LONDON (AP) - A British court has sentenced a teenage hacker to youth rehabilitation after he and other members of the Anonymous movement carried out cyber-attacks targeting financial sites like PayPal and Visa.
Jake Birchall had admitted conspiring to impair the operation of computers in 2010 and 2011. The 18-year-old Birchall was sentenced Friday to 18 months of rehabilitation and 60 hours of unpaid work.
Three other co-defendants, aged 22 to 28, were given jail sentences of up to 18 months last week for their part in the attacks. They targeted groups involved in combating Internet piracy and companies that had stopped processing online donations to WikiLeaks.
The websites for Mastercard and Visa were disrupted, and PayPal said the attacks cost it 3.5 million pounds ($5.5 million.)
By Rand Paul
Obama acts as though we no longer have a Constitution
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

Viewing and reviewing the Los Angeles experimental and classic punk scene with a nod to Rodney's English Disco

Born in 1930 in rural Missouri, Charles Vandegriffe, Sr., brings his time and place to the Communities.