The Wikileaks Question

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Dec 18, 2010 9:38 pm

chump wrote:
...The Bank of England governor, Mervyn King, was so concerned about the health of the world's banks in March 2008 that he plotted a secret bailout of the system using funds from cash-rich nations, according to a US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks.


1) In 2008 and 2009, the Federal Reserve functioned as the central bank for the entire world. Documents pried from the Federal Reserve in November show that dozens of foreign banks and an astonishing number of foreign governments lined up to get handouts from the Fed, who kept its client list a deeply protected secret. The recipients included most of Europe’s major banks: Barclay’s Bank, Bank of Scotland, RBS, Societe Generale, Dresdner Bank, Bayerische Landesbank, and Dexia. Also on the list are the central banks of Australia, Denmark, Mexico, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, South Korea, Britain, and Japan.

If it had been publicly known at the time what the true, global extent of the crisis really was, the world’s economy would have completely collapsed. This is the biggest story of the year, perhaps of the entire past decade, but it’s received zero attention from the US press.

viewtopic.php?p=372371#p372371

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby chump » Sat Dec 18, 2010 10:16 pm

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/ ... geNumber=1

Former contractor says FBI put back door in OpenBSD
By Robert McMillan
December 15, 2010 06:13 AM ET IDG News Service -

A former government contractor says that the FBI installed a number of back doors into the encryption software used by the OpenBSD operating system.

The allegations were made public Tuesday by Theo de Raadt, the lead developer in the OpenBSD project. DeRaadt posted an e-mail sent by the former contractor, Gregory Perry, so that the matter could be publicly scrutinized.

"The mail came in privately from a person I have not talked to for nearly 10 years," he wrote in his a posting to an OpenBSD discussion list. "I refuse to become part of such a conspiracy, and will not be talking to Gregory Perry about this. Therefore I am making it public."

No one has come forward to corroborate Perry's story, but the allegations are remarkable. If they're true -- and at present they're being greeted with skepticism by the security community -- they mean that the FBI may have developed secret ways to snoop on encrypted traffic and then hidden them in source code submissions accepted by OpenBSD.

Perry is now CEO with a VMware services company called GoVirtual, but 10 years ago -- when the backdoor code was allegedly added to OpenBSD's IPsec stack -- he was a government contractor working for the FBI, he said.

In an e-mail interview, Perry said that the back door code was developed to give the FBI a way to monitor encrypted communications within the U.S. Department of Justice. Perry says he worked with the FBI while he was chief technology officer at a company called Netsec, and was a contractor at the FBI's Technical Support Center, which was set up in the late 1990s to help law enforcement circumvent encryption techniques used by criminals.

There, Perry helped develop encryption cracking techniques, including what are known as side channel attacks -- these are ways of finding secret information by looking in unexpected places -- figuring out passwords by looking at the amount of time it takes the computer to process different characters, for example.

One project Perry worked on, a virtual private network (VPN) system used by the U.S. Department of Justice "later proved to have been backdoored by the FBI so that they could recover (potentially) grand jury information from various US Attorney sites across the United States and abroad," Perry said.

An FBI spokesman was unable to comment on the matter.

Perry said he sent the e-mail to de Raadt because his non-disclosure agreement with the FBI had expired.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the whole matter is that de Raadt decided to go public with claims that could undermine the credibility of his software. OpenBSD is open source software and its components are widely used in other Unix-based operating systems.

"I don't know many people or many companies who would have done this," said Dan Kaminsky, a well-known security consultant, who has worked with the OpenBSD project on security issues.

In his e-mail, de Raadt said that by going open with the allegations, he's giving users a chance to audit their code, and the people accused of writing the back doors a chance to defend themselves.

One person quickly came forward Tuesday to say he never worked for the FBI, as alleged by Perry. "I don't know where the person who started this rumor got his information, but he is sadly mistaken regarding my involvement," wrote Scott Lowe, a virtualization expert at EMC.

It's possible that Perry's claims of an FBI backdoor are true, Kaminsky said, but he's skeptical. "There's no way of really knowing. I guess the big question I have is is this guy going to be speaking publicly about his accusations?" he said. "Can anyone even trace back that he would conceivably have been under this NDA."

Robert McMillan covers computer security and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Robert on Twitter at @bobmcmillan. Robert's e-mail address is robert_mcmillan@idg.com
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Dec 18, 2010 11:24 pm

Swedish TV Video on Wikileaks



Weekend Edition
December 17 - 19, 2010

Exposing the Futility of US Foreign Policy

Wikileaks and the Free Press

By SAUL LANDAU

“Congress shall make no law …abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.” 1st Amendment, US Constitution

US officials routinely declare commitment to a free press – except when someone uses it to reveal unflattering information. Ironically, members of the media critical of Wikileaks also think the government should protect us by not sharing “classified information.” Those two words often alert us to some bureaucrat is covering his ass by barring the public from knowing of a possibly illegal act.

