Partisans go cyber: The hacker ethic and partisans’ legacy

Authors

  • Andrei Yu. Dudchik Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, 1, ul. Surganova, Minsk, 220072, Republic of Belarus; Ural Federal University, 19, ul. Mira, Ekaterinburg, 620002, Russian Federation

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu17.2023.209

Abstract

The article discusses the role of hackers and hacktivists in modern hybrid conflicts, in particular the ‘localization’ patterns of hackerism, by focusing on the case of the Belarusian hacker group Cyber Partisans. The study shows the significance of the partisan movement for modern Belarusian identity and historical memory and discusses the attempts of appropriation of this topic by various political actors. The comparison between hacktivism and partisan warfare holds a certain heuristic potential, making it possible to build conceptual categories for the analysis of the hacktivists’ practices and their ethical norms. Parallels may be drawn between the hackers and partisans (along with more common analogies with the pirates and ‘social bandits’) to gain a better understanding of the historical and ideological roots of the hacker movement in the ethical sphere. One of the most famous interpretations of the concept partisan belongs to the German jurist and political theorist Carl Schmitt, whose approach accentuates the partisan’s connection with the local territory (the telluric nature of the partisan). An interesting way to compare the hacker and partisan ethic is to look at both of them from the game-related perspective. For example, the situations described in the ‘partisan’ literature have much in common with the prisoner’s dilemma — a popular game theory paradox. These situations of moral choice foster a particular kind of subjectivity which is closely entwined with keeping true and remaining loyal, a subjectivity that is apt to handle certain information with discretion and care. The study explores the heuristic potential of the concept nomos for the analysis of the partisan ethic and hacker ethic. The proposed concept nomos of the swamp develops Karl Schmitt’s ideas and can be applied to reveal the specifics of the partisan activity in Belarus and to analyze partisanship in connection to the historical and modern forms of ‘partisan’ hacktivism.

Keywords:

hacker, hacktivist, partisan, cyberpartisan, hacker’s ethic, partisan ethic, nomos, Belarus

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
 

References


References

Claverie, B. and Cluzel, F. (2022), The Cognitive Warfare Concept. Available at: https://www.innovationhub-act.org/sites/default/files/2022-02/CW%20article%20Claverie%20du%20Cluzel%20final_0.pdf (accessed: 23.04.2022).

Sidorenko, I.N. (2017), Philosophy of violence: from metaphor to concept, Minsk: BSU Publ. (In Russian).

Hacker (2022), Available at: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hacker (accessed:24.04.2022).

Thomas, D. (2003), Hacker Culture, Minnesota: University Of Minnesota Press.

Sbculturelist (2022). Available at: http://subcultureslist.com/hacker-culture/ (accessed: 20.03.2022).

Hacktivism (2022). Available at: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hacktivism (accessed:24.04.2022).

Hare, F. (2019), Privateering in Cyberspace: Should Patriotic Hacking Be Promoted as National Policy?, Asian Security, vol. 15, is. 2, pp. 93–102.

Wijermars, M. and Lokot, T. (2022), Is Telegram a “harbinger of freedom”? The performance, practices, and perception of platforms as political actors in authoritarian states, Post-Soviet Affairs, vol. 38, is. 1–2, pp. 125–145.

Rudling P.A. (2014), The Rise and Fall of Belarusian Nationalism, 1906–1931, Pittsburg: University of Pittsburgh Press.

Urban, M. (1989), An Algebra of Soviet Power Elite Circulation in the Belorussian Republic 1966–86, Cambridge: University Press.

Litvinova, O. (2016), Evolution of partisan ethics during the Great Patriotic War (based on materials from the Bryansk region), Yaroslavl Pedagogical Bulletin, vol. 1, pp. 297–302. (In Russian)

Kovalenya, A.A. and Stashkevich, N. S. (2004), The Great Patriotic War of the Soviet people (in the context of World War II), Minsk: BSU Publishing Center. (In Russian)

Litvin, A.M. (2019), Belarus partisan. Illustrated encyclopedia of the partisan movement in Belarus during the Great Patriotic War, Minsk: Belarusian Encyclopedia named after Petrus Brouka Publ. (In Russian)

Bartushka, M. (2014), Partisan War in Belarus in 1941–1944, Smalensk: Іnbelkult Publ. (In Belarusian)

Musial, B. (2018), Soviet partisans in 1941–1944: Myths and reality, Smalensk: Inbelkult Publ. (In Belarusian)

Lewis, S. (2020), The “Partisan Republic”: Colonial Myths and the War for Memory in Belarus. Available at: https://www.nlobooks.ru/magazines/novoe_literaturnoe_obozrenie/166_nlo_6_2020/article/22957/ (accessed: 09.05.2021). (In Russian)

Kazharski, A. (2021), Belarus’ new political nation? 2020 anti-authoritarian protests as identity building, New Perspectives, vol. 29(1), pp. 69–79.

Jargon File (1996). Available at: http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/H/hacker-ethic.html (accessed: 22.03.2022).

Levy, S. (2010), Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media.

Raymond, E. (2001), The Cathedral and the Bazaar. Musings on Linux and Open Source by an Accidental Revolutionary, Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media.

Himanen, P. (2019), Hacker ethics and the spirit of informationalism, Moscow: AST Publ. (In Russian)

Coleman, G. (2013), Coding Freedom: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Hacking, Princeton: University Press.

Von Busch, O. and Palmas, K. (2006), Abstract hacktivism: the making of a hacker culture, London: Open Mute.

