Which companies are being targeted by Anonymous? See their responses

In addition to Russian entities, Anonymous says it’s now targeting some Western companies.

Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

The “hacktivist” collective known as Anonymous said it has a new target in its “cyber war” against Russia — Western businesses that are still doing business there.

A post on March 21 from a Twitter account named @YourAnonTV stated: “We call on all companies that continue to operate in Russia by paying taxes to the budget of the Kremlin’s criminal regime: Pull out of Russia!”

The tweet, which has been liked more than 23,000 times, gave companies 48 hours to comply.

The threat, which was later echoed on other Anonymous-affiliated Twitter accounts, included a photo with the logos of some 40 companies, including household names such as Burger King, Subway and General Mills.

The account later tagged more companies to the post, ostensibly putting them on notice that they, too, could soon be targeted. 

Incorrectly targeted?

Three targeted oil field service companies — Halliburton, Baker Hughes and Schlumberger — had also already issued announcements about their Russian business operations. The statements followed a Washington Post article that implored readers to stop investing in companies deemed to be “funding Putin’s war.”

Intentional or ‘fog of war?’

A second batch of targeted companies

Many companies that received “Fs” on Yale’s list appeared on a second Anonymous Twitter post published March 24. This post targeted a new — and seemingly updated — list of companies, which included Emirates airline, the French gardening retailer Leroy Merlin and the essential oil company Young Living.

Several companies caught in Anonymous’ crosshairs soon announced they were cutting ties with Russia, including the Canadian oilfield service company Calfrac Well Services and the sanitary product maker Geberit Group — the latter including hashtags for Anonymous and Yale in its Twitter announcement.  

The French sporting goods company Decathlon this week announced it too was shutting stores in Russia. But Anonymous had already claimed credit for shuttering its Russian website, along with sites for Leroy Merlin and the French supermarket company Auchan.

Jeremiah Fowler, co-founder of the cybersecurity company Security Discovery, said his research determined that Anonymous also successfully hacked a database belonging to Leroy Merlin.

“I’m absolutely sure [Anonymous] found it,” he said, saying that the collective left messages and references inside the data.

Anonymous also claimed last week that it hacked a database of another targeted company, the Swiss food and beverage corporation Nestle. However, Nestle told CNBC that these claims had “no foundation.” The design and tech website Gizmodo reported that Nestle said it accidentally leaked its own information in February.

Nestle has since announced it is reducing its operations in Russia, but the measures were rejected as insufficient by at least one online Anonymous account.

Other forces at play

After being targeted by Anonymous, the French car manufacturer Renault announced it was suspending activities in a Moscow manufacturing plant. However, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy publicly singled out Renault, as well as Nestle, during televised addresses to European governments and citizens.

A company spokesperson for Renault told CNBC its decision had nothing to do with Anonymous.

Other companies have made moral cases for continuing to operate in Russia. Auchan, in a press release issued this week, said Russians have “no personal responsibility in the outbreak of this war. Abandoning our employees, their families and our customers is not the choice we have made.”

Another complication: Franchises

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/01/which-companies-are-being-targeted-by-anonymous-see-their-responses.html