R E S P O N S E T O H I V / A I D S I N B O S N I A
A N D H E R Z E G O VI N A
2 0 11 – 2 01 6 S T R A T E G Y
Blog containing a database of articles, reports, blogger's notes and photos of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Balkans region. The compilation and material was created by Aleksandra Miletić-Šantić, a lawyer, social scientist, human rights activist, journalist and interpreter.
utorak, 19. veljače 2019.
Politika za smanjenje štete (harm reduction) iz oblasti ovisnosti u Federaciji Bosne i Hercegovine
Politika za smanjenje štete(harm reduction) iz oblasti ovisnosti u Federaciji Bosne i Hercegovine. Politika je usvojena na 112. sjednici Vlade Federacije BiH i objavljena u Sluzbenim novinama Federacije BiH br. 34/14 od 07.05.2014.
petak, 8. veljače 2019.
utorak, 5. veljače 2019.
Joint Conclusions from the High Level Dialogue on the Accession Process of 27 June 2012 (original English version)
Conclusions agreed at the High Level Dialogue held in Brussels on 26 June, 2012. (including the annex to the Conclusions - a Roadmap with issues and agreed deadlines for BiH to be able to submit a credible EU membership application before the end of the year).
The meeting went well and was held in a very constructive spirit. All invitees attended and took part in the constructive discussions that focused mostly on the EU agenda and less on the current political problems.
A follow-up to the High Level Dialogue will be held in November in Sarajevo.
Joint Conclusions from the High Level Dialogue on the Accession Process of 27 June 2012 (original English version)
Conclusions agreed at the High Level Dialogue held in Brussels on 26 June, 2012. (including the annex to the Conclusions - a Roadmap with issues and agreed deadlines for BiH to be able to submit a credible EU membership application before the end of the year).
The meeting went well and was held in a very constructive spirit. All invitees attended and took part in the constructive discussions that focused mostly on the EU agenda and less on the current political problems.
A follow-up to the High Level Dialogue will be held in November in Sarajevo.
Joint Conclusions from the High Level Dialogue on the Accession Process of 27 June 2012 (translation B-C-S)
Conclusions agreed at the High Level Dialogue held in Brussels on 26 June, 2012. (including the annex to the Conclusions - a Roadmap with issues and agreed deadlines for BiH to be able to submit a credible EU membership application before the end of the year).
The meeting went well and was held in a very constructive spirit. All invitees attended and took part in the constructive discussions that focused mostly on the EU agenda and less on the current political problems.
A follow-up to the High Level Dialogue will be held in November in Sarajevo.
RS uložila 13 mil. KM u Novu banku i Pavlović banku - 09. jan. 2013. (capital.ba)
https://www.capital.ba/rs-ulozila-13-mil-km-u-novu-banku-i-pavlovic-banku/
Premijer Srpske Aleksandar Džombić potvrdio je da je RS kupila kompletne emisije obje banke. Objašnjava da je vrlo bitno kapitalno podržati finansijske institucije, da bi one mogle kreditima održavati investicionu aktivnost privrede.
RS uložila 13 mil. KM u Novu banku i Pavlović banku
Objavljeno u EKSKLUZIVNO, FINANSIJE
BANJALUKA, RS je uložila 13 miliona KM u hartije od vrijednosti Nove banke Banjaluka i Pavlović banke Bijeljina. Posljednjih dana prošle godine, RS je kupila kompletnu emisiju obveznica Nove banke vrijednu osam miliona maraka, te kompletnu emisiju akcija Pavlović banke u iznosu od pet miliona KM, saznaje CAPITAL.ba.
Premijer Srpske Aleksandar Džombić potvrdio je da je RS kupila kompletne emisije obje banke. Objašnjava da je vrlo bitno kapitalno podržati finansijske institucije, da bi one mogle kreditima održavati investicionu aktivnost privrede.
“Nova banka nam se obratila sa javnom emisijom od osam miliona KM i Pavlović banka sa emisijom akcija od pet miliona KM i mi smo odlučili da ih kapitalno ojačamo da bi mogli da podržavaju investicionu aktivnost naše privrede”, rekao je Džombić.
Nova banka je emitovala 80 hiljada obveznica po 100 maraka. Upis i uplata obveznica je počela i završila istog dana – 31. decembra. Godišnji prinos je bio primamljivo visok – osam odsto, što je veća kamata nego na štednju.
