Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Demonstration disrupts BART during commute

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Demonstrators, organized by the group Anonymous, converged on San Francisco BART stations Monday for a protest, fallout after BART shut down cell service last week over threatened protests about a police shooting at a BART station last month.





The protests disrupted BART service in San Francisco during the evening commute, with the Civic Center station being shut down after protesters began to disrupt train service. Access to the Powell Street station was also limited for a time and street traffic was also impacted as protesters marched up Market Street towards Montgomery Station and then back down towards the Embarcadero.
The effort is being staged by hackers who broke into a website and published private information of BART customers. The hacker group threatened to wage war against BART and its members and supporters may be making good on that promise.
BART Chief Spokesperson Linton Johnson says protests are fine, as long as they take place outside the fair gates.
"They can do it outside; I welcome it they can say whatever they want about me and BART or anything else they want to say," Johnson said.
"Who are these people who are furthering their political agenda by basically trespassing on my personal rights," hacking victim Kelcey Poe said.
The group that hacked into BART's website and exposed hundreds of BART riders' names, phone numbers and addresses calls itself Anonymous for a reason.
"They don't want to go on her record with who they are; they won't even tell you who they are," CNET senior writer Elinor Mills said.
Mills has been tracking the group since last year. She says they are global, but they also have ties in the Bay Area. There's no real leader and they have proven in previous online attacks, they know how to do damage.
"They're more online activists; they really have a message or messages to spread and they're using the Internet as a way to do that," Mills said.
BART says it shut down cellphone service to protect its customers and the transit agency did not rule out doing it again Monday, but it did not seem that they did so.
"Let it be known the protesters did this, not BART," Johnson said. "We were forced into a decision that we had to make in order to protect the safety of our customers."

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