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A Canadian man who has publicly claimed credit for cyber attacks on free speech alternative website Gab and First Amendment domain registrar Epik has a history of being employed by the FBI.

Aubrey Cottle, who is also known by the nickname "kirtaner," serves as a spokesman for the liberal hacktivist group "Anonymous." Speaking to the media under his real name, he has strongly implied that he was at least partially responsible for the attack on Gab last February, as well as the leak of credit card information, personal addresses, and names of individuals who have registered domains on Epik in late September.

Cottle and Anonymous' sudden reemergence has been convenient for the federal government. A number of Donald Trump-themed websites on Epik were being sought out in subpoenas by the Department of Justice related to the January 6th protests. If the Epik leaks are proven genuine, the FBI has found itself a short cut to the private data of political targets.

"Kirtaner" is a controversial figure in the hacktivist community, including among leftists. Frederick Brennan, the former administer of 8chan, has even stated that Cottle openly flaunts federal laws and appears to not fear any consequences.

According to a PDF iconcollection of screenshots published by a rival group of anarchists verified by National Justice, Cottle has a long-standing employment history with both the FBI and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).

Cottle, in his own words, has stated that he helped the FBI develop a child pornography honeypot and that he has dealt "often" with the feds.

In another exchange, he went into detail about being approached by the Canadian Security Intelligence Services (CSIS), and divulged that most young hackers are approached by the intelligence community to work for the state when they are identified.

The leader of Anonymous' most telling confession came in a tweet published June 6th, 2020, where Cottle writes that his group is at the minimum allowed to break the law with the permission of American and Canadian authorities: "i was the lucky one to have the blessing of alphabet agencies to weaponize anonymous (as an antiterrorism thing, to boot), those that came after me, not so much."

Anonymous, according to its own leader's words, appears to be a COINTELPRO style operation enabled by Canadian and American intelligence services. The trajectory of the group circumstantially supports this theory, as their targets ebb and flow according to Washington's interests at the moment, with targets ranging from the Syrian and Iranian governments during periods of unrest to a more recent emphasis on attacking China and Russia.

Domestically, the group has been fixated on releasing the information of local police officers, a website dedicated to enforcing Texas' anti-abortion law, and right-wing critics of the government.

Whether acts of cyber terrorism aimed at US citizens who use Gab, Epik and other free speech oriented websites and services are being conducted with the knowledge and even support of the FBI and CIA remains a question worthy of full investigation.

A Canadian man who has publicly claimed credit for cyber attacks on free speech alternative website Gab and First Amendment domain registrar Epik has a history of being employed by the FBI. Aubrey Cottle, who is also known by the nickname "kirtaner," serves as a spokesman for the liberal hacktivist group "Anonymous." Speaking to the media under his real name, he has strongly implied that he was at least partially responsible for the attack on Gab last February, as well as the leak of credit card information, personal addresses, and names of individuals who have registered domains on Epik in late September. Cottle and Anonymous' sudden reemergence has been convenient for the federal government. A number of Donald Trump-themed websites on Epik were being sought out in subpoenas by the Department of Justice related to the January 6th protests. If the Epik leaks are proven genuine, the FBI has found itself a short cut to the private data of political targets. "Kirtaner" is a controversial figure in the hacktivist community, including among leftists. Frederick Brennan, the former administer of 8chan, has even stated that Cottle openly flaunts federal laws and appears to not fear any consequences. According to a PDF iconcollection of screenshots published by a rival group of anarchists verified by National Justice, Cottle has a long-standing employment history with both the FBI and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). Cottle, in his own words, has stated that he helped the FBI develop a child pornography honeypot and that he has dealt "often" with the feds. In another exchange, he went into detail about being approached by the Canadian Security Intelligence Services (CSIS), and divulged that most young hackers are approached by the intelligence community to work for the state when they are identified. The leader of Anonymous' most telling confession came in a tweet published June 6th, 2020, where Cottle writes that his group is at the minimum allowed to break the law with the permission of American and Canadian authorities: "i was the lucky one to have the blessing of alphabet agencies to weaponize anonymous (as an antiterrorism thing, to boot), those that came after me, not so much." Anonymous, according to its own leader's words, appears to be a COINTELPRO style operation enabled by Canadian and American intelligence services. The trajectory of the group circumstantially supports this theory, as their targets ebb and flow according to Washington's interests at the moment, with targets ranging from the Syrian and Iranian governments during periods of unrest to a more recent emphasis on attacking China and Russia. Domestically, the group has been fixated on releasing the information of local police officers, a website dedicated to enforcing Texas' anti-abortion law, and right-wing critics of the government. Whether acts of cyber terrorism aimed at US citizens who use Gab, Epik and other free speech oriented websites and services are being conducted with the knowledge and even support of the FBI and CIA remains a question worthy of full investigation.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Anonymous was a very useful tool, back in the day, limited only by confusion as to whether civil war was to be instigated or allowed to develop naturally.

Capacity to shut Antifa down at will was always curious.

Was abandoned aftrr the Q confusion as to whether V was the villain, or whether the government V fought was a villain. After Q had been posting: “Strength Through Unity, Unity Through Faith” kinda stuff, then posted a scene of V’s speech from V For Vendetta (whose enemies utilize the first quotation), it all kinda unravelled (from a useful propaganda standpoint) after that.

Then, the abomination QAnon was born.

Icky sticky business.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

There were circling theories for years, at least a decade now, that /ourguys/ have long been curating our development as an open-source, decentralized, autonomous and ungovernable intelligence asset. All Q did was use us as a tool, like someone using a megaphone. It was the perfect operation to take advantage of a bunch of autists. You make them think they're playing a game by sending them on what appears to be a treasure hunt while doubling as a giant puzzle. Not only did it work, it sent the current regime, being held together by strings at this point, in to a tailspin. They've been wasting their magazine like a startled greenie in the dark for years now. As an example, this whole pandemic theater was supposed to take years. They've condensed it down to just a couple, made tons of mistakes along the way, like not preparing a proper candidate after Hillary or during her tenure (a supplement after the first term wasn't a counter for, for instance). This whole thing that's playing our right now is tptb spending all of their ammunition while they scramble to retain the reigns. Clearly, as we're all seeing, their patchwork administration and their hollow scarecrow of a president isn't fooling anyone. All they really did was quicken the Boomer and Millennial learning period, kick Gen Z and Zoomers up to full throttle, deteriorating so much of their hard work to demoralize everyone for decades.

Their biggest mistake was not realizing that calling us all schitzos, incels, deplorable and retards wasn't enough. They should have killed us when they had the chance, but not killing us hardly accomplishes anything. now that wouldn't solve anything. The only real move right now is try to get us to kill each other before we calmly start growing a disobedient bone and making our own government with blackjack and hookers (okay, maybe not the hookers part; maybe that's negotiable).

This is the reason for the catchphrase, "Nothing Can Stop What's Coming."

[–] 0 pt

Neat! Sweet! & Petite!

oo

[–] 0 pt

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