Radović: Dobar prinos i sigurna investicija
“Razlog zašto je to bila veća kamata u odnosu na štednje, je što je to prodrška kapitala, pa možemo uvećati rizičnu aktivu. Vlada je kupila obveznice procjenjujući da je to dobar prinos i vrlo sigurna investicija s obzirom na aktivu i kapital sa kojim Nova banka raspolaže“, kaže Milan Radović direktor Nove banke.
Pavlović banka je emitovala 5 000 povlašćenih akcija, ukupne vrijednosti pet miliona KM. Upis i uplata takođe su završene posljednjeg dana prošle godine, kupovinom tih hartija od strane države. Na tržištu, prema nezvaničnim informacijama, za svježim novcem traga i Gavrilo Bobar vlasnik Bobar banke, ali on se još nije obratio Vladi jer smatra da na drugoj strani može proći jeftinije. No, Balkan Investment banka očekuje državnu podršku. Produžila je rok za prodaju prioritetnih akcija vrijednih pet miliona maraka.
“Imamo zahtjev Balkan banke, no prije donošenja odluke, želimo da vidimo revizorski i izvještaj Agencije za bankarstvo”, kaže Džombić.
Banke se posljednjih godina, kaže premijer, suočavaju sa otežanim pristupom novcu i padom porfelja. To je uticalo na adekvatnost kapitala, i umanjilo njihovu mogućnost da kreditiraju privredu. Vlada je prije dvije godine sa 13 miliona KM dokapitalizovala Balkan Investment i Bobar banke, te Aura osiguranje. Mjerama za ublažavanje posljedica ekonomske krize, usvojenim 2009. godine, predviđeno je, između ostalog, kapitalno jačanje fnansijskih institucija u RS.
Autor: CAPITAL.ba
Autor: CAPITAL.ba
ponedjeljak, 4. veljače 2019.
Civil Disobedience Pt 3 By: Puck Arks July 30, 2017 - the factual dragnet blog
https://thefactualdragnet.blogspot.com/2017/07/civil-disobedience-pt-3-by-phuck-arks.html?fbclid=IwAR3tlPRvUWTDMI0B2EqNMw-FKi_NenBZPcqinQzW2YyTMXatnuJyotQtijo
Written By: Puck Arks
Practitioners of nonviolent struggle have an entire arsenal of "nonviolent weapons"at their disposal. Listed below are 200 of them.
1. Public Speeches
2. Letters of oppos
ition or support, mass emails, Text Resist to 50409, faxes, twitter storms
3. Declarations by organizations and institutions
4. Signed public statements
5. Declarations of indictment and intention
6. Group or mass petitions
Communications with a Wider Audience
7. Slogans, caricatures, and symbols
8. Banners, posters, memes and displayed communications
9. Websites, pamphlets, books, leaflets, videos
10. Newspapers, journals, fanzines, social media, press releases
11. Internet, radio, and television
12. Skywriting, earthwriting, chalk
Group Representations
13. Deputations
14. Mock awards
15. Group lobbying
16. Picketing
17. Mock elections
Symbolic Public Acts
18. Displays of flags and symbolic colors
19. Wearing of symbols
20. Prayer and worship
21. Delivering symbolic objects
22. Protest disrobing
23. Destruction of own property
24. Symbolic lights
25. Displays of portraits
26. Paint as protest
27. New signs and names
28. Symbolic sounds
29. Symbolic reclamation
30. Rude gestures
Pressures on Individuals
31. "Trolling" officials
32. Taunting officials
33. Fraternization
34. Vigils
Drama and Music
35. Humorous skits, pranks, memes
36. Performances of plays and music
37. Singing, Chants and Cadence Calls
Processions
38. Marches
39. Parades
40. Religious processions
41. Pilgrimages
42. Motorcades
Honoring the Dead
43. Political mourning
44. Mock funerals
45. Demonstrative funerals
46. Homage at burial places
Public Assemblies
47. Assemblies of protest or support
48. Protest meetings
49. Camouflaged meetings of protest
50. Teach-ins
Withdrawal and Renunciation
51. Walk-outs
52. Silence
53. Renouncing honors
54. Turning one’s back
The Methods of Social Noncooperation
Ostracism of Persons
55. Social boycott
56. Selective social boycott
57. Lysistratic nonaction
58. Excommunication
59. Interdict
Noncooperation with Social Events, Customs, and Institutions
60. Suspension of social and sports activities
61. Boycott of social affairs
62. Student strike
63. Social disobedience
64. Withdrawal from social institutions
Withdrawal from the Social System
65. Stay-at-home
66. Total personal noncooperation
67. "Flight" of workers
68. Sanctuary
69. Collective disappearance
70. Protest emigration (hijrat)
The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: Economic Boycotts
Actions by Consumers
71. Consumers’ boycott
72. Non-consumption of boycotted goods
73. Policy of austerity
74. Rent, Mortgage withholding
75. Refusal to rent
76. National consumers’ boycott
77. International consumers’ boycott
Action by Workers and Producers
78. Workmen boycott
79. Producers’ boycott
Action by Middlemen
80. Suppliers’ and handlers’ boycott
Action by Owners and Management
81. Traders’ boycott
82. Refusal to let or sell property
83. Lockout
84. Refusal of industrial assistance
85. Merchants’ "general strike"
