• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Wikileaks and Julian Assange Mega-thread

Redeye said:
It won't kill anything, though.  Wikileaks isn't one guy. It's not going to go away.
Then I suppose we do nothing.  Or we can hack their sites and deny their funds every time they pop up.  Make examples out of the ones we do catch.  I mean, fuck, there are child molesters out there, but just because we can't stop them, doesn't mean we don't stop fighting them.  Even though 98% of the crap they posted was pure gossip material, when they crossed that line, they ought to be sought out and stopped.  Yes, I realise others will rise up, but I refuse to let that little fucker (and his ilk) think that they can do whatever they wish without consequences.
 
Make examples of who, how?  Manning is going to be punished by law for his actions, but Assange I can't see how they can do much to him.  He is not a US citizen, nor was he present in the US when the events occured.  If you're suggesting some sort of extrajudicial repercussions, I cannot support that.  If the US (or any other aggrieved party) wishes to seek to cut off their funding by moral suasion of intermediaries, or whatever else, then fine.  However, I don't see that there's much that effectively can be done because of the problem of the decentralization of the participants.  Back to the point I made, that's an illustration - extracting whatever form of justice one might on Assange will neither put the genie back in the bottle, nor stop WL.  I guess it's time everyone reassess their security efforts in light of it.

Technoviking said:
Then I suppose we do nothing.  Or we can hack their sites and deny their funds every time they pop up.  Make examples out of the ones we do catch.  I mean, frig, there are child molesters out there, but just because we can't stop them, doesn't mean we don't stop fighting them.  Even though 98% of the crap they posted was pure gossip material, when they crossed that line, they ought to be sought out and stopped.  Yes, I realise others will rise up, but I refuse to let that little ****** (and his ilk) think that they can do whatever they wish without consequences.
 
Nemo888 said:
There is one way to kill Wikileaks dead. Get proof(make some if you can't find any) of Wikileaks SELLING info. That would be espionage.  Otherwise we're screwed. Bradley Manning will take all the heat for stealing them.

BTW Where were you guys 3 years(memory) ago when Wikileaks published lists of NATO part numbers and then got a hold of manifests for shipments to Afghanistan. That was a serious breach.  I liked the gossip but the new critical infrastructure cable is a different story.

That pretty twisted.
 
Pretty twisted, but you watch. Currently Wikileaks can call itself a journalistic organization. Because of the importance of the 4th estate in a functioning democracy this gives them a great deal of protection. Bradley Manning will be crucified but wikileaks will continue. There is no legal framework for winning a prosecution. No more than prosecuting Reuters, Der Spiegel or the New York Times for publishing them.

The "rape" charge is trumped up by a jilted lover and the hand of the US State Department is all over the reopening of the case. Nothing will come of it except a public black eye for Sweden's screwed up legal system and a thank you from Uncle Sam. States do dark deeds to protect their secrets. I expect a story about wikleaks selling secrets any day now. Then a proper espionage case can start. Or the US can just back down and take their lumps. Bank of America is next and then the Russian oligarchs. Everybody will get a turn.
 
Indeed, the attacks on Wikileaks seem to hold the potential to be far worse than Wikileaks itself...

hold_fast said:
 
Nemo888 said:
I expect a story about wikleaks selling secrets any day now. Then a proper espionage case can start.
You've made this assertion twice now, that information selling is a pre-condition of an espionage charge.

What are you basing that on?
 
Nemo888 said:
Pretty twisted, but you watch. Currently Wikileaks can call itself a journalistic organization. Because of the importance of the 4th estate in a functioning democracy this gives them a great deal of protection. Bradley Manning will be crucified but wikileaks will continue. There is no legal framework for winning a prosecution. No more than prosecuting Reuters, Der Spiegel or the New York Times for publishing them.

The "rape" charge is trumped up by a jilted lover and the hand of the US State Department is all over the reopening of the case. Nothing will come of it except a public black eye for Sweden's screwed up legal system and a thank you from Uncle Sam. States do dark deeds to protect their secrets. I expect a story about wikleaks selling secrets any day now. Then a proper espionage case can start. Or the US can just back down and take their lumps. Bank of America is next and then the Russian oligarchs. Everybody will get a turn.