In school, Americans routinely hear “we are a government of law.” Teachers should add “when convenient.”

Indeed, Julian Assange formed Wikileaks because the US government had acted in a wildly illegal fashion and then used “classification of documents” to cover crimes -- and because mainstream media abdicated its responsibility decades ago.

Look at some instances from the newspaper of record to understand the nature of the US free press.

During the Spanish Civil War, Herbert Matthews saw dead and wounded Italian troops. Mussolini had dispatched them to aid Franco’s fascist insurgency against the Republic.
Returning to Madrid to file the story Matthews’ boat capsized, Ernest Hemingway jumped in after him and pulled him out.

Days later, Matthews discovered the Times editor had removed the Italian connection entirely by changing “Italian” in his story to “insurgent.” The Hemingway story got spiked. (Authors conversations with Matthews --1961)

In 1961, shortly before the CIA launched its selected group of Cuban exiles to invade the island, Tad Szulc wrote a story on the impending covert operation, including the date, and the place: the Bay of Pigs. The Times’ editor alerted the publisher who phoned President Kennedy.

Should the Times publish the details?

Kennedy thought making public the where and when of the CIA plan would damage US national security. The Times removed the “where and when” from the story.

After the “Bay of Pigs fiasco,” Kennedy reportedly regretted his comment to the Times’ publisher. Had The Times published the details, Kennedy might have had a pretext to cancel the operation.

In October 1962, Fidel Castro invited Matthews to cover the Missile Crisis from inside his office. Matthews called the publisher who called the White house. Not a good idea, said a top Kennedy adviser. Matthews was told not to cover the story from Cuba.

In 2002 and into early 2003 the Times featured bogus front page stories by Judith Miller and other reporters offering supposedly definitive evidence of Saddam Hussein’s possession of WMD. The sources turned out to be the Cheney-Rumsfeld gang who peddled invented “evidence” to opportunistic journalists.

Currently, The Times beats journalistic war drums on Iran with similar “evidence.” Its “fear Iran” stories omit key historical events. The United States initiated Iran’s nuclear program when the Shah (our guy) ruled that country. In the mid 1980s top Reagan officials illegally sold sophisticated missiles to Iran’s theocratic rulers (Iran-Contra scandal).

Wikileaks published documents from sources US journalists should have cultivated instead of behaving like White House stenographers. (Exceptions like Seymour Hersh and Dana Priest only dramatize the point: the fourth estate has become an arm of national security policy.)

In 2009, the media cheered Assange as he accepted Amnesty International’s UK New Media Award for Wikileaks’ "Kenya: The Cry of Blood - Extra Judicial Killings. But Assange this time has used his sources to reveal sins of a democratic regime –the world’s leading source of “freedom”.

The righteous Wolf Blitzer howled on CNN to demand the Government make certain neither he nor his journalistic competitors discover any more “classified” documents.

"Do we know yet if they've [made] that fix? [that] somebody right now who has top secret or secret security clearance can no longer download information onto a C.D. or a thumb drive?" (Nov. 29)

Blitzer fears citizens might realize their government does major hanky panky. Did Blitzer get his journalism degree from a correspondence course at Pentagon U?

Underlying Blitzer’s blitz echoes Secretary of State Clinton’s whine that Wikileaks endangered lives.

Wait! Officials of a government that killed more than 100,000 people in the Iraq War and countless tens of thousands in Afghanistan have “humane” concerns? The people who order drone strikes to assassinate “suspected terrorists” in several countries worry about endangering lives?

Amnesia? US troops killed millions of civilians in the Vietnam and Korean wars, yet US leaders possess the chutzpah to accuse Wikileaks of endangering peoples’ lives by revealing U.S. sources?

The government has not yet shown that the cable releases have caused deaths – even among Arab dictators and hired ratfinks who fed names to the US military for arrest or assassination. Maybe some of those exposed will at least feel the torturous whip of public humiliation.

Wikileaks compromised government confidentiality, critics charge, referring to the government that reads our emails and taps our phones. It deserves the same respect it gives its citizens: none.

Wikileaks reveal not a compassionate great power struggling for order and law against venal forces, but a sneaky gang of operators spying on UN officials and anyone else around.

The big secrets in the cables: Israel and Saudi Arabia pressed Washington to bomb Iran.

The documents – aside from the trivia and gossip -- shows the foolishness and futility of the foundations of US foreign policy. Bullying cannot substitute for diplomacy much less strategy in the Middle East or anywhere else.

Assange deserves journalistic honors and thanks from US citizens. Instead, we hear echos of the noted intellectual who called him “an anti-American operative with blood on his hands. His past posting of classified documents revealed the identity of more than 100 Afghan sources to the Taliban. Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders?

