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WSWS : News
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Internet
Internet vandals threaten access and expression on the World
Wide Web
By the Editorial Board
11 February 2000
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The source of the coordinated attacks that crippled major Internet
web sites earlier this week and the motivations of those responsible
remain unclear. But whoever carried out these actions, and whatever
their subjective purpose, the objective content of the assault
on the Internet was a reactionary attack on democratic rights.
The attempt to exploit the relatively open character of the
Internet to cripple targeted sites is an act of sabotage that
can have no progressive content. Moreover, it can only strengthen
those commercial and government forces that want to clamp down
on the World Wide Web and restrict the free flow of information
and debate along this powerful international medium.
On three successive days, leading web sites were hit by a form
of hacker attack known as denial of service (DOS).
While the technology involved in such an assault is not sophisticated,
the scale of the attacks indicate considerable advanced planning
and, in all probability, the coordinated efforts of at least several
hackers.
In a DOS attack, a hacker programs a computer, or group of
computers, to repeatedly call up a web site, perhaps thousands
of times a second. This overloads the site and either shuts it
down completely or blocks access to legitimate users. It is believed
those responsible for this week's attacks first planted an illicit
program in dozens, if not hundreds, of unsuspecting Internet-linked
computers. They then triggered these computers to simultaneously
flood the targeted web sites with thousands of messages and requests
for information.
On Monday the Internet clearinghouse Yahoo, whose daily traffic
(42 million unique visitors) is second only to America Online,
was shut down for three hours. On Tuesday the online bookseller
Amazon suffered a major slowdown, Time Warner's CNN news site
was shut for two hours, and the e-commerce retailers Ebay and
Buy.com were either jammed or completely closed for a good part
of the day. On Wednesday the technology news site ZDNet was forced
off-line for two hours and the on-line brokerage E-Trade suffered
sporadic outages for several hours.
Major Internet providers such as MCI WorldCom's UUNet division
and Microsoft's MSN network also reported slowdowns and disruptions
as a result of the attacks on the targeted sites. Keynote Systems,
a company that measures the performance of web sites, reported
Wednesday that during the assaults it took eight seconds to call
up a typical web site's home page, nearly twice the time required
over the previous two weeks.
In Washington Attorney General Janet Reno announced that the
FBI had opened a criminal investigation into the cyber attacks.
Reno said the Justice Department was not aware of the motives
behind these attacks. However some observers suggested that
the timing might not have been random. They pointed out that many
of the country's top Internet security experts were attending
the North American Network Operators' Group conference in San
Jose, California when the attacks began. The assault on Yahoo
began only minutes after an Internet security expert from AT&T
Labs ended a speech on DOS attacks and how to secure sites against
them.
These acts of cyber vandalism play directly into the hands
of government agencies that have been pressing for increased police
powers over the Internet. The FBI investigation will doubtless
be used to test the ability of the state to monitor Internet traffic
and pinpoint the origin of messages. The FBI has already begun
examining the records of the target companies and their partners
on the Web. It is collecting logs from Internet service providers
that can show where transmissions originated.
FBI Director Louis Freeh has been pushing for Congress to grant
the bureau greater power to make the nation's telephone and computer
networks more accessible to wire-taps and other forms of surveillance.
Last July, the Clinton administration circulated a plan for an
extensive software system to monitor government computers and
possibly those of private industry. The network, known as the
Federal Intrusion Detection Network, or Fidnet, alarmed civil
libertarians who said it could be used to curtail privacy on the
Internet.
It is too soon to say whether those responsible for this week's
attacks come from the milieu of anti-cyber activists who consider
modern technology itself to be an evil force. But even if that
proves not to be the case, the latest assault on the Internet
underscores the deeply reactionary essence of this particular
form of middle-class politics. Far from expressing a democratic
spirit, the modern-day Luddites evince a morbid pessimism and
contempt for the capacity of working people to build a popular
movement for progressive and revolutionary change.
Nor do those who seek to undermine the Internet actually oppose
its increasing subordination to big business, and the restriction
of political and intellectual expression which is an inevitable
byproduct of the commercialization of the medium. On the contrary,
they aid the corporate/government drive to eviscerate the Internet's
democratic potential.
Events such as this week's cyber attacks complement the anti-democratic
tendencies inherent in the growing monopolization of the Internet
and the telecommunications industry as a whole, embodied in the
recently announced merger of America Online and Time Warner.
See Also:
How the White House and the
media package government propaganda as entertainment
[24 January 2000]
AOL buyout of Time Warner:
merger frenzy sweeping corporate America
[14 January 2000]
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