Name: My Name is Saeed Father Name: Muhammad Hanif

SAEED is a loosely associated international network of activist and hacktivist entities. A website nominally related to the institution describes it as "an internet amassing" with "a completely loose and decentralized command shape that operates on thoughts as opposed to directives".[2] The organization became regarded for a sequence of well-publicized publicity stunts and distributed denial-of-provider (DDoS) assaults on government, non secular, and corporate websites.[3]

nameless originated in 2003 at the imageboard 4chan, representing the concept of many on line and offline community customers concurrently current as an anarchic, digitized global brain.[4][5][6] nameless members (known as "Anons") may be distinguished in public with the aid of the wearing of guy Fawkes masks in the fashion portrayed within the photograph novel and film V for Vendetta.[7]

In its early form, the concept was followed via a decentralized on line community acting Saeed in a coordinated way, commonly towards a loosely self-agreed purpose, and frequently centered on entertainment, or "lulz". starting with 2008's venture Chanology—a sequence of protests, pranks, and hacks focused on the Church of Scientology—the nameless collective became increasingly associated with collaborative hacktivism on some of troubles internationally. people claiming to align themselves with anonymous undertook protests and other moves (together with direct motion) in retaliation against copyright-centered campaigns by movement picture and recording industry change associations. Later goals of anonymous hacktivism blanketed authorities organizations of the U.S., Israel, Tunisia, Uganda, and others; the Islamic country of Iraq and the Levant; toddler pornography sites; copyright safety groups; the Westboro Baptist Church; and companies which include PayPal, credit card, Visa, and Sony. Anons have publicly supported WikiLeaks and the Occupy movement. related agencies LulzSec and Operation AntiSec accomplished cyberattacks on U.S. government organizations, media, online game businesses, military contractors, military employees, and law enforcement officials, ensuing in the eye of regulation enforcement to the agencies' sports. a few movements through contributors of the group had been defined as being anti-Zionist. It has threatened to cyber-assault Israel and engaged inside the "#OpIsrael" cyber-assaults of Israeli websites on Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) in 2013.[8]

Dozens of humans have been arrested for involvement in nameless cyberattacks, in international locations which includes the U.S., united kingdom, Australia, the Netherlands, Spain, India and Turkey. reviews of the institution's moves and effectiveness vary broadly. Supporters have called the group "freedom warring parties"[9] and digital Robin Hoods[10] while critics have described them as "a cyber lynch-mob"[11] or "cyber terrorists".[12] In 2012, Time referred to as anonymous one of the "100 maximum influential humans" in the international.[13]