BRAINYARDNEWS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR


David F. Carr
David F. Carr
David F. Carr is Editor of The BrainYard, the community for social business on InformationWeek.com, covering social media and the...
Read Full Bio >>
See More From This Columnist >>
SHARE



Snubbed By Google+, Hacker Group Promises Alternative Network

David F. Carr | July 18, 2011
 
   
Snubbed By Google+, Hacker Group Promises Alternative Network Developers claiming to represent the Anonymous hacker collective say they will launch their own social network free of tyranny.

Developers claiming to represent the Anonymous hacker collective say they will launch their own social network free of tyranny.

Developers from (or at least sympathetic to) the hacker collective Anonymous are promising to create their own social network, after Google+ blocked the group's profile.

So far, AnonPlus consists of nothing more than a placeholder page proclaiming great things to come and an associated discussion forum for developers to discuss user interface concepts and other ideas for the service.

A forum post announcing the initiative proclaims:

"This is one social network that will not tolerate being shut down, censored, or oppressed--even in the face of blackout.

"We the people have had enough ... enough of governments and corporations saying what's best for us--what's safe for our minds.

"The sheep era is over. The interwebz are no longer your prison."

The hacker blog darknet.org.uk noted that the official Anonymous blog and Twitter feed had yet to mention the project, making the association with the group uncertain. In fact, the AnonPlus home page says something about the connection being loose and the goal being broader than providing a social media home base for Anonymous: "this project is for ALL people not just anonymous, this idea is a presstorm idea and only takes the name anon because of the Anonymity of the social network." Presstorm, which is hosting the developers forum, advertises itself as an investigative journalism and activism website.

As of Monday afternoon, the developer forum was offline, due (according to a post from the AnonPlus Twitter feed) to a distributed denial of service attack.

The AnonPlus developers say they began work on their own social network after Google suspended their Your Anon News Google+ profile and the associated Gmail account for violation of Google's Community Standards. For starters, Google says that G+ profiles are supposed to represent real individuals, not pseudonyms (although support for company and organization profiles is in the development pipeline).

There are other efforts to create social networks that would give users greater control over their privacy, such as Diaspora, an open source community project. If AnonPlus has one advantage, it might be in staking a more serious commitment to anonymity, with the backing of people who have a vested interested in staying anonymous so they don't get arrested.

Join Cloud Connect for a virtual event on designing and deploying reliable on-demand applications. It happens Aug. 11. Find out more and register.

COMMENTS

STAYUPDATED

Sign up to the BrainYard email newsletter

*Required field

Privacy Statement

BRAINYARDRESEARCH
The State of Community Management
The State of Community Management documents a comprehensive set of lessons learned to help define this emerging role and give you the tools to be successful in your social initiatives.
Enterprise 2.0: What, Why and How?
This paper is an introduction to Enterprise 2.0 ‐ why it is one of the most crucial concepts to understand in business today and how you can begin to take advantage of E2 in your organization.
Guide to Understanding Social CRM
This paper presents the foundational components of Social CRM and lays the groundwork required for your company to build and maintain long and valuable customer relationships.
VIDEOGALLERY
Startup DataSift's Big Data Platform
DataSift CEO Rob Bailey talks about the growth in big data, and his company's platform to ingest, manage and provide that data from social networks. He also provides a quick demonstration of the product.
Salesforce.com's Social Enterprise Approach Pushes
Salesforce.com co-Founder Parker Harris discusses why the company has moved past its Cloud 2 mantra, with acquisitions like Heroku and Radian6 enabling even tighter customer relationships for the enterprise.
March Madness And Social Networking
March Madness and pro sports hold many lessons for social network marketing. In this exclusive interview Eric Lundquist interviews sports broadcaster Butch Stearns on what social network marketing can learn from how sports teams social network
SLIDESHOWS
7 Examples: Put Gamification To Work
An increasing number and variety of business applications are integrating game mechanics, or gamification, to improve user engagement, engage new...
Get Social: 11 Management Systems That Can Help
Social media management systems can help your organization manage and measure increasingly sophisticated social strategies.
6 Social Sites Sitting On The Cutting Edge
Your company's Facebook and Twitter presence are established, but don't rest there. Consider these other social sites--some familiar, some less...