Action by Holders of Financial Resources
86. Withdrawal of bank deposits, Use Credit Unions
a) Stop using petrol dollar, switch to crypto currency
87. Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments
88. Refusal to pay debts or interest
89. Severance of funds and credit
90. Revenue refusal
91. Refusal of a government’s money
Action by Governments
92. Domestic embargo
93. Blacklisting of traders
94. International sellers’ embargo
95. International buyers’ embargo
96. International trade embargo
The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: The Strike
Symbolic Strikes
97. Protest strike
98. Quickie walkout (lightning strike)
Agricultural Strikes
99. Peasant strike
100. Farm Workers’ strike
Strikes by Special Groups
101. Refusal of impressed labor
102. Prisoners’ strike
103. Craft strike
104. Professional strike
Ordinary Industrial Strikes
105. Establishment strike
106. Industry strike
107. Sympathetic strike
Restricted Strikes
108. Detailed strike
109. Bumper strike
110. Slowdown strike
111. Working-to-rule strike
112. Reporting "sick" (sick-in)
113. Strike by resignation
114. Limited strike
115. Selective strike
Multi-Industry Strikes
116. Generalized strike
117. General strike
Combination of Strikes and Economic Closures
118. Hartal
119. Economic shutdown
The Methods of Political Noncooperation
Rejection of Authority
120. Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance
121. Refusal of public support
122. Literature and speeches advocating resistance
Citizens’ Noncooperation with Government
123. Boycott of legislative bodies
124. Boycott of elections
125. Boycott of government employment and positions
126. Boycott of government departments, agencies, and other bodies
127. Withdrawal from government educational institutions
128. Boycott of government-supported organizations
129. Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents
130. Removal of own signs and place-marks
131. Refusal to accept appointed officials
132. Refusal to dissolve existing institutions
Citizens’ Alternatives to Obedience
133. Reluctant and slow compliance
134. Non obedience in absence of direct supervision
135. Popular non obedience
136. Disguised disobedience
137. Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse
138. Sit down
139. Noncooperation with conscription and deportation
140. Hiding, escape, and false identities
141. Civil disobedience of "illegitimate" laws
Action by Government Personnel
142. Selective refusal of assistance by government aides
143. Blocking of lines of command and information
144. Stalling and obstruction
145. General administrative noncooperation
146. Judicial noncooperation
147. Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by enforcement agents
148. Mutiny
Domestic Governmental Action
149. Quasi-legal evasions and delays
150. Noncooperation by constituent governmental units
International Governmental Action
151. Changes in diplomatic and other representations
152. Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events
153. Withholding of diplomatic recognition
154. Severance of diplomatic relations
155. Withdrawal from international organizations
156. Refusal of membership in international bodies
157. Expulsion from international organizations
The Methods of Nonviolent Intervention
Psychological Intervention
158. Self-exposure to the elements
159. The fast
a) Fast of moral pressure
b) Hunger strike
c) Satyagrahic fast
160. Reverse trial
161. Nonviolent harassment
Physical Intervention
162. Sit-in
163. Stand-in
164. Ride-in
165. Wade-in
166. Mill-in
167. Pray-in
168. Nonviolent raids
169. Nonviolent air raids
170. Nonviolent invasion
171. Nonviolent interjection
172. Nonviolent obstruction
173. Nonviolent occupation
Social Intervention
174. Establishing new social patterns
175. Overloading of facilities
176. Stall-in
177. Speak-in
178. Guerrilla theater
179. Alternative social institutions
180. Alternative communication system
Economic Intervention
181. Reverse strike
182. Stay-in strike
183. Nonviolent land seizure
184. Defiance of blockades
185. Politically motivated counterfeiting( Think #OpLionCash) defacing money basically
186. Preclusive purchasing
187. Seizure of assets
188. Dumping
189. Selective patronage
190. Alternative markets
191. Alternative transportation systems
192. Alternative economic institutions
Political Intervention
193. Overloading of administrative systems
194. Disclosing identities of secret agents
195. Seeking imprisonment
196. Civil disobedience of "neutral" laws
197. Work-on without collaboration
198. Dual sovereignty and parallel government
Internet
199. DDOS, defacing, hacking
200. Leaking, whistle blowing
Written By: Puck Arks
Practitioners of nonviolent struggle have an entire arsenal of "nonviolent weapons"at their disposal. Listed below are 200 of them.
