Pete Fein summarizes his work hacking for freedom over the past few months. This includes helping Anonymous organize global protests in support of WikiLeaks with 105 cities participating within one week. He worked with Telecomix to provide VPNs, TOR, encryption, mirrors and proxies to restore access to censored sites for Egyptians during their internet blackout. Telecomix also served as an IRC to Twitter relay and recruited ham radio operators to establish radio communication when internet and phones were blocked. They injected messages into web server logs of the few Egyptian machines still online to communicate. Telecomix continues developing intranet live CDs and building radios from consumer electronics to circumvent future shutdowns and help other countries experiencing censorship.
Hacking for Freedom: Pete Fein on Organizing Global Protests and Keeping Communication Lines Open
1. Hacking for
Pete Fein @petewearspants Please Pirate
Hi, my name is Pete Fein, and I've been hacking for freedom. -
2. Hacking for
Pete Fein @petewearspants Please Pirate
Hi, my name is Pete Fein, and I've been hacking for freedom. -
3. This video is from Tunisia. It shows a flamethrower being used to disperse protesters. What I
find compelling here not the violation of the Geneva Conventions, but the phones. People
desperately trying to get word out, to show the world what’s happening. And that’s why
information needs to be free, right there in grainy, glorious cell phone video. Here’s what I’ve
done for freedom in the last few months
4. Wi k iLe aks
whyweprotest.net
I helped Anonymous organize global protests on January 15 in support of WikiLeaks and free
speech. With one week of public planning, we put together protests in 105 cities around the
world.
5. One week. 105 cities. Still think we’re just a bunch of script kiddies?
6. my wife would kill me
On that subject, let me go on record and say I don’t DDOS or deface.
7. And if the Feds happen to be watching this
- Screw You.
8. And if the Feds happen to be watching this
- Screw You.
9. Egypt
Ten days later was Egypt’s Jan 25 movement, which saw a nearly total blackout of the
Internet, cellular and SMS service.
10. telecomix.org
Most of my work here was with Telecomix, an association of Internauts who defend free
communication.
11. Telecomix is yin to Anonymous’ yang. If Anonymous takes sites down, Telecomix keeps them
up.
- What these groups have in common with each other, and the protesters on the ground
- is that they are truly leaderless and possessed by a radical passion for freedom.
12. Telecomix is yin to Anonymous’ yang. If Anonymous takes sites down, Telecomix keeps them
up.
- What these groups have in common with each other, and the protesters on the ground
- is that they are truly leaderless and possessed by a radical passion for freedom.
13. Telecomix is yin to Anonymous’ yang. If Anonymous takes sites down, Telecomix keeps them
up.
- What these groups have in common with each other, and the protesters on the ground
- is that they are truly leaderless and possessed by a radical passion for freedom.
14. do-ocracy
Don’t govern. Just do.
We operate as a do-ocracy, a form of organization in which the people who get things done,
get things done. Here’s a little bit of what Telecomix did for Egypt:
15. When the Net was up we provided VPNs, TOR and other encryption for safe communication.
18. #irc
We served as manual IRC to Twitter relay, tweeting for Egyptians who were unable to do so
themselves.
19. when countries block,
we (d)evolve
When the Net was down, we went low tech. When countries block, we devolve.
20. We worked with ISPs and individual users to run hundreds of dialup modem lines.
21. We recruited ham radio operators from around the globe to help establish radio
communication.
22. Working with Anonymous, we sent comms and medical information to every fax machine in
Egypt we could find. We also set up reverse fax service for transmitting news out of the
country.
23. [30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET WE+ARE+TELECOMIX HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
[30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET WE+ARE+HERE+TO+HELP HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
[30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET DIALUP+MODEM+LINES HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
[30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET NUMBER+46850009990 HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
[30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET USER/PASS:telecomix HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
[30/Jan/2000:00:23:48] "GET IRC+irc.telecomix.org HTTP/1.1" 404 6248
We nmap’d the entire Egyptian IP address space to find a few hundred machines that were
still up. We then injected human-readable messages into their web server logs.