“Did we use all the cyber tools at our disposal to permanently dismantle Wikileaks? Were individuals working for Wikileaks on these document leaks investigated? Shouldn’t they at least have had their financial assets frozen just as we do to individuals who provide material support for terrorist organizations?” (Sarah Palin on her Facebook)
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Sat Dec 18, 2010 11:30 pm

chump wrote:One project Perry worked on, a virtual private network (VPN) system used by the U.S. Department of Justice "later proved to have been backdoored by the FBI so that they could recover (potentially) grand jury information from various US Attorney sites across the United States and abroad," Perry said.

:!:

Original statement from Theo de Raadt and whistleblower email with phone numbers and ensuing discussion here:
List: openbsd-security-announce
Subject: Allegations regarding OpenBSD IPSEC
From: Theo de Raadt <deraadt () cvs ! openbsd ! org>
Date: 2010-12-14 21:18:27
Message-ID: 201012142118.oBELIRnH002826 () cvs ! openbsd ! org
[Download message RAW]

I have received a mail regarding the early development of the OpenBSD
IPSEC stack. It is alleged that some ex-developers (and the company
they worked for) accepted US government money to put backdoors into
our network stack, in particular the IPSEC stack. Around 2000-2001.

Since we had the first IPSEC stack available for free, large parts of
the code are now found in many other projects/products. Over 10
years, the IPSEC code has gone through many changes and fixes, so it
is unclear what the true impact of these allegations are.

The mail came in privately from a person I have not talked to for
nearly 10 years. I refuse to become part of such a conspiracy, and
will not be talking to Gregory Perry about this. Therefore I am
making it public so that
(a) those who use the code can audit it for these problems,
(b) those that are angry at the story can take other actions,
(c) if it is not true, those who are being accused can defend themselves.

Of course I don't like it when my private mail is forwarded. However
the "little ethic" of a private mail being forwarded is much smaller
than the "big ethic" of government paying companies to pay open source
developers (a member of a community-of-friends) to insert
privacy-invading holes in software.

----

From: Gregory Perry <Gregory.Perry@GoVirtual.tv>
To: "deraadt@openbsd.org" <deraadt@openbsd.org>
Subject: OpenBSD Crypto Framework
Thread-Topic: OpenBSD Crypto Framework
Thread-Index: AcuZjuF6cT4gcSmqQv+Fo3/+2m80eg==
Date: Sat, 11 Dec 2010 23:55:25 +0000
Message-ID: <8D3222F9EB68474DA381831A120B1023019AC034@mbx021-e2-nj-5.exch021.domain.local>
Accept-Language: en-US
Content-Language: en-US
X-MS-Has-Attach:
X-MS-TNEF-Correlator:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
MIME-Version: 1.0
Status: RO

Hello Theo,

Long time no talk. If you will recall, a while back I was the CTO at
NETSEC and arranged funding and donations for the OpenBSD Crypto
Framework. At that same time I also did some consulting for the FBI,
for their GSA Technical Support Center, which was a cryptologic
reverse engineering project aimed at backdooring and implementing key
escrow mechanisms for smart card and other hardware-based computing
technologies.

My NDA with the FBI has recently expired, and I wanted to make you
aware of the fact that the FBI implemented a number of backdoors and
side channel key leaking mechanisms into the OCF, for the express
purpose of monitoring the site to site VPN encryption system
implemented by EOUSA, the parent organization to the FBI.
Jason
Wright and several other developers were responsible for those
backdoors, and you would be well advised to review any and all code
commits by Wright as well as the other developers he worked with
originating from NETSEC.

This is also probably the reason why you lost your DARPA funding, they
more than likely caught wind of the fact that those backdoors were
present and didn't want to create any derivative products based upon
the same.

This is also why several inside FBI folks have been recently
advocating the use of OpenBSD for VPN and firewalling implementations
in virtualized environments, for example Scott Lowe is a well
respected author in virtualization circles who also happens top be on
the FBI payroll, and who has also recently published several tutorials
for the use of OpenBSD VMs in enterprise VMware vSphere deployments.

Merry Christmas...

Gregory Perry
Chief Executive Officer
GoVirtual Education

"VMware Training Products & Services"

540-645-6955 x111 (local)
866-354-7369 x111 (toll free)
540-931-9099 (mobile)
877-648-0555 (fax)
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Dec 19, 2010 12:22 am

OpenLeaks to Launch a WikiLeaks Type Site, but it will be Less ‘Open’.
December 10, 2010 by Clayton TarwaterNO COMMENTS


As everyone who has read a news website or watched the news in the past week knows, WikiLeaks has been at the forefront of legal issues, debates, and internet outages. With their founder Julian Assange sitting behind bars, waiting for his court date later this month, WikiLeaks lives on. However, it lives on not to the pleasure of the United States Government or many other countries’ top leaders.

