Piratbyran Co-Founder Says Stop DDoSing Polish Sites 140
bs0d3 writes "Since the news was released that Poland will sign ACTA later this month, activists have taken to the streets in protest. Also, Anonymous has aimed their DDoS cannons at Polish websites. A government minister admitted the government had failed to fully consult the public on the issue. Piratbyran Co-Founder Marcin de Kaminski has been following the issue on ACTA in Poland, and agrees with activists that Anonymous' DDoS is hurting the situation. Now the Polish government is trying to speed up the signatory process, making a statement of not giving in to 'cyber terrorists.'"
Re:Any news? (Score:2, Informative)
It is a self-selected group of individuals; many of whom are part of formal or informal groups. Just because they don't have an official rank of 'Grand Imperial Poobah' it doesn't mean that there aren't de facto 'leaders'.
Re:Punishing the wrong government. (Score:5, Informative)
How it looks in Poland (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Stopping is not the solution (Score:4, Informative)
What!?
Dude, we're not THAT conservative. Actually, given that we're part of the Old World, you'd probably hard pressed to find anyone but the most closed-minded people, who would care about who is sleeping with whom.
We have a party leader who's brought a dildo to press conference, we have another who is apparently married to a cat in everything but official capacity, and we've had a share of convicted criminals, low-level swindlers and so on. At the least we've avoided a Berlusconi-level con guy, though.
Regards,
Ruemere
Re:Hardly unique. (Score:4, Informative)
I guess they don't teach much about the Easter Rising and the Irish Civil War in British schools, nor probably touch on the invention of concentration camps (a British coinage, you know) in South Africa, or the Mau Mau in Kenya, or, well, you get the picture (or, presumably, didn't beforehand). And, while India basically invented non-violent civil disobedience to get its independence more or less peacefully, that certainly wasn't true a century before, in the "Mutiny" of 1857, which was a large-scale war with a considerable number of civilian casualties.
By the way, "no taxation without representation" dates from the 1750's, so it seems odd to call it an after the fact justification.
Re:this means (Score:5, Informative)
And now they have every justification for doing so in the eyes of most of their citizens.
Great job, anonymous! /sarcasm
Actually, as of yesterday the Polish government is reconsidering signing the treaty. [activepolitic.com]
/nosarcasm
Great job, anonymous!