Can I have that crystal ball when you're done with it? Unless you're an intelligence insider for the US, I suggest you keep your innuendo to yourself. Speculation is one thing, making statements as fact, unless you cite credible sources, is something altogether different. Don't leave the Site owner open to legal action for unsubstantiated statements. Precursors like 'In my opinion' ..... or 'I believe that' would help. However, once again, citations also go a long way to establishing the credibility of your statements.

Milnet.ca Staff
 
'Hacktivists' strike back

Call it the war of the hackers.

As enemies of WikiLeaks seek to shut down or sabotage the site leaking sensitive U.S. diplomatic documents, an army of counter-hackers has targeted such companies as MasterCard and Visa for supporting the efforts to muzzle WikiLeaks and its founder.

The information war brewing online — with WikiLeaks playing the part of the battlefield — escalated Wednesday when visa.com and mastercard.com became the latest companies targeted by the "hacktivists," known collectively as Anonymous, which also struck banks and companies it feels oppose WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange.

Earlier this week, the group also claimed responsibility for attacks against the online payment service PayPal and the Swiss bank that froze Assange's account. These attacks, which flood the targeted websites and make them inaccessible, are part a campaign the group calls Operation Payback.

"These people are hacktivists," said Rui Pereira, who teaches at the British Columbia Institute of Technology. "They have an agenda they're promoting, and this is a mechanism they're using to raise awareness of what they're about."

Operation Payback launched three months ago with a manifesto to take on the entertainment industry and anti-piracy groups, and essentially 'pay back' any websites perceived to impede an attempt at making information free and available.

"What is this all about? And what does it have to do with censorship and Operation Payback?" Anonymous wrote on its website, which also went down Wednesday afternoon, a few hours before tweeting that Facebook had blocked the Operation Payback page for violating the social networking site's terms of use.

"While we don't have much of an affiliation with WikiLeaks, we fight for the same reasons. We want transparency and we counter censorship. The attempts to silence WikiLeaks are long strides closer to a world where we cannot say what we think and are unable to express our opinions and ideas."
article continues here
                    (Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act)
 
It is my opinion of course. I have no affiliations with anything other than the medical community.

Wikileaks has no pending charges against them and even if there were some laid "innocent till proven guilty" should still apply. Most of the things done against wikileaks are illegal already. Denial of service attacks, the release of his personal info by Swedish prosecutors(ironic I know), removing their DNS hosting, disabling their funding, etc. With that behavior as a baseline it is logical to predict an escalation as more critical cables are released.

Wikileaks freedom of the press protection is the perfect safe harbour. That was the only way I could imagine removing that safe harbour. If I thought of it many others must have as well. Time will tell.
 
Hackers Give Web Companies a Test of Free Speech

A hacking free-for-all has exploded on the Web, and Facebook and Twitter are stuck in the middle.

On Wednesday, anonymous hackers took aim at companies perceived to have harmed WikiLeaks after its release of a flood of confidential diplomatic documents. MasterCard, Visa and PayPal, which had cut off people’s ability to donate money to WikiLeaks, were hit by attacks that tried to block access to the companies’ Web sites and services.

To organize their efforts, the hackers have turned to sites like Facebook and Twitter. That has drawn these Web giants into the fray and created a precarious situation for them.

Both Facebook and Twitter — but particularly Twitter — have received praise in recent years as outlets for free speech. Governments trying to control the flow of information have found it difficult to block people from voicing their concerns or setting up meetings through the sites.

At the same time, both Facebook and Twitter have corporate aspirations that hinge on their ability to serve as ad platforms for other companies. This leaves them with tough public relations and business decisions around how they should handle situations as politically charged as the WikiLeaks developments.

Some internet experts say the situation highlights the complexities of free speech issues on the Internet, as grassroots Web companies evolve and take central control over what their users can make public. Clay Shirky, who studies the Internet and teaches at New York University, said that although the Web is the new public sphere, it is actually “a corporate sphere that tolerates public speech.”

Marcia Hofmann, a lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said, “Any Internet user who cares about free speech or has a controversial or unpopular message should be concerned about the fact that intermediaries might not let them express it.”

She added, “Your free speech rights are only as strong as the weakest intermediary.”

The problem came into on Wednesday, when a group calling itself Anonymous started Operation Payback spent much of the day posting notes on Facebook and Twitter that told followers which companies to single out and that documented hacking successes.

But Facebook banned one of the group’s pages, saying that using the site to organize hacking attacks like that violated its terms of use. The group went to Twitter to complain.