Formal Statements
1. Public Speeches
2. Letters of oppos
ition or support, mass emails, Text Resist to 50409, faxes, twitter storms
3. Declarations by organizations and institutions
4. Signed public statements
5. Declarations of indictment and intention
6. Group or mass petitions
Communications with a Wider Audience
7. Slogans, caricatures, and symbols
8. Banners, posters, memes and displayed communications
9. Websites, pamphlets, books, leaflets, videos
10. Newspapers, journals, fanzines, social media, press releases
11. Internet, radio, and television
12. Skywriting, earthwriting, chalk
Group Representations
13. Deputations
14. Mock awards
15. Group lobbying
16. Picketing
17. Mock elections
Symbolic Public Acts
18. Displays of flags and symbolic colors
19. Wearing of symbols
20. Prayer and worship
21. Delivering symbolic objects
22. Protest disrobing
23. Destruction of own property
24. Symbolic lights
25. Displays of portraits
26. Paint as protest
27. New signs and names
28. Symbolic sounds
29. Symbolic reclamation
30. Rude gestures
Pressures on Individuals
31. "Trolling" officials
32. Taunting officials
33. Fraternization
34. Vigils
Drama and Music
35. Humorous skits, pranks, memes
36. Performances of plays and music
37. Singing, Chants and Cadence Calls
Processions
38. Marches
39. Parades
40. Religious processions
41. Pilgrimages
42. Motorcades
Honoring the Dead
43. Political mourning
44. Mock funerals
45. Demonstrative funerals
46. Homage at burial places
Public Assemblies
47. Assemblies of protest or support
48. Protest meetings
49. Camouflaged meetings of protest
50. Teach-ins
Withdrawal and Renunciation
51. Walk-outs
52. Silence
53. Renouncing honors
54. Turning one’s back
The Methods of Social Noncooperation
Ostracism of Persons
55. Social boycott
56. Selective social boycott
57. Lysistratic nonaction
58. Excommunication
59. Interdict
Noncooperation with Social Events, Customs, and Institutions
60. Suspension of social and sports activities
61. Boycott of social affairs
62. Student strike
63. Social disobedience
64. Withdrawal from social institutions
Withdrawal from the Social System
65. Stay-at-home
66. Total personal noncooperation
67. "Flight" of workers
68. Sanctuary
69. Collective disappearance
70. Protest emigration (hijrat)
The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: Economic Boycotts
Actions by Consumers
71. Consumers’ boycott
72. Non-consumption of boycotted goods
73. Policy of austerity
74. Rent, Mortgage withholding
75. Refusal to rent
76. National consumers’ boycott
77. International consumers’ boycott
Action by Workers and Producers
78. Workmen boycott
79. Producers’ boycott
Action by Middlemen
80. Suppliers’ and handlers’ boycott
Action by Owners and Management
81. Traders’ boycott
82. Refusal to let or sell property
83. Lockout
84. Refusal of industrial assistance
85. Merchants’ "general strike"
Action by Holders of Financial Resources
86. Withdrawal of bank deposits, Use Credit Unions
a) Stop using petrol dollar, switch to crypto currency
87. Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments
88. Refusal to pay debts or interest
89. Severance of funds and credit
90. Revenue refusal
91. Refusal of a government’s money
Action by Governments
92. Domestic embargo
93. Blacklisting of traders
94. International sellers’ embargo
95. International buyers’ embargo
96. International trade embargo
The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: The Strike
Symbolic Strikes
97. Protest strike
98. Quickie walkout (lightning strike)
Agricultural Strikes
99. Peasant strike
100. Farm Workers’ strike
Strikes by Special Groups
101. Refusal of impressed labor
102. Prisoners’ strike
103. Craft strike
104. Professional strike
Ordinary Industrial Strikes
105. Establishment strike
106. Industry strike
107. Sympathetic strike
Restricted Strikes
108. Detailed strike
109. Bumper strike
110. Slowdown strike
111. Working-to-rule strike
112. Reporting "sick" (sick-in)
113. Strike by resignation
114. Limited strike
115. Selective strike
Multi-Industry Strikes
116. Generalized strike
117. General strike
Combination of Strikes and Economic Closures
118. Hartal
119. Economic shutdown
The Methods of Political Noncooperation
Rejection of Authority
120. Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance
121. Refusal of public support
122. Literature and speeches advocating resistance