The WikiLeaks.org website is gone, as is their hosting with Amazon.com, and their ability to receive donations through Paypal, Visa or Mastercard. This has not entirely stopped the organization and their supporters though. There are literally hundreds of mirror sites that direct to the WikiLeaks content formerly available on the wikileaks.org domain name.

Will WikiLeaks survive when all is said and done? That is up for debate. The idea will certainly live on, but whether WikiLeaks is as popular in 2011 as it has been in 2010 has yet to be decided.

However, with the news of WikiLeaks’ possible decline, comes more news of a successor to the whistleblowing organization. Some of Julian Assange’s former workers have left the organization to start a new site called OpenLeaks. The website which only shows a logo of the soon to be launched organization at the OpenLeaks.org domain name will be another online destination that allows for the submission and distribution of leaked documents. The head of OpenLeaks is Daniel Domscheit-Berg, and up until September of 2010, he was one of Assange’s closest allies.

Even though the name of the new organization is called ‘Open’ Leaks, they will be far from as “open” as WikiLeaks ever was. The plan is to allow for leaked documents to be submitted. However, these documents will not be published to the public. Instead they will be distributed to other news agencies and outlets for them to decide what is appropriate, legal, and constitutional to publish.

One of the problems that WikiLeaks had before it became as popular and as controversial as it is today, was the ability to raise funds. Since it was a non-profit organization, all of the money needed to run the company had to be made via donations. It should be interesting to see whether or not OpenLeaks.org charges news outlets for leaked material, or if they too choose to only raise funds through donations as well.

There are many issues that arise from being a “closed” leaks website, which OpenLeaks will be. Who gets first dibs at leaked documents? Do the leaked documents get distributed to the highest bidding news outlet? Who is held responsible once leaks are released? Will the government target OpenLeaks, or the news outlet that distributes the news?

There is no official date on the opening of OpenLeaks.org, but stay tuned to ‘US News Source’ for more information.

http://www.usnewssource.com/headlines/o ... 17526.html

*

what a joke.

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Simulist » Sun Dec 19, 2010 12:36 am

Even though the name of the new organization is called ‘Open’ Leaks, they will be far from as “open” as WikiLeaks ever was. The plan is to allow for leaked documents to be submitted. However, these documents will not be published to the public. Instead they will be distributed to other news agencies and outlets for them to decide what is appropriate, legal, and constitutional to publish.

Well that's a cupful of crap.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby anothershamus » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:26 am

Short and sweet from Max Keiser . com

)'(
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Elvis » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:30 am

Even though the name of the new organization is called ‘Open’ Leaks, they will be far from as “open” as WikiLeaks ever was. The plan is to allow for leaked documents to be submitted. However, these documents will not be published to the public. Instead they will be distributed to other news agencies and outlets for them to decide what is appropriate
Safe as milk. Could be rotten. Will Open Leaks get the vigorous vetting "Albino-boy" gets?
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Tabloid Schmuck! Jim Sciutto of ABC News

Postby JackRiddler » Sun Dec 19, 2010 11:28 am

.

Assange writes the epitaph for ABC News reporter Jim Sciutto's tombstone: Tabloid schmuck!



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQriw-tiFBU

I like how it looks like even his own crew is moving away from...

Jim Sciutto, Tabloid Schmuck!

If you post somewhere today, make sure to include that phrase: Jim Sciutto, Tabloid Schmuck!

Jim Sciutto is an American journalist. He is ABC News’ Senior Foreign correspondent, based in London. He has reported from more than 30 countries in Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East, including twelve assignments in Iraq. Sciutto contributes to all ABC News broadcasts and platforms, including “World News with Charles Gibson,” “Nightline” and “Good Morning America.”

Sciutto won Emmy awards in 2004 and 2005 for best story in a regularly scheduled newscast, covering northern Iraq for “Iraq: Where Things Stand.” He was nominated for another Emmy in 2005 for outstanding coverage of a breaking news story for “Crisis in Beslan”. He also reported from Poland as part of ABC’s Dupont Award-winning coverage of the death of Pope John Paul II.

Sciutto was the first television reporter to interview Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Abdullah and one of a handful of journalists allowed inside an Iranian nuclear plant in 2005. During the Iraq war, Sciutto was the only reporter embedded with the U.S. Special Forces. In 2002, he was appointed Associate Fellow of Pierson College at Yale. He was also selected as a term member of the Council of Foreign Relations in June 2002.


He is also the author of Against Us: The New Face of America's Enemies in the Muslim World.

I wonder what his top Google hit will be in a few days.

Jim Sciutto, Tabloid Schmuck, award winning journalist, representative avatar of the American Establishment, career dead at 18.

