Posted on 5-9-2002
Return
to Sender -- 55,000 Times
By Noah Shachtman www.wired.com
Photo shows Francis Boyle
Law professor and pro-Palestinian agitator Francis Boyle expected
to have a
lot of e-mail waiting for him after his two-and-a-half-week
vacation. But
he never imagined that there would be 55,000 messages packing
his inbox --
many of them hurt, even belligerent, notes from friends and
fellow activists.
Why, they wondered, had Boyle -- who appeared on national television
last
Sept. 13 to campaign against U.S. involvement in Afghanistan
-- written
"when I see in the newspapers that civilians in Afghanistan
or the West
Bank were killed by American or Israeli troops, I don't really
care"? The
answer was simple. The message that supposedly came from Boyle
was a
forgery -- one of thousands sent out in the names and from e-mail
addresses
of prominent advocates for the Palestinians -- designed to sow
dissension,
create confusion and waste time in the activist community. "Primarily,
it's
been a frustrating nuisance. But there have been a lot of angry
misunderstandings, creating a lot of distraction," said Nigel
Parry,
co-founder of the Electronic Intifada website. "Some people
are closing
accounts, others are getting off (activist e-mail) lists entirely."
Palestinian and Israeli hackers have been going after each other
since the
latest round of Middle East violence erupted in September 2000.
But this
tactic, e-mail identify theft -- known as a "Joe job" by spam
experts -- is
a new one, possibly the most disruptive yet. Boyle, a professor
of
international law at the University of Illinois, spent nearly
four days
sifting through the messages, writing personal apologies to
the offended
and manually deleting thousands of bounce-backs.
Monica Tarazi, New York director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee, recently had her personal Yahoo e-mail account shut
down for one
day for spamming after a message bearing her name was sent to
more than 80
Yahoo groups.
Yale medical school professor Mazin Qumsiyeh received dozens
of e-mails
from irate colleagues after messages he had written to a private
list of
activists were forwarded to more than 1,500 people in the Yale
community
without his knowledge.
The content of the impersonated e-mails has varied widely: news
accounts of
terrorist attacks; historical looks at the relationship between
the United
States and Jewish people; anti-Semitic rants; pro-Israel analysis.
There
have even been forged warnings that "the e-mails of the members
of this
group are hacked by pro-Israeli people." Earlier this month,
Tarazi and
Parry discussed the problem with agents from the FBI's computer
crimes and
civil rights divisions in a half-hour conference call. But the
FBI said
there was little they could do to stop the e-mail impersonations
from
continuing. "While these e-mails are a nuisance, offensive and
intimidating, the FBI didn't find anything illegal: There haven't
been
threats that rise to the level of a hate crime, no money has
been stolen,
public safety has not been endangered and, as far as we can
tell, our
computers have not been hacked or 'technically intruded into'
as one agent
put it," Tarazi said in an e-mail. "The offensive messages are
all
protected by the First Amendment."
Qumsiyeh was quick to blame "these Zionists" for the mimicry,
saying in an
e-mail that the FBI would have taken the case "seriously of
course if the
shoe was on the other foot, if you know what I mean." The Palestinian
movement is legendarily polarized. For example, in 1993 Boyle
-- then the
Palestinian delegation's legal adviser at the Middle East peace
negotiations -- refused to attend the signing of the Oslo peace
agreement
on the White House lawn in part because he thought Arafat had
caved in to
the Israelis and Americans. So it's not out of the question
that this
operation could be carried out by people within the pro-Palestinian
community.
Jewish leaders like Abraham Foxman, national director of the
Anti-Defamation League, said that the e-mail impersonations
of Qumsiyeh,
Boyle and others were "absolutely improper" and that the events
show "the
Internet's dark underside (as) a vehicle for creating mischief
and abuse."
These comments come despite the fact that Boyle has refused
to condemn the
killing of Israeli civilians by suicide bombers and once labeled
Foxman's
group a "dirty tricks organization for Israel. "The Palestinian
people are
defending themselves and their land and their homes against
Israeli war
crimes and Israeli war criminals, both military and civilian,"
Boyle wrote
in a recent issue of The Link, a pro-Arab journal.
According to Laura Atkins, president of the anti-spam group
SpamCon
Foundation, several of the missives forged in Boyle's name were
sent from a
Kinko's in the St. Louis area. These were then routed through
an e-mail
server connected with Arab Wide Web, a Middle Eastern news and
culture
website based in Dubai.
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