Citizens’ Noncooperation with Government
123. Boycott of legislative bodies
124. Boycott of elections
125. Boycott of government employment and positions
126. Boycott of government departments, agencies, and other bodies
127. Withdrawal from government educational institutions
128. Boycott of government-supported organizations
129. Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents
130. Removal of own signs and place-marks
131. Refusal to accept appointed officials
132. Refusal to dissolve existing institutions
Citizens’ Alternatives to Obedience
133. Reluctant and slow compliance
134. Non obedience in absence of direct supervision
135. Popular non obedience
136. Disguised disobedience
137. Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse
138. Sit down
139. Noncooperation with conscription and deportation
140. Hiding, escape, and false identities
141. Civil disobedience of "illegitimate" laws
Action by Government Personnel
142. Selective refusal of assistance by government aides
143. Blocking of lines of command and information
144. Stalling and obstruction
145. General administrative noncooperation
146. Judicial noncooperation
147. Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by enforcement agents
148. Mutiny
Domestic Governmental Action
149. Quasi-legal evasions and delays
150. Noncooperation by constituent governmental units
International Governmental Action
151. Changes in diplomatic and other representations
152. Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events
153. Withholding of diplomatic recognition
154. Severance of diplomatic relations
155. Withdrawal from international organizations
156. Refusal of membership in international bodies
157. Expulsion from international organizations
The Methods of Nonviolent Intervention
Psychological Intervention
158. Self-exposure to the elements
159. The fast
a) Fast of moral pressure
b) Hunger strike
c) Satyagrahic fast
160. Reverse trial
161. Nonviolent harassment
Physical Intervention
162. Sit-in
163. Stand-in
164. Ride-in
165. Wade-in
166. Mill-in
167. Pray-in
168. Nonviolent raids
169. Nonviolent air raids
170. Nonviolent invasion
171. Nonviolent interjection
172. Nonviolent obstruction
173. Nonviolent occupation
Social Intervention
174. Establishing new social patterns
175. Overloading of facilities
176. Stall-in
177. Speak-in
178. Guerrilla theater
179. Alternative social institutions
180. Alternative communication system
Economic Intervention
181. Reverse strike
182. Stay-in strike
183. Nonviolent land seizure
184. Defiance of blockades
185. Politically motivated counterfeiting( Think #OpLionCash) defacing money basically
186. Preclusive purchasing
187. Seizure of assets
188. Dumping
189. Selective patronage
190. Alternative markets
191. Alternative transportation systems
192. Alternative economic institutions
Political Intervention
193. Overloading of administrative systems
194. Disclosing identities of secret agents
195. Seeking imprisonment
196. Civil disobedience of "neutral" laws
197. Work-on without collaboration
198. Dual sovereignty and parallel government
Internet
199. DDOS, defacing, hacking
200. Leaking, whistle blowing
Commander X, a Fugitive Homeless Hacker, Has a New Book About Hacking on the Run by Patrick McGuire | Nov 1 2016
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/4xabwp/commander-x-homeless-hacker-turned-fugitive-just-published-the-definitive-boo
Commander X, a Fugitive Homeless Hacker, Has a New Book About Hacking on the Run
Christopher Doyon. Image: FBI
Christopher Doyon—or as he's known to his 7,000+ Twitter followers, Commander X—is a homeless, fugitive hacker who has been on the run from the US government for more than four years in Canada. While there have been several high-profile cases of Anonymous members being imprisoned, Commander X is an outlier. By all accounts, he was an influential member of the hacktivist collective during its most consequential period, but he has so far escaped the fate of his former comrades.
So, as a symbol of his freedom, today X published his first book, Behind the Mask, and it's the first of its kind in terms of advancing the public record on Anonymous. While we are used to some sporadic voices from the hacktivist collective movement coming forward to the media, they are mostly heard through voice-scrambling filters in short videos announcing Anonymous operations, or from behind bars.
