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Ukraine Says 400,000 Volunteers Aid Hacking Against Russia (bloomberg.com) 37

More than 400,000 people have volunteered to help a crowdsourced Ukrainian government effort that is using digital means to disrupt Russian government and military targets, according to a Ukrainian cybersecurity official. From a report: Victor Zhora, deputy chief of Ukraine's information protection service, said in a briefing Friday that the country was engaged in a "cyber resistance" against Russia that was aimed at making the country weaker. The update comes after Ukraine's minister of digital transformation called on international computer specialists to attack Russian web infrastructure. "Our friends, Ukrainians all over globe, [are] united to defend our country in cyberspace," Zhora said. Ukraine was working to do "everything possible to protect our land in cyberspace, our networks, and to make the aggressor feel uncomfortable with their actions," he added.
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Ukraine Says 400,000 Volunteers Aid Hacking Against Russia

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  • In the good old days getting linked by a story on Slashdot could bring many an unprepared website to it's knees.

  • by walkerp1 ( 523460 ) on Friday March 04, 2022 @11:58AM (#62326143)
    It seems irresponsible for a ministerial-level IT guy to effectively ask people to engage in unlawful activity. Hacking Russia under these auspices might seem like a heroic thing to do, given the framing, but if you aren't a Ukrainian soldier working under the direction of the government, you aren't shielded from the consequences of these kinds of vigilante activities.
    • Exactly. The Belgian government already discouraged partaking in this, because Russian IT is pretty good and a few Belgian cooperators are not going to make a significant impact, while a Russian retaliation could cripple Belgian infrastructure.
      • by Jzanu ( 668651 )
        Only traitors complain about sacrifice to defend their country. Some in Belgium may think they are insulated if they hide from the war, but this new European war comes for them either way and their choice is to fight it or lose it. These IT volunteers are the Flying Tigers of cyberwarfare. History will remember their virtue even if it takes a decade for the politicians to catch up.
    • You.. I mean.. you're.. Wait, you're fucking joking right? Some of the shit I read around here, jesus fucking christ.

      Here's a protip - civilians are being bombed, and everyday Ukrainians are picking up arms and literally killing Russian soldiers. And, let me get this straight, you think it may be questionable for them to engage in unlawful cyber-hacking against their enemy? I mean, molotov cocktails and a 7.62 round to the face - OK, but cyberhacking "oh, be careful fellows, that's against the lawsies!"?

      In

      • So, here's the thing. TFA states that it was a appeal, i.e. everyone. It also says "we are all Ukrainians", but that's just a metaphor. Nobody here is suggesting that Ukrainians not defend themselves. Non-Ukrainans are the subject of the warning.
        • Ahh, ok fair point but you did call out specifically "Ukrainian soldiers", which would imply them as being something different than Ukrainian civilians. I think any Ukrainian can do whatever they want with regards to Russia without worrying about the law (outside of atrocities, of course).

          So I guess you don't have to shut the entire fuck up.

    • hmmm. Your concern over the legality of hackers dismantling Putin's infrastructure is misplaced. To be honest, this is just the start. The thousands and thousands of hackers that have already started the process are being joined by state-level actors. I seriously doubt anybody is going to convene a court of law anywhere to go after the crews that take Russia back to the stone age. Putin is the one needing to experience some consequences for his behavior, and I hope he ends up a cautionary example f

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