Decocidio

Decocidio (whose logo is ) is an anonymous, autonomous collective of hacktivists[1] which is part of Earth First!,[2] a radical environmental protest organisation, and adheres to Climate Justice Action.[3][4] In their hacks the group shows affiliation with the autonomous Hackbloc collective.[3][4]

Decocidio
Decocidio logo
Formation2010
FoundersLeandro Pinheiro Felippe et al.
PurposeHacking
Radical environmentalism
Autonomism
Green anarchism
AffiliationsHackbloc
Earth First
Climate Justice Action

The logo of the collective is an upper case theta preceded by a hash symbol or number sign. In many scripting languages the “#” introduces a comment that goes to the end of the line. The upper case theta was in 1969 made into an Ecology Symbol by cartoonist Ron Cobb, that later became associated with Earth Day. This letter of the Greek alphabet also pictured on the Ecology Flag used by American environmentalists in the 1970s.

The name Decocidio is a type of word play which refers to the act of killing code.[5] The noun consists of the stem deco- and the suffix -cidio:

Actions

European Climate Exchange

On 23 July 2010, at 23:23 UTC, Decocidio targeted the public website of the European Climate Exchange, a leading marketplace for trading CO
2
emissions
in Europe. The website showed a spoof homepage for around 22 hours in an effort to promote the contention that carbon trading is a false solution to the climate crisis.[1][2][3][4][6]

gollark: Google Gates, developer of Bing and famed halting problem inventor.
gollark: That is what I said.
gollark: This was proven by famous computer scientist Google Gates in 1988.
gollark: No, you can't be sure about anything.
gollark: We have Turing oracles, LyricTech™ doesn't, and thus you cannot ever halting problem.

See also

References

  1. "European Climate Exchange (ECX) target of decocidio hacktivists against carbon trading scam". Earth First!. 23 July 2010.
  2. Phillips, Leigh (26 July 2010). "Hackers shut down EU carbon-trading website". The Guardian.
  3. Quaid, John (27 July 2010). "European Climate Exchange site hacked". Financial Services Technology. Archived from the original on 4 December 2010.
  4. Leyden, John (26 July 2010). "EU climate exchange website hit by green-hat hacker". The Register.
  5. Darren Pauli (27 July 2010). "Climate activists ply hack and trade". Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  6. Lechner, Michael. "Hacker-Attacke legt ECX-Website vorübergehend lahm" (in German). Dow Jones Business Newsletters. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011.

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