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LulzSec's actions against government and corporate websites are reminiscent of those taken by the much larger, more amorphous group known as Anonymous. That group has launched Internet campaigns against the music industry, the Church of Scientology, and Middle Eastern dictatorships, among others. An Anonymous member told the AP that he believed LulzSec was formed by people from the group who got tired of the time it took to reach consensus and launch hacking projects. "They wanted to go on more adventurous, brazen hacking adventures and really get their names out there," he said. He spoke on condition that his name is withheld given the pressure being put on Anonymous members by law enforcement. In the interview, the LulzSec hacker acknowledged that members of his group had participated in Anonymous operations in the past, such as attacks on Tunisian government websites during the country's revolution earlier this year. He said that there were six members of LulzSec altogether, working eight-to-10 hours a day, but declined to go into detail when pressed. "We'd prefer not to be waterboarded, so for the foreseeable future we'll try our best to remain as anonymous as possible," he joked. Authorities -- and rival hackers -- are trying hard to strip that anonymity away, although the hacker claimed not to be worried. On Tuesday, 19-year-old Ryan Cleary was arrested as part of a joint FBI-Scotland Yard investigation into hackings linked to both LulzSec and Anonymous. British Police Commissioner Paul Stephenson described Cleary's arrest as "very significant," but the hacker insisted he wasn't a member of the group. "He hosted an IRC (a kind of chat room) we used, yes. But it wasn't our official meeting place, it was just a place for fans to gather," the hacker said. The hacker declined to be drawn on the content of the material he said his group was planning to release, except to say that it was all related to "governments and law enforcement." He added that, behind the scenes, the group's hacking attacks were ongoing. "Every day our stash increases," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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