The Internet
has altered the landscape of political discourse and advocacy since the 1990s,
particularly for those wishing to have a more universal means of influencing
national and foreign policies. With the InternetÂ’s availability to mainstream
society came a growth in the political fever among both the White Hats and the Black Hats—a fever known as “hacker
activism” or “hacktivism.” Those who engage in hacktivism are known as the
hacktivists—individuals pairing their needs for activism with their hacking
skills to advance free speech worldwide—if they are White Hats—or to carry off some
political mission that may have damaging effects to the Websites targeted—if
they are Black Hats.
The operations commonly used in hacktivism include browsing
the Web for information; constructing Websites and posting information on them;
transmitting electronic publications and letters through email; and using the Internet to
discuss issues, form coalitions, and plan and coordinate activities.
See Also:
Black Hats; Clipper Proposal or Capstone Project; Electronic Mail or Email;
Internet; White Hats or Elite Hackers or Samurai Hackers.
Schell, B.H., Dodge, J.L., with S.S. Moutsatsos. The
Hacking of America: WhoÂ’s Doing It, Why, and How. Westport, CT: Quorum
Books, 2002.