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Telecomix
Le 7 Mai dernier, le trafic internet en Syrie a disparu pendant près de 24h...Huit jours plus tard, rebelote. A l'autre bout du Monde, un groupe d'activistes connectés tente à distance de désenclaver le pays, mais aussi de permettre la communication à l'intérieur, son nom Telecomix.
Le 05 septembre 2011, tous les Syriens qui se sont connectés à Internet ont eu la surprise de découvrir une page contenant des instructions permettant de détourner la censure mise en place par le gouvernement de Bachar el- Assad et d’assurer la sécurité de leurs correspondances privées, leur donnant ainsi la possibilité de communiquer librement entre eux et avec le reste du monde, publiant au passage des fichiers log des dispositifs de surveillance syrien. Quelques membres de Telecomix, groupe décentralisé de hackers européens, constitué en 2009 contre les lois restreignant la liberté d’expression sur le net – sont à l’origine de ce qu’ils appellent “OpSyria”. Okhin, l’un des membres actifs de cette cellule, également proche de la Quadrature du net, nous donne sa vision du hacking et de la liberté.
One of the problems hacktivists ran into when trying to disseminate useful information to people in Syria and Egypt was how to get through to people when DNS and web access are being filtered or outright blocked. Putting up web pages containing phone numbers of ISPs volunteering dialup access was something of a crapshoot because there was no guarantee that people would be able to view them. Someone (I don't remember whom) hit on the idea of contacting sysadmins in the Middle East by leaving messages in the access and error logs of their web servers. This works but pumping an entire list of phone numbers, usernames, and passwords by hand over HTTP requests gets old fast, to say the least.
An Arabic guide to make a dynamic Socks5 proxy
Hello. This is Agent Cameron from Telecomix.
I have a message for you.
For quite some time, the internauts of Telecomix have worked their way through the vast networks.
For the most part, we have found many kind inhabitants. Humans. Robots. And other forms of life.
However, not everything that we see, pleases us.
I have a message for you.
For quite some time, the internauts of Telecomix have worked their way through the vast networks.
For the most part, we have found many kind inhabitants. Humans. Robots. And other forms of life.
However, not everything that we see, pleases us.