X's book is the antithesis of what we're used to from Anonymous; it's personal, both braggadocious and self-deprecating, and through its first-person perspective provides insight into operations of Anonymous that will be completely alien to any non-hacker reader.
It's arguably not smart to write a book like this, given the intense thirst from the FBI to capture Anonymous leaders. But when you're Commander X, who has given interviewsto major publications since escaping prosecution in the US and becoming a fugitive; and who still tweets daily and taunts government agencies by writing messages on his timeline, such as "What will the FBI Cyber Crime Division do when there's no more Internet? Is Walmart hiring any security guards?" and "...if you want pigs to respect your protest, show up armed"; then quite obviously the traditionally-guarded hacker/media relationship has gone out the window.
"For those wondering how Anonymous begins a major operation, it usually starts with righteous indignation bordering on group outrage."
Behind the Mask covers a time period between 2008-2012 wherein X joins Anonymous, quickly rises to a position of influence in the decentralized organization, gets the attention of the FBI Cyber Division, and escapes the US on an underground railroad of his own design. (Of course, this is all according to the author.)
In X's words, his initial thoughts on Anonymous were that it was a "crazy ass science fiction cult" where people wore "stupid Guy Fawkes masks." In fact, he was apparently told to join Anonymous while he was serving as a "Commander" of a small cyber-focused militia called the People's Liberation Front (PLF), run out of a "dungeon" in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where "every square inch" of the walls were "plastered with concert posters (mostly Grateful Dead), protest fliers… and hand-drawn art, mostly political in nature."
It's here that X got an order from the "Supreme Commander of the PLF," a man we know in the book only as Commander Adama, to become an Anonymous member. This is provable insofar as the People's Liberation Front certainly exists, and Christopher Doyon is a real person. Otherwise, Behind the Mask has to be read with a certain healthy skepticism about the events detailed wherein.
Nonetheless, Adama's intention for X joining Anonymous was allegedly twofold: 1) For the PLF to form an alliance with the group and 2) to launch an offensive against the municipal government of Santa Cruz for its treatment of the homeless—a city where public sleeping is still criminalized.
Apparently, Adama wanted revenge for a homeless friend of his living in Santa Cruz, who was found dead under a bridge.
X accepted the mission quickly, which provides insight into the mindset of hackers like him. In more than one instance, he makes it clear in Behind the Mask that he and his colleagues were often driven to action by pure and simple anger: "For those wondering how Anonymous begins a major operation, it usually starts with righteous indignation bordering on group outrage."
After accepting the order, we pick up X's Santa Cruz mission a year in, where he is living in the mountains growing weed, or as he refers to his plants: "the girls... Twenty-six of the most gorgeous sativa/indica mix plants the likes of which you could only grow in the black earth of the Santa Cruz mountains."
It's here that he is still on a roundabout quest to obtain vengeance for the homeless. And while he did eventually take down the Santa Cruz county website in 2010 as a direct protest for the city's treatment of its street population, it was a minor defacement. X describes this kind of low-impact DDOS attack as a "smashy-smashy" operation. Despite the relatively inconsequential operation, it was this protest that led to the indictment from which X is still running from today (it carries a maximum 15-year sentence due to the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act).
X's relationship with Anonymous at that time led to other notable hacks, including what he describes as the takedown of Mastercard.com by his own keystrokes ("I hit the fire button"), during the infamous Anonymous attack against credit card companies and Paypal after they cut off Wikileaks' financial lifeline.
In what is perhaps the most telling anecdote of X's life as a hacker on the run, he describes his role in attacking the government of Egypt during the Arab Spring while spending his days in a San Francisco coffee shop called Coffee to the People Cafe:
"Another area where my work had an impact was in data collection… I programmed a 'spider'... to crawl servers and harvest specific data. Mine was programmed to collect the fax numbers and E-Mail addresses of every single Egyptian. My spider, which I nick-named 'Hazel' - was not only capable of doing the task - but she could then separate the civilian from the government data. This would eventually allow Anonymous to wage psychological warfare on the Egyptian government while at the same time sending valuable information and encouragement to the Egyptian people…
This led to a somewhat comical scene of me having to spend the night sleeping in an alley behind the coffee house so I could stay connected and keep Hazel running."
This intense duality of coordinating and participating in globally influential hacks while sleeping on the street, encapsulates the fascination that journalists and activists alike have had with Commander X for years.