Jordan, T. and Paul, T. (2004), Hacktivism and Cyberwars: Rebels with a Cause?, London: Routledge

Karagiannopoulos, V. (2015), Living With Hacktivism From Conflict to Symbiosis, London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Hobsbawm, E.J. (1981), Bandits, New York: Pantheon Books.

Hobsbawm, E.J. (1963), Primitive Rebels, Manchester: University Press.

Wong, W. and Brown, P. (2013), E-Bandits in Global Activism: WikiLeaks, Anonymous, and the Politics of No One, American Political Science Association, vol. 11(4), pp. 1015–1033.

Coleman, G. (2014), Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous, London: Verso.

Dwan, J.H., Paige, T.P. and McLaughlin, R. (2022), Pirates of the Cyber Seas: Are State-Sponsored Hackers Modern-Day Privateers? Available at: https://lthj.qut.edu.au/article/view/1583/1211 (accessed: 14.05.2022).

Phillips, P.J. and Pohl, G. (2022), Hackers, Pirates, and Privateers. Available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4090094 (accessed: 14.05.2022).

Freudenberg, D. (2008), Theorie des Irreguliren. Partisanen, Guerillas, und Terroristen im modernen Kleinkrieg, Wiesbaden: VS Verlag

Munkler, G. (2018), Fragments of war. The evolution of violence in the 20th and 21st centuries, Moscow: Kuchkovo pole. (In Russian)

Dudchik, A. (2021), Nomos of the swamp: conceptualization of the project of the Belarusian “partisan ethics”, Matica Srpska Journal of Slavic Studies, vol. 99, pp. 165–182.

Apresyan, R.G. (2010), Prisoner’s Dilemma, in: New Philosophical Encyclopedia, vol. 2, Moscow: Mysl’, p. 34. (In Russian)

Bykov, V. (1985), Sotnikov, in: Bykov, V., Collected works: in 4 vols., vol. 2, Moscow: Molodaia gvardiia, pp. 305–452. (In Russian)

Kuhn, S. (2019), Prisoner’s Dilemma, in: Zalta, E.N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2019 Edition). Available at: https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2019/entries/prisoner-dilemma/ (accessed: 08.12.2021).

Yamamoto, H., Okada, I. and Muto, M. (2019), Effect of voluntary participation on an alternating and a simultaneous prisoner’s dilemma, Physical review, vol. 100, is. 3. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.100.032304

Hobbs, A. (1998), Physis and nomos, in: Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, London: Routledge, pp. 6510–6511.

Berger, P.L. (1990), The Sacred Canopy. Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion, Hamburg: Anchor

Cover, R.M. (1983), Foreword. Nomos and Narrative, Harvard Law Review, vol. 97, no. 1, pp. 4–69.

Schmitt, C. (2007), The theory of the partisan: An Interim Remark on the Notion of the Political, in: Schmitt, C., Partisan Theory, Moscow: Praxis Publ., pp. 7–144. (In Russian)

Kurennoy, V. (2007), The theory of the partisan. [Book review: Schmitt, C. The theory of the partisan, Moscow: Praxis, 2007], Neprikosnovennyi zapas, no. 1, pp. 277–278. (In Russian)

Dmitriev, T.A. (2007), Partisan theory yesterday and today, in: Schmitt, C. The theory of the partisan, Moscow: Praxis, pp. 203–301. (In Russian)

Schmitt, C. (2008), The Nomos of the Earth in the International Law of Jus Publicum Europaeum, Moscow: Vladimir Dal’ Publ. (In Russian)

Jameson, F. (2009), Notes on Nomos, Sociological Review, vol. 8 (2), pp. 17–20.

Shepherd, B. and Pattinson, J. (2010), Introduction, in: Shepherd, B. (ed.), ,War in a Twilight World,, London: Springer.

Giblett, R.J. (1996), Postmodern Wetlands Culture, History, Ecology, Edinburgh: University Press.

Stroganov, M.V. (ed.) (2010), Russian swamp: between nature and culture: Proceedings of the international scientific conference, Tver’: M.Batasova Publ.

Leontyeva, T.V. and Mokienko, V.M. (2021), The metaphor of the swamp in the characteristics of society, Bulletin of the Tomsk State University, no. 465, pp. 13–21.

Zhelyazko, V., Lagun, T. and Likhatsevich, A. (2016), Development of agricultural hydromelioration in Belarus, Environment Engineering, no. 4, pp. 75–80.

Van Creveld, M. (2005), Transformation of war, Moscow: Alpina Business Books Publ. (In Russian)

Duchyts, L., Lobach, U. and Sanko, S. (2004), Swamp, in: Belarusian mythology: encyclopedic Dictionary, Minsk: Belarus, pp. 41–42. (In Belarusian)

Kupala, J. (1942), Belarus rises, To Belarusian partisans. Maskva: Newspaper “Soviet Belorussia” Press Publ., pp. 5–10.

Wolin, R. (1990), Carl Schmitt, political existentialism, and the total state, Theory and Society, no. 19, pp. 389–416.

Marder, M. (2010), Groundless Existence. The Political Ontology of Carl Schmitt, London: Blumsbury.

Bykov, V. (2001), Swamp. Available at: https://magazines.gorky.media/druzhba/2001/7/boloto.html (accessed: 05.08.2021).

Downloads

Published

2023-06-30

How to Cite

Dudchik, A. Y. (2023). Partisans go cyber: The hacker ethic and partisans’ legacy. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies, 39(2), 322–339. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu17.2023.209