Scientology
Internet Hackers Plan Real-Life Protests at Church Locations
Thursday
, January 31, 2008
Hackers
who launched a massive online attack against the Church of Scientology are now
turning to real-world protests to draw attention to what they call a "vast
moneymaking scheme under the guise of 'religion."'
The
loosely organized group of hackers, who meet up and coordinate attacks through
Internet Relay Chat channels, have set Feb. 10 for a wave of protests at Scientology
locations worldwide.
In
anonymous postings on the group's Web site, organizers said they are trying to
raise awareness about the threats to free speech posed by the church's lawyers,
who, the group claims, aggressively try to silence critics by threatening lawsuits.
The church said its lawyers follow standard procedures for protecting copyrighted
materials.
The
first wave of attacks began earlier this month with hackers bombarding the church's
Web site with traffic to cripple its servers. The church appears to have fortified
its Web site since then, deploying technology that helps protect against so-called
denial-of-service attacks.
Pranksters
also hammered the church's telephone network with phony phone calls and mountains
of spam faxes and e-mails.
However,
the attacks went off-course this week.
A
married couple in Stockton received dozens of threatening phone calls after their
home phone number, address and the wife's Social Security Number were posted online
by hackers who mistook them for pro-Scientology hackers. They received an apologetic
phone call from one of the pranksters after the foul-up was discovered.
The
online assault was triggered by the sudden disappearance from YouTube of a video
interview featuring celebrity Scientologist Tom Cruise, in which he discusses
his beliefs and reasons for being a Scientologist.
Critics
mocked the interview savagely in blogs. The church's lawyers intervened and had
the video removed for copyright infringement.
The
church said in a statement that it did not threaten Web sites or media outlets
with lawsuits for posting the Cruise video, adding that it is "unquestionably
a stolen and pirated video placed on the Internet in an out-of-context manner
for the purpose of causing controversy."