The Good Tech Companies - From Guy Fawkes to Resistance and Cryptos: A Fight for Freedom
Episode Date: November 5, 2024This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/from-guy-fawkes-to-resistance-and-cryptos-a-fight-for-freedom. Do you know why Guy Fawkes ma...sks are symbol of rebellion or even anarchism? Should you wear your own mask too? "Remember, remember, the 5th of November". Check more stories related to media at: https://hackernoon.com/c/media. You can also check exclusive content about #history, #guy-fawkes, #crypto-anarchism, #anonymous, #hacktivists, #internet-censorship, #obyte, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Guy Fawkes is a man who died over 400 years ago in old England. A group of conspirators, led by Robert Catesby, sought to assassinate King James I. They rented a cellar beneath the parliament building and stocked it with 36 barrels of gunpowder. The plan unraveled when an anonymous letter, sent days before the event, warned a Catholic member of parliament to stay away from the building.
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From Guy Fawkes to Resistance and Cryptos, A Fight for Freedom, by Obite.
Picture this. You go to a protest these days, and you find a lot of people wearing white,
bearded masks. Maybe the hacktivist group Anonymous comes to your mind,
maybe V for Vendetta, maybe even the historical root, Guy Fawkes.
A man who died over 400 years ago
in Old England. But do you know why are they all connected as a symbol of rebellion or even
anarchism? Should you wear your own mask too? Well, let's explore this story in chronological
order, shall we? If you must know it now, it includes a murder attempt plot, explosives,
a dystopian world, and somehow ends up with modern online anarchism and protests
worldwide. Cryptoshave been in the mix too since they appeared in 2009. Old historical facts,
remember, remember, the 5th of November, gunpowder, treason and plot. This Isan English
folk rhyme that dates back to the 17th century and has firmly stay ed in popular imagery ever
since. You see, that century
wasn't Catholic-friendly at all in England. In case you didn't know, there was a thing called
European Warsaw religion that went on for centuries. That was a complex historical event
in which numerous realms and parties participated, so we'll sum it up by saying that the English
high powers preferred the Church of England, Anglicanism, a form of
Christian Protestantism that was against the Church of Rome and the figure of the Pope.
Instead, the English monarch became the supreme governor of the Church instead of the Pope,
and, eventually, they sought to erase Catholicism from England. As a consequence, harsh religious
persecution was put in place. Catholics faced heavy restrictions on practicing their faith,
prohibitions against holding public office, fines for not attending Anglican services,
and occasional imprisonment or execution for those deemed traitors due to their loyalty to
the Pope over the English monarch. In other words, that was the perfect recipe for a group
of Catholic revolutionaries to design a plot to kill and replace the Protestant king in Highscourt.
The 5th of November a group of conspirators, led by Robert Catesby, sought to assassinate
King James I and his government officials in a dramatic explosion by November 5, 1605.
Therent had a cellar beneath the Parliament building and stocked it with 36 barrels of
gunpowder, enough to cause massive destruction. The plan unraveled, however, when an anonymous
letter,
sent days before the event, warned a Catholic member of parliament to stay away from the
building. N-N-This prompted a search, and just hours before the planned explosion,
authorities found Guy Fox, one of Kitsby's associates, guarding the gunpowder and ready
to light the wicks. Fox was arrested, tortured, and eventually executed, while most of the other conspirators
were also caught and met similar fates. The event is known now as the Gunpowder Plot.
Today, November 5 is celebrated as Guy Fox Night or Bonfire Night in the UK.
People light bonfires, set off fireworks, and sometimes burn effigies of Guy Fox or other
hated characters to commemorate the failure of the plot and the survival of King James I, who most English people actually liked back then,
despite his anti-Catholic posture. Fictional facts.