.

I found that here
http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... 444#536492

- which included the following comment:

Grinchie (1000+ posts) Sat Dec-18-10 07:02 PM
Response to Original message

10. It's pretty clear that Assange has read the works of Edward Bernays, and took appropriate steps

Many people do not see that the way the question was presented was crafted to be venal and destructive, and then broadcasted to death, just like Howard Deans Death Holler when he was campaigning for President years ago.

The general populace has no clue about these Propaganda technique designed to trigger the hidden shadows lurkning in the subconcious.

Assange was appropriate in his response, and more people show walk away, but instead, they stand there letting their ego tell them that this is their 15 minutes of fame and withstand rhetoric designed to make them look bad, regardless of the outcome.

Of course, the reporter is from Disney, the Biometric loving, TSA hugging, Message Parroting organization that ran with 9/11 and went to bed with Bush in a Heartbeat. They are the ones that present sophomoric stories of jealously and blame to millions of children every day, it's not out of the ordinary to see this type of thing from them, as a key component of the Lamestream Media.


A friend of Hugh's? And mine too!

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:13 pm

‘Wikileaks’ cable drop is a giant power move for the left

by PHILIP WEISS on DECEMBER 3, 2010 · 150 COMMENTS
Image
(SOURCE: WIKILEAKS)

I love the rage against Julian Assange. It shows how effective the Wikileaks drop has been. Schumer: "This man has put his own ego above the safety of millions of innocents... He should be extradited, tried for espionage, and given the most severe penalty possible." And just now on WNYC, Massimo Calibresi of Time was saying that Assange doesn't really care about gov't transparency, he's just a grandiose showman/freak/autodidact from a nomadic background. And we have learned from this that the media shouldn't just be a firehose, but should make "appropriate" decisions about what to run, says Calibresi. Liberal Jamie Rubin formerly of the State Department was as angry as Schumer on Chris Matthews the other night, and Matthews seems to want Assange arrested. I'm told Richard Cohen was completely dismissive today. Quel surprise.

A few quick thoughts on the cables drop:

– It is a historic huge event. We will be figuring out what it means for years. It is like the Pentagon Papers in that respect, it will transform the terrain. Calibresi says it will result bureaucratically in more secrecy. Gosh, I don't care; it's the biggest breaking of secrecy I've ever seen.

– People are gaining enormous information about how government works. This is a phenomenological, objective truth. 250,000 cables. Wow. The cables will be studied and studied; and many people will learn from them.

– Despite the characterizations of Assange as a weirdo and anarchist, he's a leftwinger; and this is a huge power move for the Left. The Left is aided enormously by these cables, left wing discourse. The appropriate decisions that the media made for us gave us the destruction of Iraq. Assange is angry about that, enraged about the killing in the Middle East, that's my assessment of his statements. And he has taken bold action.

– Could this affect American status in the world? Knock it down. Yes, absolutely. Why are Schumer and Matthews so angry. They know.

– Everyone is telling us that Assange is a weird cat. OK, he's weird. I don't care. They went into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office when that went down. I bet Dan Ellsberg was weird. A lot of people are weird. All the stuff about the sexual assault charges against Assange and his cult/theater/dropout background may be true (and let him be tried); but these matters are actually trivial next to his political motivation and action.

– Did you notice how familiar so many arguments in the cables were? That's because you heard them before; these State Department guys have been piping them to the NYT and other MSM voices for years. Assange is trying to break that daisy chain. No wonder Rubin is mad and the MSM is upset. This was their game, they got to make the decisions. And notice, they're madder than when Assange's Iraq information allegedly endangered soldiers and exposed soldiers' atrocities. Now it's journalistic/diplomat conspiring that's been exposed.

– Will the cable drop damage people, hurt relationships, even end some careers? Yes I'm sure it will. Gotta break some eggs to make an omelet.

– Susan Abulhawa notes that many of the cables seem to serve Israel's interests, and she wonders about the sources... She's not alone, other friends of mine wonder; Assange has actually praised Netanyahu in one statement or another. Myself, I don't buy it. I think the lobby spins everything all the time, and the cables will actually shed a lot of light on how the special relationship works, in the long run. Latest morsel: Jane Harman of California, jumping in on a congressional meeting with Mubarak to press him about cutting off supplies to the people of Gaza. Doesn't this woman have better things to do with her time?

http://mondoweiss.net/2010/12/wikileaks ... -left.html

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Simulist » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:39 pm

vanlose kid wrote:– Susan Abulhawa notes that many of the cables seem to serve Israel's interests, and she wonders about the sources... She's not alone, other friends of mine wonder; Assange has actually praised Netanyahu in one statement or another. Myself, I don't buy it. I think the lobby spins everything all the time, and the cables will actually shed a lot of light on how the special relationship works, in the long run.