A Facebook spokesman issued a statement saying that the company was “sensitive to content that includes pornography, bullying, hate speech, and threats of violence” and would “take action on content that we find or that’s reported to us that promotes unlawful activity.”

In an interview Wednesday morning, Joe Sullivan, Facebook’s chief security officer, addressed WikiLeaks’s own presence on the site. He said the company had not received any official requests to disable pages or accounts associated with the WikiLeaks organization.

Facebook generally resists requests by governments or advocacy groups to take down material if that material is not illegal or does not violate Facebook’s terms of service, which prohibit attacks on individuals or incitements to violence.

“Facebook is a place where people come to talk about all sorts of things, including controversial topics,” Mr. Sullivan said. It was not clear whether anyone had asked Facebook to take down the Operation Payback page.

Twitter allowed the Operation Payback account to stay active most of Wednesday. But the group’s account was disabled late in the day, after it posted a link to a file that provided thousands of consumer credit card numbers, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation.

A Twitter spokesman declined to discuss the details of the situation.

“We don’t comment about the specific actions we take around user accounts,” he said.

The company is not overly concerned about hackers’ attacking Twitter’s site, he said, explaining that it faces security issues all the time and has technology to deal with the situation.

Twitter is in a particularly delicate situation because its founders have celebrated their service’s role in political protest and free speech. They have not been shy about trying to capitalize on the good will engendered by playing that role.

WikiLeaks’s own Twitter account remains active, and it is the group’s main channel for reaching supporters and the media.

Last week, Amazon.com fell into a similar position when it decided to stop storing files for WikiLeaks. Advocates of WikiLeaks complained that Amazon.com was bowing to political pressure to cut the organization from its Web services. An Amazon.com spokesman said the company was simply banning an organization that had violated its terms of service by trying to distribute documents it did not own.

The last week has given rise to a hacking war in which groups have blocked access to WikiLeaks’s Web sites by bombarding them with requests.

And now the WikiLeaks supporters have responded in kind, flying the freedom of speech banner as the motivation for their actions.

Article

Facebook, Twitter boot WikiLeaks supporters after Visa attack

A hacker group that calls itself "Anonymous" says it took the Visa Web site down today in retaliation for the credit card company suspending payments to the WikiLeaks site.

Earlier today the group hit the MasterCard site with a distributed denial-of-service attack for the same reason, and it took down PayPal over the weekend. The MasterCard site was back up this afternoon.

"IT'S DOWN! KEEP FIRING!!!" the group tweeted on its Operation Payback campaign page.

Visa said yesterday that it was suspending payments to the controversial whistle-blower site, joining MasterCard and PayPal.

Operation Payback also said its page had been banned from Facebook for violating terms of use, and late afternoon the group's Twitter account was suspended as well. Attempts to reach the group's Twitter page displayed a warning that said "Sorry, the profile you are trying to view has been suspended." A Twitter representative declined to comment on the matter. The group then created at least one new account on Twitter after being suspended.

Facebook bans pages that are "hateful" or "threatening" or which attack an individual or group, according to a warning Operation Payback posted to Twitter. A Facebook spokesperson provided this statement: "Specifically, we're sensitive to content that includes pornography, bullying, hate speech, and threats of violence. We also prohibit the use of Facebook for unlawful activity. The goal of these policies is to strike a very delicate balance between giving people the freedom to express their opinions and viewpoints--even those that may be controversial to some--and maintaining a safe and trusted environment."

In a minor reversal, PayPal said this afternoon that it was releasing money in the WikiLeaks account to the organization but would still restrict the account from receiving any new donations. The company published a blog post seeking to clarify that the company restricted WikiLeaks' account because its Acceptable Use Policy does not allow any group to use the service if it encourages others to engage in illegal activity.

"In 2008 and 2009, PayPal reviewed and restricted the account associated with WikiLeaks for reasons unrelated to our Acceptable Use Policy," the post said. "The account was again reviewed last week after the U.S. Department of State publicized a letter to WikiLeaks on November 27, stating that WikiLeaks may be in possession of documents that were provided in violation of U.S. law. PayPal was not contacted by any government organization in the U.S. or abroad. We restricted the account based on our Acceptable Use Policy review."

PayPal's site was also targeted today. "We can confirm that there were attempted DDoS attacks on paypal.com. The attack slowed the website itself down for a short while, but did not significantly impact payments," a PayPal spokesman told CNET.

