... email an article

Title: Al Qaeda's Internet Savvy in Doubt
Time/date: Sat, Sep 20, 2008 at 6:35:48 pm

Kudos to Rusty Shackleford and Aaron Weisburd for scaring the jihadis enough to make the mainstream media notice: Web problems hit release of al Qaeda 9/11 video.

Some suspected they had been targeted by hackers. India’s Hindustan Times pointed the finger at intelligence websites that track militant sites on the Internet, which responded in tongue-in-cheek fashion.

Rusty Shackleford of My Pet Jawa (www.mypetjawa.mu.nu) denied his web group was behind any cyber-attack on the websites. “But if I was responsible I’d deny it,” he said.

Aaron Weisburd of www.internet-haganah.com wrote: “The actual reasons for this are not known to me (and I would say that even if I actually knew what was going on).”

When less popular Islamist websites managed to post links to the video — which includes a “last will” recording by one of the September 11 hijackers — downloaders noted that the password given to them was wrong.

This further delayed the release and unnerved al Qaeda sympathizers, one of whom wrote: “May God bless you my brothers, but the password is wrong.”

Reuters’ correspondents sure are plugged into the jihadis’ thought waves, aren’t they?

 

You must have Javascript enabled to use the contact form.

(Separate multiple email addresses with commas. Maximum 10 addresses.)
Send to:

Your email:

Your comments:

Addresses you supply will never be sold or used for any other purpose.