That said, Behind the Mask has to be taken with a grain of salt, if for no other reason than the fact it is written by one of the single most prominent evangelists of one of the most divisive, but nonetheless impactful, activist movements of all time. X is never shy to state (and perhaps overstate) Anonymous's impact; and some of his past claims verge on unbelievable.
But what's verifiable about the exploits X was involved in are historical in and of themselves; many of his colleagues were punished and imprisoned, the financial industry was spooked by Anonymous's retaliation for Wikileaks, X is a cyber-fugitive, and he is personally emblematic of a new kind of anarchistic activism that can very quickly grab the attention of the world's strongest governments.
For all these reasons, X's book is a remarkable and personal account of a uniquely bizarre adventure. His account of escaping the US is, alone, worthy of a reader's attention. According to X, he designed an underground railroad—before he knew he would have to use it himself—of willing Anonymous members or sympathizers who could, at a moment's notice, deliver a "package" from (as he puts it) one "node" to another in order to transport an American activist out of harm's way and into Canada.
Designing an underground railroad and activating it are of course two different things. And for X, who at the time was living in a camp by California's San Lorenzo river, deciding to take that voyage was at times "way too 'spy thriller'" for his own taste.
The book unfortunately ends in 2012, with X's masked appearance at the Hot Docs Film Festival premiere for Brian Kloppenberg's Anonymous documentary, We Are Legion, in Toronto. As he says, "I arrived at the world premier to play my part wearing my brown Guy Fawkes hoodie, my all access pass around my neck and a real Guy Fawkes Mask on my face." So by the end of Behind the Mask, we're left wondering what X has been up to in Canada for the past four years.
Incomplete timeline notwithstanding, the book captures a first-hand account of a man who, for better or worse, was at the switchboard during some of Anonymous's most high-profile hacks, stunts, and protests. And thus, it's an essential work in framing the impact of this controversial, decentralized, and brash hacktivist network.
Exclusive Interview with Commander X By Richard -Updated on: 25 September 2018 (darkwebnews.com)
https://darkwebnews.com/hacking/interview-with-commander-x/
Exclusive Interview with Commander X
Updated on:
Christopher Doyon, more commonly known by the pseudonym Commander X, has been one of the hacktivist communities’ more public figures in recent years, known equally as well as the likes of Barrett Brown, Jeremy Hammond, Sabu and weev.
Affiliated with Anonymous and the People’s Liberation Front (formerly), Commander X has been on the run from the United States since 2011, facing prosecution for taking down a local government website. Following a stint in Canada, Commander X is now in Mexico and seeking political asylum.
On June 12, 2018, Commander X announced the release of his third book, “Exiled for the Mask: The Story of Anonymous Operation Golden Eagle.” The book is scheduled to be released on November 5 via Lulu and Smashwords for print and eBook, respectively.
This book is the “finale” to his first two books, “Behind the Mask: An Inside Look at Anonymous” and “Dark Ops: An Anonymous Story,” effectively forming his trilogy.
In light of Commander X’s ongoing bid to gain political asylum in Mexico and the pending release of his third book, Dark Web News has landed an exclusive interview with the renowned hacktivist.
Your new book is slated for release on November 5. Talk about it a little bit. What can we expect as readers? Why did you decide to write it?
It is the final installment in what is now officially known as “The X Chronicles Trilogy”. It completes a roughly ten year story of my life within the Globaxicol Collective called Anonymous.
The final book entitled “Exiled For The Mask: The Story Of Anonymous Operation Golden Eagle” is due out exactly one year after I cut a hole in the fence between the USA an Mexico with a pair of bolt cutters and entered this country in a bid to gain political asylum. It will tell the story of how that came to be, and a bit of what happened after arriving in Mexico.
Operation Golden Eagle. What’s the meaning behind the op name?
The Golden Eagle is the national bird of Mexico. Not much more complicated then that, really.
Have you ever considered stopping or taking a leave from what you do? You’ve cited health issues in recent years as well as the toll that the pressure of staying on the run has taken.
Yes, these things are true. And yes I’ve considered it, daily sometimes. And finally, no – it’s probably not going to happen any time soon.
Did you enjoy your time in Canada?
Yes. But then I have thoroughly enjoyed every aspect of this decade long adventure. And Mexico is an utterly delightful nation.
You’re currently seeking political asylum in Mexico. How is the process going?
Very well.
What are some of the major challenges you have faced?
Breaking into the main stream Mexican media. Something that I believe is about to change any moment. I have given an interview to the largest media outlet in Mexico.
How is Mexico?