Although the Israeli lobby unquestionably spins things in a way it deems most beneficial to its mission, I'm starting to think that something else may account for some of Assange's reported points of view.

Sometime back, when I first read that Assange had called 9/11 a "false conspiracy," I reacted by preparing to toss Assange completely overboard in my own mind, but I waited to hear more. I still think Assange is glaringly wrong about that — but he probably did say it, just as he may actually have "praised Netanyahu."

Assange is part of this civilization just like anyone else, and being part of it he's probably also affected by a portion of the propaganda that remains effective for millions.

That doesn't mean that he is or isn't honest; it may just mean that he lives and learns in this context, and that he's human.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Dec 19, 2010 2:44 pm


___________________
(bad old embed code originally meant for old windows media player embeds of some sort. now removed from main posting screen.)
here's what was enclosed in old wonky embed tags:
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.democracynow.org/embed_show_v2/300/2010/12/3/story/is_wikileaks_julian_assange_a_hero"></script>
___________________


Is WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange a Hero? Glenn Greenwald Debates Steven Aftergood of Secrecy News
WikiLeaks is coming under attack from all sides. The U.S. government and embassies around the world are criticizing the whistleblowing group for releasing a massive trove of secret State Department cables. The WikiLeaks website is struggling to stay online just days after Amazon pulled the site from its servers following political pressure. The U.S. State Department has blocked all its employees from accessing the site and is warning all government employees not to read the cables, even at home. "These attacks will not stop our mission, but should be setting off alarm bells about the rule of law in the United States," said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. We host a debate between Steven Aftergood, a transparency advocate who has become a leading critic of WikiLeaks, and Glenn Greenwald, a constitutional law attorney and legal blogger for Salon.com. [includes rush transcript]

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/12/3/i ... nge_a_hero

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Is WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange a Hero? Glenn Greenwald Debates Steven Aftergood of Secrecy News
WikiLeaks is coming under attack from all sides. The U.S. government and embassies around the world are criticizing the whistleblowing group for releasing a massive trove of secret State Department cables. The WikiLeaks website is struggling to stay online just days after Amazon pulled the site from its servers following political pressure. The U.S. State Department has blocked all its employees from accessing the site and is warning all government employees not to read the cables, even at home. "These attacks will not stop our mission, but should be setting off alarm bells about the rule of law in the United States," said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. We host a debate between Steven Aftergood, a transparency advocate who has become a leading critic of WikiLeaks, and Glenn Greenwald, a constitutional law attorney and legal blogger for Salon.com. [includes rush transcript]

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Guests:

Glenn Greenwald, constitutional law attorney and political/legal blogger at Salon.com.
Steven Aftergood, senior research analyst at the Federation of American Scientists. He directs the Project on Government Secrecy and runs Secrecy News.
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JUAN GONZALEZ: WikiLeaks is under attack. The whistelblowing group’s website has effectively been killed just days after Amazon pulled the site from its servers following political pressure. Wikileaks.org went offline this morning for the third time this week in what the Guardian newspaper is calling "the biggest threat to its online presence yet."

A California-based internet hosting provider called EveryDNS dropped WikiLeaks last night, late last night. The company says it did so to prevent its other 500,000 customers from being affected by the intense cyber attacks targeted at WikiLeaks.

This morning, WikiLeaks—and the massive trove of secret diplomatic cables it has been publishing since Sunday—was only accessible online through a string of digits known as a DNS address.

Earlier this week, Joe Lieberman, the chair of the Senate committee on Homeland Security, called for any organization helping to sustain WikiLeaks to immediately terminate its relationship with them.

Meanwhile, the State Department has blocked all its employees from accessing the site and is warning all government workers not to read the cables, even at home.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange told The Guardian the developments are an example of the, quote, "privatization of state censorship." Assange said, quote, "These attacks will not stop our mission, but should be setting off alarm bells about the rule of law in the United States."

AMY GOODMAN: Just what is WikiLeaks’ mission? On its website, the group says, quote, "WikiLeaks is a non-profit media organization dedicated to bringing important news and information to the public." The website goes on, "We publish material of ethical, political and historical significance while keeping the identity of our sources anonymous, thus providing a universal way for the revealing of suppressed and censored injustices," unquote.

But not all transparency advocates support what WikiLeaks is doing. Today we’ll host a debate. Steven Aftergood is one of the most prominent critics of WikiLeaks and one of the most prominent transparency advocates. He’s the director of the government secrecy project at the Federation of American Scientists. He runs the Secrecy News project, which routinely posts non-public documents. He is joining us from Washington, D.C. We’re also joined by Glenn Greenwald. He’s a constitutional law attorney and political and legal blogger for Salon.com who’s supportive of WikiLeaks. He’s joining us from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.

