On March 10th, #Anonymous leaked over 360,000 files from Роскомнадзор / Roskomnadzor, the Russian agency responsible for monitoring, controlling and censoring Russian mass media.
On March 17th, #Anonymous released 79 gigabytes of emails from Omega, the R&D division of #Transneft/#Транснефть - #Russia's state-controlled pipeline company, currently under sanctions
On March 28th, #Anonymous hacked ~140,000 emails from the Russian firm MashOil, which designs, manufactures and maintains drilling, mining and fracking equipment. MashOil has tested equipment with Gazprom and signed agreements with Gazprom subsidiaries.
On March 30th, #Anonymous leaked 5,500 emails from Thozis Corp, a Russian investment firm involved in the project to build a satellite city in Saint Petersburg, one of the largest development projects in Russia, among other deals.
On March 31st, #Anonymous leaked 62,000 emails from the Marathon Group, a Russian investment firm owned by Alexander Vinokurov, currently under EU sanctions. Vinokurov is also the son-in-law of Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov, who has provided significant backing.
On April 1st, #Anonymous hacked 200,000 emails from the Russian law firm Capital Legal Services, which practices law in a variety of areas.
On April 1st, the Anonymous affiliated hacking group @xxNB65 released over 150,000 emails, 8,200 files and several hundred GB of databases from Mosekspertiza, a state-owned company created by the Moscow Chamber of Commerce.
There's this narrative going on that Anonymous works together with the US government. All of these claims are people saying this without providing documented evidence. But who benefits from such claims?
During the George Floyd protests in America, Anonymous posted a massive hack on American law enforcement, called #BlueLeaks It's likely that this spooked the feds. Now how would you discredit a chaotic movement that's impossible to control? You try to create a narrative
In 2011, the FBI arrested some of our comrades through infiltration, there were operations going on to make everyone a suspected federal agent in order to create distrust, and it worked for core US subsets.