And in what appeared to be a hactivist battle between opposing sides, several Web sites (including this one) operated by the Anonymous group were offline today, possible victims of a denial-of-service attack, according to security firm Imperva.

Anonymous was not the only group taking action in support of WikiLeaks. The group known as 4Chan had taken responsibility on Tuesday for using a denial-of-service attack to shutdown the sites for Swiss bank PostFinance and lawyers in Sweden prosecuting sex allegations against WikiLeaks front man Julian Assange.

Meanwhile, Icelandic hosting company DataCell EHF said it will take legal action against Visa and MasterCard over their refusal to process donations for WikiLeaks. DataCell said that it had been losing revenue as a result of those actions.

WikiLeaks has come under attack since it posted its latest release of about 250,000 confidential U.S. diplomatic cables to the Web last month, embarrassing officials and incurring the wrath of foreign leaders. That release followed posting of cables related to the U.S. operations in Afghanistan and Iraq earlier in the year.

As U.S. politicians cry foul and WikiLeaks' payment and infrastructure providers cut their ties to the beleaguered site, supporters have stepped up efforts to keep the site up, creating mirrors of the site, and enacting revenge on those companies that turn their backs on the project.

While that war is being waged, Assange, is behind bars for accusations not believed to be directly related to WikiLeaks. He was arrested yesterday in London on allegations of sexual assault in Sweden. Assange says he and the Web site are being unfairly punished for telling people what their governments are doing.

Asked for comment, Visa said in a statement today that its processing network that handles transactions was functioning normally but that its Web site was down. "Visa's corporate Web site--Visa.com--is currently experiencing heavier than normal traffic. The company is taking steps to restore the site to full operations within the next few hours."

The action comes as U.S. officials weigh their legal options against WikiLeaks. A State Department spokesman told CNET that Assange could be in legal jeopardy for disclosing classified information because he is "not a journalist."

Update at 5:43 p.m. PT with PayPal attacked today, new Twitter accounts appearing and Web sites operated by Anonymous offline, and at 4:48 p.m. PT with PayPal releasing WikiLeaks funds, at 4:27 p.m. PT with 4Chan attacks on Swiss bank and Swedish prosecutors, and at 3:12 p.m. PT with Anonymous' Operation Payback account on Twitter having been suspended and at 3 p.m. to include comments from Visa and Facebook.

Article

It appears these "activists" are only worsening Assange's case.
 
These people fiercely believe that knowledge of information is more important than life.
IMO the infant known as "cyber warfare" is about to bloom.
Surf wisely :camo:
                      ___________________________________________________-

Montreal student hosts mirror WikiLeaks site
Site is one of more than 1,200 mirror sites

A Montreal computer science student and self-styled internet freedom advocate is hosting a mirror website that duplicates the material no longer available on WikiLeaks.com, as part of the global efforts to keep the whistleblower site alive.

Concordia University student Nadim Kobeissi decided to mirror the controversial website because of his staunch belief in the freedom of information.

Listen to CBC host Mike Finnerty's conversation with Nadim Kobeissi here.
"This is a fight for civil liberties," Kobeissi told CBC News on Wednesday. "What we're seeing is an attempt to censor the internet, which is completely unacceptable."

WikiLeaks has released hundreds of classified U.S. government cables and correspondence in recent weeks. The documents, which were published in co-operation with several mainstream media outlets, included behind-the-scenes conversations between diplomats who often paint unflattering portraits of foreign leaders.

Strategic energy infrastructure in several G8 countries has also been identified in the cables.

Governments around the world have vigorously condemned the release of the cables as irresponsible, dangerous and a threat to security.

Mirror sites show internet's true spirit 
The official WikiLeaks.com site was taken down after an initial batch of cables was released and is now available at the IP. address 213.251.145.96 or on any of the more than 1,200 mirror sites that have cropped up. Social media tools such as Twitter have helped redirect supporters to the mirror sites, which duplicate WikiLeaks material.

WikiLeaks supporters say the site is providing an essential public service that will ultimately hold governments accountable for their policies and decisions.

'The internet has an unprecedented potential to be a place where censorship is impossible, where freedom of speech is an imperative.' —Nadim Kobeissi, computer science student
That's why Kobeissi says he decided to host a mirror site.

"We can really prove a point by mirroring the content that's being censored, because that shows how the internet has been built," he said. "That shows that censorship is impossible on the internet and why the internet is so beautiful."