We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Why don’t we begin with Steven Aftergood? You have been a fierce proponent of transparency, yet you are a critic of WikiLeaks. Why?

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: I’m all for the exposure of corruption, including classified corruption. And to the extent that WikiLeaks has done that, I support its actions. The problem is, it has done a lot more than that, much of which is problematic. It has invaded personal privacy. It has published libelous material. It has violated intellectual property rights. And above all, it has launched a sweeping attack not simply on corruption, but on secrecy itself. And I think that’s both a strategic and a tactical error. It’s a strategic error because some secrecy is perfectly legitimate and desirable. It’s a tactical error because it has unleashed a furious response from the U.S. government and other governments that I fear is likely to harm the interests of a lot of other people besides WikiLeaks who are concerned with open government.

JUAN GONZALEZ: And when you say—when you list some of the main errors that the organization has made, could you give some examples of what to you are most troubling, when you talk about the invasion of privacy rights and other—and the others that you’ve listed?

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: Last year, WikiLeaks published a thousand-page raw police investigative file from Belgium, investigating a case of child abuse and murder. And as one would expect, the police file included lots of unsubstantiated allegations that later turned out to be false. But by publishing the raw allegations in their original state, WikiLeaks brought embarrassment and disgrace to people who were in fact innocent. It got to the point where the Belgium government was looking into the possibility of blocking access to WikiLeaks, not as an act of censorship, but as an act of protection against libel.

WikiLeaks has also published what I think is probably the only actual blueprint of a nuclear fission device that has been made available online. It’s not an artist’s concept, but it’s an actual blueprint of a real nuclear weapon that they posted online. I think from a proliferation point of view, that was a terrible mistake.

AMY GOODMAN: Glenn Greenwald, we want to bring you in before the break with a response.

GLENN GREENWALD: Right. Well, it’s interesting because we led off the segment with you, Amy, detailing a whole variety of repressive actions that are being taken against WikiLeaks. And one of the reasons for that is because people like Steven Aftergood have volunteered themselves and thrust themselves into the spotlight to stand up and say, "I’m a transparency advocate, but I think that what WikiLeaks is doing in so many instances is terrible."

If you look at the overall record of WikiLeaks—and let me just stipulate right upfront that WikiLeaks is a four-year-old organization, four years old. They’re operating completely unchartered territory. Have they made some mistakes and taken some missteps? Absolutely. They’re an imperfect organization. But on the whole, the amount of corruption and injustice in the world that WikiLeaks is exposing, not only in the United States, but around the world, in Peru, in Australia, in Kenya and in West Africa and in Iceland, much—incidents that are not very well known in the United States, but where WikiLeaks single-handedly uncovered very pervasive and systematic improprieties that would not have otherwise been uncovered, on top of all of the grave crimes committed by the United States. There is nobody close to that organization in terms of shining light of what the world’s most powerful factions are doing and in subverting the secrecy regime that is used to spawn all sorts of evils.

And I think the big difference between myself and Steven Aftergood is it is true that WikiLeaks is somewhat of a severe response, but that’s because the problem that we’re confronting is quite severe, as well, this pervasive secrecy regime that the world’s powerful factions use to perpetrate all kinds of wrongdoing. And the types of solutions that Mr. Aftergood has been pursuing in his career, while commendable and nice and achieving very isolated successes here and there, is basically the equivalent of putting little nicks and scratches on an enormous monster. And WikiLeaks is really one of the very few, if not the only group, effectively putting fear into the hearts of the world’s most powerful and corrupt people, and that’s why they deserve, I think, enthusiastic support from anyone who truly believes in transparency, notwithstanding what might be valid, though relatively trivial, criticisms that Mr. Aftergood and a couple of others have been voicing.

AMY GOODMAN: [inaudible] to break, and then we’re going to come back to this discussion. We’ve just gotten word from a tweet that the WikiLeaks website is now being hosted in Switzerland, again taken down over the last hours. We are seeing here the WikiLeaks tweet says, "WikiLeaks moves to Switzerland, "http://wikileaks.ch">http://wikileaks.ch." We’ll bring you the latest as we go through this broadcast. We’re speaking with Glenn Greenwald of Salon.com and Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists. Back with them in a minute.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: Our guests are Glenn Greenwald of Salon.com—he’s joining us from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil—and Steven Aftergood, the Federation of American Scientists, joining us from Washington, D.C., debating WikiLeaks and the trove of cables they’ve released. It ultimately will be the largest trove of U.S. diplomatic cables ever leaked in U.S. history, following the largest trove of government documents ever released in the Iraq war cables, close to 400,000 of those documents. Juan?

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, Steven Aftergood, I’d like to get your response to Glenn Greenwald just before our break and this issue of the fundamental challenge that he believes they are providing to elites all around the world.

