- check out the stylin' NEW Collusion haxor gear at Jinx Hackwear!!! -
- sign up on the Collusion Syndicate's infotainment discussion lists!!! -

Volume 5
Nov 1999


 HOME

 TechKnow
 Media Hack
 Parallax
 Reviews
 Fiction
 Humor
 Events
 Offsite

 Mission
 Responses
 Discussion
 #Collusion
 NEW!

 Submit a Story
 Collusioneers
 © & TM Info
 Contact Us


SETI@Home

Join the
Collusion
SETI Team!




A Thoreau 2000 Project

Digital Warfare Now!
 by sfear

So suddenly, it's all over the news. From the National Public Radio story about Russian attacks on US Defence Department computers to the BBC reports of hackers taking over the official Websites of the Pakistan Government, Digital Warfare seems to be seeping into mainstream coverage. Even ZDNet's Kevin Poulsen has been talking to the FBI's Cybercops about the long predicted Digital Pearl Harbor.

But even with all the attention these topics are getting in the mainstream press there seems to be a significant lack of attention paid to a full-fledged Digital War that has been waged since Jan. '98. I'm talking about the Digital Zapatismo movement. Never heard of it? Maybe that's because it has been systematically ignored by the US Government and Media for the past five years.

Let me provide a little background.

"In January, 1994, a group of rebels led by Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos in the Mexican state of Chiapas calling themselves the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) rose up in a 'Declaration of War' against several Mexican army barracks. In doing so, the guerrillas challenged the status quo in Mexico, namely the more than 60 years of political domination by the PRI [the ruling political party of Mexico]. Their demands: jobs, housing, health, and education for Mexico's most impoverished peoples. Many observers inside and outside of Mexico have seen the Chiapas uprising as a call for real change in Mexico, a movement pushing forward truly democratic elections and process in that country." (1)

However, Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos is a different breed of rebel. Instead of hiring Mercenaries he contracted Hackers (is there much difference?). When the Mexican government used its control of the mass media to limit and distort news about the uprising, he took his cause directly to the Internet. Digital Zapatismo was born.

Digital Zapatismo started as a way to distribute information about the Zapatista movement to the international community. Zapatista websites and coalitions sprung up around the globe. When the Mexican government stepped up military action in an attempt to crush the rebellion, the Zapatistas fought back in more than one way.

FloodNet

A small group called the Electronic Disturbance Theater created a fun little toy called FloodNet.

Technical Expination:

FloodNet is based on a java applet that even in the olden days could constantly reload multiple frames. Each frame was set to reload the home page of the Mexican government. This effectively created a client-side "denial-of-service" attack.

"On April 10, Flood Net Tactical Version 1.0 was showcased during a dress rehearsal action of Electronic Civil Disobedience against Mexican President Zedillo's web site. As a Java applet reload function, the first test of Flood Net sent an automated reload request every seven seconds to Zedillo's page. Reports from participants and our observations confirmed that the more than 8,000 participants in this first Flood Net action intermittently blocked access to the Zedillo site on that day." (2)

"Several questions were brought up on the issues of net traffic, ISPs, and small international pipes. Speculations on the technological implications of these actions began to focus on questions of Who is most likely to be damaged by this move? The Mexican target banks or the Internet Service Providers, ISPs, who route data to these banks?"

"As these discussions were taking place a group of Mexican digital activist on February 4, 1998 hacked into a Mexican government home page on the Internet and placed pro-Zapatista slogans on the front pages of the site. Soon afterwards an MS Dos Ping Action program from the ECD group arrived to hit Mexican Banks and Chase Manhattan Bank on February 9. The next level of possible ECD began to emerge at the end of February: an automatic mail engine from the New Humans and Java based site that automatically began to PING the Britsh Mexican Embassy URL every 7 seconds once you logged-in." (3)

United States Flood Net: The Declaration of Violation

Despite predictions of futurists and utopians the digital age has not made the government more answerable to the people. The American political landscape has, in fact, become increasingly separated from the American people.

As the Internet and digital technology pushes it's way into adolescence, it is possible that those few with the knowledge and skills will again take control of the powers embedded in the system by our forefathers. (5) From the American Revolution to Henry David Thoreau (4) a tradition of challenging authority was embedded into the American character. We all possess the notion that civil disobedience is a means to liberty and freedom.

As an illustration of the potential of digital warfare the Collusion Group presents this initial offering: The United States Flood Net. The USFN uses the same frame-reload tactics of the original FloodNet, but does so with a slightly different goal.

"The FloodNet application of error log spamming is conceptual Internet art. This is your chance to voice your political concerns on a targeted server. You can make a statement in your own words." (2)

"Basically, with HTTP, you request a document (from a server) and it either has it or does not. If it has it, fine, it pipes the html to your browser. When the server does not have the requested doc, it returns the familiar "File not Found" or "Error 404" message (also an html doc). It also records the URL that was being asked for in the server's error log file, which is used by system administrators to track down bad links coming from other sites and in some instances to trace security threats or break in attempts." (2)

References:

(1) Disinfo.org

(2) http://www.nyu.edu/proje cts/wray/EDTECD.html, Stefan Wray, June 17, 1998.

(3) Digital Zapatismo, Ricardo Dominguez.

(4) Civil Disobedience, Henry David Thoreau

(5) The Zapatista Effect: The Internet and the Rise of an Alternative Political Fabric