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| | Ask HN: What Ever Happened to Hacktivism? | |
19 points by merpkz 45 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments
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| | In light of recent events it is clear that some part of American society does recognize the great injustice being done by the corporations and some people seem to support vigilante bringing justice by any means possible, even straight up murder, which is kind of inefficient - they will always find a new CEO. So this inevitably begs the question of what ever happened with hacktivism as a whole? That used to be a thing 10 - 15 years back when I was more impressionable person and it seemed to me like it could bring the change to status quo. These days you can hardly hear anymore about any targeted attacks on greedy corporations with goal to release information to bring them down. It sure looks like most of the hackers have sold out to those corporations for profit or even for free doing bug bounty programs, ignoring the injustice being done by those very same corporations. So what happened to hacktivism? How did it fizzle out after anonymous, lulzsec almost completely? |
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Also companies became brazen [0]. It became okay to run a company like NSO (Pegasus) or simply publish your grotesquely immoral and very illegal hacker manifesto... as a "product", so long as you're doing it for money (ideological ends are still frowned upon).
Hacktivists can't compete with that.
Indeed, exposure of wrongdoing became a useless tool in everyone's hands. Before the wave of regulation, when Ian Levy, was the CTO at NCSC he gave a talk saying how we could "shame" hopeless BigTech companies into better security. Though I admired his attitude it was clear to me that would not work. Heavy regulation was gonna come because BigTech has no shame.
At the same time enshitification happened. That meant that the consequences of leaks and outages became much less. Where else are you gonna go? Microsoft can go down for days and despite the harms there is no reckoning. Everyone is simply stuck in a dead-end dependency on monopoly services. We just take an early lunch, call it "internet weather" and to hell with the economy. If "hactivists" took out half the internet tomorrow it would be "business as usual" for most people.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42382815