The WikiLeaks saga is a pivotal event in the world wide web's history and speaks to the internet's power, Kobeissi said.

"What we're seeing right now is the first real information war involving the internet," he said. "The internet has an unprecedented potential to be a place where censorship is impossible, where freedom of speech is an imperative."

WikiLeaks is believed to be in possession of 250,000 classified U.S. State Department cables but has only released about 1,000 of them so far after consulting with journalists from the New York Times, the Guardian, Le Monde, El Pais and Der Spiegel, who advised the site on which cables to publish and which details to remove.

Backlash against companies that cut off WikiLeaks
The organization is also dealing with the fallout from the criminal charges laid against its co-founder, Julian Assange. Assange is in a U.K. prison facing extradition to Sweden on sexual assault charges. Assange is also being investigated by American authorities on potential espionage charges.

Several companies have taken steps to cut off their co-operation with WikiLeaks — some after pressure from the U.S. government. The web hosting arm of Amazon, Amazon Web Services, last week kicked the site off its servers. Internet payment site PayPal followed suit and suspended WikiLeaks's account, as did Visa and MasterCard, making donation payments to WikiLeaks with those credit cards impossible.

Some of the sites have suffered a backlash from WikiLeaks supporters as a result of their actions. MasterCard on Wednesday reported severe technical difficulties on its own website, believed to be the work of "hacktivists" trying to protect WikiLeaks.

The whistleblower organization came to mainstream attention last spring when it started leaking classified U.S. army documents from Iraq and Afghanistan. In mid-fall, the site started dispatching diplomatic cables that have embarrassed elected leaders around the world.
link
                    (Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act)
 
I wonder.  Has Nadim Kobeissi also posted his home address, phone number, email address, and photos of all his personal property of value?  Did he post his birth date and place of birth and info of all his immediate family on his site as well?  We do want to know whom we are dealing with, do we not?  After all, we do have the RIGHT to know.
 
;D  (See CBC comment at bottom.)

Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.

WikiLeaks payment firm to sue Visa, MasterCard


Last Updated: Thursday, December 9, 2010 | 6:05 AM ET
The Associated Press
CBC

LINK

The payment processor for WikiLeaks said Thursday that it was preparing to sue credit card companies Visa and MasterCard over their refusal to process donations to the secret-spilling website.

Andreas Fink, the CEO of Iceland's DataCell ehf, told The Associated Press that he would seek damages from the U.S. financial companies over their decision to block WikiLeaks funds.

"It's difficult to believe that such a large company as Visa can make a political decision," Fink said in a telephone interview from Switzerland. In an earlier statement, his company had defended the WikiLeaks, saying that "it is simply ridiculous to think WikiLeaks has done anything criminal."

WikiLeaks has been under intense pressure since it began publishing some 250,000 U.S. State Department cables, with attacks on its websites and threats against its founder, Julian Assange, who is now in a British jail fighting extradition to Sweden on sex crime allegations.

A host of U.S. internet and financial companies have severed their links to the controversial website, some citing terms of use violations.

Earlier this week, Visa and MasterCard said they would stop processing payments to WikiLeaks, although they have not offered a detailed explanation of why. Supporters have reacted with outrage — with many noting that unsavoury organizations such as the far-right British National Party both claim to accept Visa and MasterCard.

MasterCard has declined repeated requests for comment. Visa Europe Ltd. spokesman Simon Kleine said organizations could receive funds through Visa so long as they were legal and didn't breach the company's operating rules.

But he said that when issues arose "we need to ensure that they're in compliance with our operating rules and in compliance with local laws."

He declined to say what those issues were in WikiLeaks' case.

"We investigate on a commercially confidential basis," he said.

Fink said that he was officially notified of the dual suspensions through Danish financial services company Teller, which runs part of the payment infrastructure. He said a team from Teller was on its way to Iceland to conduct what he described as "due diligence."

Meanwhile, he said, credit card donations to WikiLeaks were frozen at least until next week, something which he said was costing his company money.

"Not accepting any credit card authorizations is basically killing the business," he said. He did not specify the kinds of damages he was seeking.

Fink's statement comes as internet payment company PayPal says it will return the money frozen in WikiLeaks's account to the foundation that was fundraising for it. In a blog post, PayPal Inc. defended its decision, which it denied had come as a result of lobbying from the U.S. government.