So, a little bit disappointing up until now? Let's fast forward to the 19th century when
fiction starts to meddle with the facts. The writer William Harrison Ainsworth published
a three-volume romance novel called,
Guy Fawkes. This story, published between 1840 and 1841, described a made-up romance between
Fawkes and Viviana Radcliffe, a new character, and narrated the journey of the gunpowder plot
from the summer of 1605 to its tragic end. All while picturing Fawkes as a sort of anti-hero.
It wouldn't be the last time. That novel was
popular in its time, but what would really hit our century would be the comic, V for Vendetta,
by Alan Moore and David Lloyd, first published in 1980. Lloyd, indeed, is the author of the
Guy Fox mask design as we know it. You may also be familiar with the homonymous movie from 2006. H-T-T-P-S colon slash slash W-W-W.
YouTube, com, watch?
V equals L-S-A-7-M-A whole A-W and embeddable equals true
They tell us a dystopian story set in a future Britain under a totalitarian regime.
The story follows V, a mysterious vigilante who wears a Guy Fawkes mask
and uses his skills to fight against the
oppressive government. V's ultimate goal is to awaken the people to the regime's injustices and
inspire them to reclaim their freedom, using acts of rebellion and symbolism to make his point.
He ends up fulfilling the original Fawkes goal and blows up the parliament.
The Guy Fawkes mask is central to V's identity, always hidden otherwise, and symbolizes resistance
against tyranny. Just as Fawkes once tried to overthrow a powerful government, V becomes a
modern symbol of defiance, using the mask to rally people against oppression while protecting their
identities. This symbolism has since been embraced worldwide by activists and movements advocating
for freedom and justice. New historical facts.
The Guy Fawkes mask became a symbol of protest and defiance in the early 2000s,
thanks largely to the online activist group Anonymous. Starting around 2008, members of
Anonymous wore the mask during a series of global protests against the Church of Scientology,
which they opposed due to its practices and aggressive control of information.
The mask allowed activists to protect the irredentities while presenting a united front
against what they saw as corruption and censorship.
https colon slash slash utu b underscore zgj2bkyitw
Embeddable equals true in 2011, the mask gained even more visibility with the Occupy Wall Street movement,
which protested economic inequality and corporate influence. The Occupy movement spread globally,
with protesters in places like New York, London, and Tokyo donning the mask as a statement against
social injustice. Julian Assange, a renowned cypherpunk and founder of Wikileaks, also wore
the mask publicly, aligning with the movement and
its ideals of transparency and accountability. Since then, the Guy Fawkes mask has appeared in
a range of protests worldwide, from Hong Kong's pro-democracy demonstrations to anti-austerity
marches across Europe. In addition, we must say that a wide lot of these protesters have learned
to use cryptocurrencies to protect their funds and data. Today, the mask remains a powerful, recognizable symbol for those fighting for
freedom and against government or corporate control, transcending borders and causes.
A mask isn't enough. Since the early days of protests by Anonymous and movements like Occupy
Wall Street, the Guy Fawkes mask has allowed people to show solidarity while protecting their
identities. However,
in the current era of advanced surveillance and censorship, simply wearing a mask is no longer
enough. According to Freedom House, global internet freedom declined for the 14th consecutive year,
and free expression online was imperiled by severe prison terms and escalating violence.
Financial censorship is also a growing concern. In some countries,
government sand institutions limit or freeze funds to silence dissent or restrict people's
access to their money. Cryptocurrencies and decentralized networks offer a way to push back.
Due to their peer-to-peer nature, cryptocurrencies allow people to control their own funds and data
without relying on central authorities. This means they can be used as tools
for those fighting against inequality or authoritarianism, helping people keep their
assets secure and enabling transactions even in restricted environments. Not all decentralized
networks, however, are equally resistant to censorship. Blockchains can be censored and
manipulated, most of them still rely on validators or miners, leaving room for censorship
and centralization. Obite stands out as a powerful alternative. Its directed acyclic graph, DAG,
structure is truly decentralized, free from miners, validators, or any other middlemen,
making it especially resistant to censorship and a good option for people seeking true autonomy.
Featured image by Ahmed Zion,
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