Don’t get stuck in a rut. The old ways get boring—we need you to come up with new ones! Be visible, unconventional, and rock the world! And tell us what you’re doing. We’ll put it in Threshold so everybody else in SEAC can read all about it.

Disruption
This means shutting down the normal operations of something. It is not necessarily illegal—it might just be clever. For instance (from SASU’s Organizing on the Campus, by Bruce Conin):

Bank on Brooklyn organized 200 of their members to go to the target bank at the same time and deposit one dollar. The next day, they all went together again and closed their accounts. The bank manager knew what was going on, but could do nothing to stop it. The people, in effect, legally occupied and shut down bank operations for two days.

You can also try the “Zap Fax”—20 pages of form letters signed by people opposing the corporation’s practice taped together to tie up their fax line. Faxing pages of black paper tied in a circle has been known to burn out the ink in the target’s fax machine. Or the “phone-in”. Have 100 people call all the numbers in the Administration building, over and over, in shifts.

Electronic Civil Disobedience
While the following tactics could antagonize your supporters and should be used carefully (if at all) you could hack a target’s webpage, replacing it with your own information (U.S. government pages are often targeted), hold a web sit-in (people from all over the world set their browser so that you access the page every second or so, this causes other people to be unable to visit it), flood (a.k.a. ‘spam’) their email account with junk, or plain hack into their computer system (or voice mail) to find information that can be leaked to the press. Do everything anonymously. Note that hacking is illegal, risky, and requires special skills.