© The Canadian Press, 2010

This story is closed to commenting.

 
George Wallace said:
This story is closed to commenting.

That's odd.  There were a whole hockeysock full of comments on that story earlier this morning...I know because I was having a good laugh at some of the idiots who think Assange and Wikileaks are some sort of messiah.
 
I was flipping through several of their articles and some are still open to comments, and others are closed to comments like this one was. 
 
Silly hackers.  Don't they realise that the internet is good for exactly two things: gaming and porn.


;D


In all honesty, the hypocracy of these tools is amazing.  "Mob Rules" seems to be the order of the day for them.  They are no better than the Black Bloc, in that they are drowning out the legitimate information out there, and flooding it full of Anti-American messages, for the sake of being, well, Anti-American.
 
Some clarification.



Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.



Details of Sweden's case against WikiLeaks' Julian Assange

Sexual assault charges in Sweden against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange are feeding conspiracy theories and claims that he's being framed. What are the known facts?



December 8, 2010
By Dan Murphy, Staff writer
The Christian Science Monitor

LINK

The media drama surrounding WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has taken a much darker turn.

Following WikiLeak's release of more than 250,000 US diplomatic cables to media outlets around the world, he's in a London jail cell awaiting deportation to Sweden on charges he sexually assaulted two women there in August.

His lawyer is warning that Assange has distributed the digital equivalent of a "thermonuclear device" in case something happens to him, and his defenders insist that the charges are fabricated in an attempt to get him to Sweden – perhaps, they hint, because the country has a strong extradition treaty with the US.

But lawyer Gemma Lindfield, representing the Swedish state, told a London court yesterday that politics and Assange's activism have nothing to do with the case. In her telling, it's a simple case of credible allegations of rape being made against Assange by two women, and that he should be brought to Sweden to stand trial.

The circumstances of the case – both women told Swedish police they had at least one consensual sexual encounter with Assange – has fueled plenty of online rumor and disinformation. A mention from the Swedish police and press reports that Assange failed to use a condom in one instance, and that in another his condom broke, have led to many false claims that having unprotected sex is illegal in Sweden, and that the country has a "broken condom law."

The reality is more prosaic.

As Ms. Lindfield tells it, the two women had withdrawn their consent to have sex with Assange either during or immediately before the act. As a result, he is charged with four violations of Sweden's criminal code on sex crimes. The first woman, "Miss A," whom Assange knew from Swedish activist circles, alleges that he coerced her to have sex. He's also charged with refusing to wear a condom, despite being asked to by "Miss A."

In the case of "Miss W," as she was described in court, he's also alleged to have "sexually exploited" the fact that she was asleep to have sex with her on Aug. 17. Article 3 of Sweden's criminal code on sex crimes indicates that she could not be reasonably expected to have given consent in that state. "A person who induces another person to engage in a sexual act by gross abuse of his or her dependent state shall be sentenced for sexual exploitation to imprisonment for at most two years," Article 3 says. "The same shall apply to a person who engages in a sexual act with another person by improperly taking advantage of the fact that the latter is helpless or in some other state of incapacitation."

RELATED: WikiLeaks: Five more of the strangest stories to emerge



 
This line caught my attention:
His lawyer is warning that Assange has distributed the digital equivalent of a "thermonuclear device" in case something happens to him

Now he's making threats?  Instead of saying things like "Do to me what you will, but the people have a right to know", instead he is threatening, and using WMDs as a metaphor for what he has.

Cut the digital equivalent of his tongue out.  Yes, there are more, but how do you eat this elephant?  One hacker at a time.  Follow the money and they can be found.
 
The threat was made about a week ago.  The entire "motherlode" of all the raw info that Wikileaks has has been distributed to some 100,000 people, encrypted.  Rather than releasing it in chunks with editing through media outlets as has been the case, Assange's threat/insurance policy is that he will release the encryption key, meaning any/all of those people will be able to decrypt the contents, causing a mass release of the raw data.  Hard to argue it's brilliant.  Evil, but brilliant.

Technoviking said:
Now he's making threats?  Instead of saying things like "Do to me what you will, but the people have a right to know", instead he is threatening, and using WMDs as a metaphor for what he has.

Cut the digital equivalent of his tongue out.  Yes, there are more, but how do you eat this elephant?  One hacker at a time.  Follow the money and they can be found.
 
Back
Top