With a publication yesterday, we reported the decision of Anonymous to declare all-out war on the Islamic State, and that the first 5.500 names and other information of suspected extremists had already been leaked.
If the future follows the past, Anonymous will undoubtedly try to win this war through a series of coordinated attacks on the ISIS websites and do do so in its leadership by identifying social networking accounts used to recruit and generally convert new members, trying to prevent and slow the spread and communication of its members.
Anonymous also allegedly train the next generation of activists calling the crowd to join.
Three new drivers are currently being distributed from an IRC channel used by Anonymous to exchange information about #OpParis:
The "NoobGuide" guide for anyone who wants to get involved, but has no hacking knowledge,
The 'Reporter' guide detailing how to install a bot Twitter for disclosure of IS accounts,
and the "Searcher" guide designed to help hackers uncover extremist websites.
"There is enough work to keep you busy, said the Anonymous member who posted the guides on IRC.
"If you want to submit anything, post your findings on ghostbin.com, share the link with one of the channel administrators and we'll talk about what to do next."
A quick scan of the drivers by TNW reveals information about how toenergyof DDoS attacks but also man-in-the-middle (MITM). The guides also have links to tools that facilitate these attacks.
It should be noted, however, that piracy is always a victim, and Anonymous knows this very well. We also all know that games with ISIS are not a joke.
We do not recommend that you take part in these activities as they promote fanaticism. We just mention the news, let us not become fanatics like the ones we condemn.