Exotic, and very interesting. Warm.
Did you ever imagine that things would get to this point of chaos in what you do?
From day one, yes.
What are some of the biggest misconceptions that people have about who you are, what you stand for, and what you do?
I am not really sure I can speak to what misconceptions people have about me, I don’t really make a point of noting them. Perhaps you can fill me in as to what people are saying about me!
You’ve worked on the side of the people, in your respective point of view. How have the people generally reacted to what you do? (i.e. Food Not Bombs condemning your online attacks)
The Op Orlando shit, well hell – Kieth McHenry is an old friend from the 80’s in the Bay Area. He was frankly delighted by the whole fiasco.
But that is just that particular example. In general people on the advantaged side of an Anonymous confrontation are grateful for the intervention.
How would you describe yourself? A hacktivist? A hacker? A leader? Just another guy with a computer?
All of the above, I suppose.
How have things changed over time with Anonymous?
Short answer, it’s gotten bigger and more global.
To what extent are you currently involved with Anonymous operations and Anonymous in general?
At the moment my time is taken up with my own case, and one particular media project in Anonymous, Anonymous Global Internet Radio.
And PLF?
It has been defunct since 2014. What survived now goes by the name Legion Security.
The People’s Liberation Front and Palestinian Liberation Front share the same acronym; has this caused confusion or misunderstandings?
I don’t recall this ever being an issue. But we were a pretty non-descript underground crew.
How did you get your start with hacking and Anonymous?
That’s a question it took a book to answer, my first one to be precise.
What imprint do you think that Anonymous has left in history, looking back and looking forward?
The most profound imprint in human history.
Anonymous has been accused of many things that they have not collectively admitted to doing. There have also been reported incidents of individuals supposedly from Anon claiming ops that Anon did not actually do. What’s the best way for people to keep up to date with what Anon is actually doing?
The choice of sources is as individual as the Anon recommending them. Check out those I follow on Twitter, and use your own judgment. My handle is @CommanderXanon on Twitter.
Six years ago, you stated Anonymous 2 won’t happen in a bid to fix the perceived issues within Anonymous. Have these issues been corrected since then, or are they still present?
Probably still all fucked up. Anonymous simply is what it is, there will be no great changes – just further refinement and evolution of tactics. No versions. Just one big messy global collective.
What role have script kiddies played in Anonymous thus far?
I don’t really have an answer to questions like this. And I prefer not to answer a question that pre-supposes a negative stereo-type of a fellow hacker.
What have been some of the miscellaneous challenges you’ve faced with being a notable member and arguable leader of Anonymous and PLF? Dealing with people, getting things done, time and resource management, etc.
Probably all of the above.
Throughout your time in Anonymous and related ops, have made any friends as opposed to just coworkers or associates?
LOL yeah I have maybe one or two friends in the world. But they would prefer to remain anonymous.
Is ‘Commander X’ solely a handle used by you, or have others done work under that pseudonym with your permission? I ask this because your attorney stated “Commander X isn’t a person. He’s an idea and that idea is social justice.” in a 2011 statement.
So far the acts attributed to the persona “Commander X” must be laid at my feet, for good or ill.
However, I have not ruled out passing the persona on after my death. Anything is possible, I suppose.
With the pending release of Apple’s iOS 12, what is your stance on the jailbreak scene?
My stance is that it’s healthy for the eco-system and should be legalized.
How instrumental has the dark web and Tor been in what you do?
Vital, at least to not getting caught.
It’s rather ironic that Tor was initially created by the U.S. government and has been a huge thorn in their side since its “public” adoption. What are your thoughts on that?
Bahahahahahahahahaha!!
Do you see the adoption of anonymity and privacy technologies and applications continuing to become more mainstream?
What choice does anyone really have?
What computer security and opsec tips would you give to the general public? Any recommended software or best practices?
Use a cellular modem and a reliable no-log VPN. Use a Tor browser. Use a good password manager like Key Pass and make all your passwords inside the manager, nice and hard. ALL your passwords, individual and hard using a password manager. This last part eliminates 90% of all attack vectors, just that one tip.
What’s your advice for the next generation of hacktivists, noting that many adolescents are growing up in the age of seeing WikiLeaks, Assange, Manning and others being covered by the mainstream news?
See the above answer. And add to it my personal advice. Move. A lot. Never stop moving.
————–
You can find Commander X on Twitter and at his website at CommanderX.info.
You can support Commander X’s bid for political asylum in Mexicohere.
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