My biggest comment and thought for this is: It's the people starting to push back. I can understand the need to hide certain information from the public, as, for the mob-mentality, people as a whole tend to panic, become aggressive, etc. All those wonderfully destructive emotions that bubble forth when confronted with something they can't understand. What I like about Anon is that they don't do things just for fame, as in this case. They're not saying "looky at what we got!", it's more along the lines of "don't push too hard, and watch what you try to sell the public." In high school, my computer science class had all sorts of spyware that would allow the V.P. and Principal to see everything you had on your screen and HDD at any given time. Well, through a blatant exploit in an MS program, we were able to back-door these systems, and, even with deep freeze, would find and wipe out any software they installed. People would be playing games, surfing the net, etc. Our teacher never cared. Why? Through the freedoms we allowed them, they were overall more productive. They played games. Sure, AFTER they finished things. They were surfing the web. Of course, the best source of information, including sites that are quite often blocked by school servers. Moral of the story? Big Brother isn't the answer. Creativity and freedom is.
Apologies for the run on paragraph and the seemingly random story, but, I hope you understand the analogical references. Props to Anon for, once again, giving the finger to the one's that want to continue to run their mouth. As for the FBI and NATO? Good luck. You'll need it.