Supporters of the Islamist militant organization ISIS have responded to the threat of a hacking campaign by the loosely knit online collective Anonymous by issuing a set of basic measures to protect against hacking.
The rules were sent over the encrypted chat app Telegram on the “Khilafah News” channel this week. They were discovered by the International Centre for the Study of Radicalization, a London-based think tank focused on terrorism.
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“O’ brothers of tawheed,” the message starts (tawheed in Islam refers to the oneness of God), “The #Anonymous hackers threatened in new video release that they will carry out a major hack operation on the Islamic State (idiots)… So U should follow the instructions below to avoid being hacked.” The message then lists several anti-hacking recommendations, which read like elementary cybersecurity practices.
Don’t open links from unknown sources, frequently use VPNs to change your IP address, don’t talk to people you don’t know on Telegram or Twitter, and don’t use the same name for your email and Twitter username — “this mistake cost many Ansar [helpers] their accounts and the kuffar [non-believers] published their IP so be careful.”
The channel over which these guidelines were sent was later shut down, ICSR’s Nick Kaderbhai said in an email to NBC News.









