
	by Molly Wood 
	January 19, 2012
	
	from
	
	News.CNET Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	#OpMegaUpload: like watching "War Games" play out, 
	
	but with cyber-bombs.
	
	
	
	Source
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	In the aftermath of Wednesday's SOPA/PIPA 
	blackout protests, the Internet community amassed quite a bit of goodwill, 
	flexed its muscles in a friendly, humorous, civil-disobedience kind of way, 
	and, remarkably, even managed to
	
	change quite a few minds.
	
	Just 24 short hours later, Anonymous legions nuked that goodwill and took 
	cyber security into thermonuclear territory. The real question now is: were 
	they played?
	
	As I write this,
	
	#OpMegaUpload is in full effect. The 
	Internet is seemingly coming down all around me. Global Internet traffic is
	
	fluctuating between 13 percent and 14 percent above 
	normal, and, as you can see from the above image, global network 
	attacks were up 24 percent. 
	
	 
	
	Affected sites include,
	
		
			- 
			
			the White House
 
			- 
			
			the FBI
 
			- 
			
			the Department of Justice
			 
			- 
			
			multiple record label sites
			 
			- 
			
			the MPAA and RIAA
 
			- 
			
			the U.S. Copyright Office
			 
		
	
	
	The attacks were spawned by a large-scale 
	indictment and the arrest of four people associated with a hosting and 
	storage site called
	
	Megaupload, all accused of online piracy.
	
	In a collective rage, Anonymous lashed out with the force of a cyber-nuke. 
	The display of power is awesome - there will be a lot of high-fiving hackers 
	tonight, that's for sure. And given the massive power of the legions, this 
	story will get more attention in just a few hours than the SOPA/PIPA 
	blackouts ever did. WIN!
	
	But then the other shoe will drop. 
	
	My sources tell me the timing of the MegaUpload arrests was no accident. The 
	federal government, they say, was spoiling for a fight after the apparent 
	defeat of SOPA/PIPA and not a little humiliation at the hands of the Web.
	
	
	 
	
	And what better way to bolster the cause for 
	cyber-crackdown than by pointing to a massive display of cyber-terrorism at 
	the hands of everyone's favorite Internet boogeyman: Anonymous? 
	
	If the SOPA/PIPA protests were the Web's moment of inspiring, non-violent, 
	hand-holding civil disobedience, #OpMegaUpload feels like the unsettling 
	wave of car-burning hooligans that sweep in and incite the riot portion of 
	the play. The result is always riot gear, tear gas, arrests, injury, and a 
	sea of knee-jerk policies, laws, and reactions that address the destructive 
	actions of a few, and not the good intentions of the many.
	
	I don't truly know whether Anonymous was cleverly goaded into #OpMegaUpload.
	
	
	 
	
	But I do know that an attack this big on this 
	many government sites will effectively erase those good Internet vibrations 
	that were rattling around Capitol Hill this week and harden the perspective 
	of legislators and law enforcement who want to believe that the Web 
	community is made up of wild, law-breaking pirates. 
	
	 
	
	That, ultimately, may help strengthen the 
	business - and the emotional - case for the pro-SOPA, pro-PIPA lobby. 
	
	 
	
	Did the feds just get the last lulz?