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: You know, maybe he’s right, but I don’t think so. I think their theory of political action is extremely primitive. It’s basically throw a lot of stuff out there, and then good things will happen to good people and bad things will happen to bad people. They made a tremendous splash with their Apache helicopter video, showing the killing of people in Baghdad in 2007. But did it lead to a change in the rules of engagement that would prevent a similar event from happening in the future? No. Did it lead to compensation for or reparations for the people who were wounded there? No. It made a big splash, and then we went on to the next big splash. And, you know, again, I could easily be wrong; I often am. Maybe WikiLeaks is going to lead to an avalanche of openness and good government. My concern, though, is the opposite, that it’s going to lead to a new clampdown, new restrictions, more secrecy.

AMY GOODMAN: Glenn Greenwald, your response?

GLENN GREENWALD: I mean, I find that standard that he just articulated to be unbelievable and absurd. The idea that WikiLeaks hasn’t single-handedly reformed the United States military’s rule of engagement, and that’s supposed to be some sort of criticism of what it does? I mean, Mr. Aftergood created a big splash back in June after Wikileaks released the Afghanistan war documents, and he made that same argument in response to something I had written when I praised Wikileaks, and he said, "Well, how many wars have WikiLeaks stopped?" How many wars has Mr. Aftergood stopped? How many rules of engagement has he caused to be changed? I mean, it’s not WikiLeaks’s fault or its responsibility that when they show grave injustices to the American people that the citizenry is either indifferent towards those injustices or apathetic towards them. WikiLeaks is devoted to shedding light on what these injustices are, and it’s then our responsibility to go about and do something about them.

Again, they’re a four-year-old organization. And they have led to all sorts of important reforms. I mean, in Iceland, WikiLeaks was basically the single-handed cause of a new law that is designed to protect whistleblowing and whistleblowing sites like WikiLeaks beyond anything else that exists in the world. Their exposure of corruption on the part of a Iceland’s biggest banks, that led to the financial meltdown, led to investigations and prosecutions. The same thing happened to exposure of injustices and corruption on the part of oil magnates in Peru. They exposed the Australian government’s efforts to target websites to be shut down under a program designed to target child pornography, when in reality the sites that were targeted were political sites. And in Spain this week, the headlines are dominated by documents that WikiLeaks released that you, Amy, covered two days ago with Harper’s Scott Horton about the fact of the Spanish government’s succumb to pressure by the American State Department not to investigate the torture of its own citizens and the death of a Spanish photojournalist in Iraq, because WikiLeaks exposed that. And so you see all over the world, in just a short history of four years, immense amounts of reforms and greater awareness of what political and financial elites are doing around the world. I think he’s imposing on them an absurd and unreasonable standard that he, himself, and essentially nobody else is able to meet, either.

AMY GOODMAN: Steven Aftergood, how would you—what would you say the difference is between WikiLeaks and your own newsletter, Secrecy News?

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: I mean, there are several obvious differences in scope and scale and distribution. From my point of view, WikiLeaks is poorly focused in order to achieve its objective. And let me say, of course, I supported the release of the Apache helicopter video. I started out by saying that I favor the unauthorized disclosure of classified information that reveals corruption. It’s very hard, evidently, to say both good and bad things about WikiLeaks. People want you to say only one or the other.

But yesterday, Der Spiegel reported that a member, an official from the Free Democratic Party, had been relieved of his duties after he was identified as one of the persons who provided documents to the U.S. government in one of the WikiLeaks cables. Does that advance the public interest? WikiLeaks might call that a victory for open government, but I think it’s regrettable. I think if it’s multiplied dozens or hundreds of thousands of times over, it does real damage to the conduct of American diplomacy and to the national interest. So, just on principle, I oppose that kind of cavalier approach to disclosure.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Glenn Greenwald, your response?

GLENN GREENWALD: Right. Well, actually, WikiLeaks does not have a cavalier or indiscriminate approach to disclosure, contrary to accusations often made against it. They’ve certainly made mistakes in the past. I criticize them, for instance, for exercising insufficient care in redacting the names of various Afghan citizens who cooperated with the United States military. They accepted responsibility for that, and in subsequent releases, including in the Iraq document disclosures, they were very careful about redacting those names. And in the current diplomatic cable disclosure, thus far on their website, the only documents that have been posted were cables that were already published by their newspaper partners such as The Guardian and the New York Times and Der Spiegel, which included the redactions that those newspapers applied to those documents to protect the names of various people who are innocent and otherwise might be harmed in an inadvertent way. So they are constantly increasing their safeguards and their scrutiny. They’re perfecting their procedures. They acknowledge the responsibility that they have.

But what they—what I think is the crucial point is, is that, again, I mean, you know, what I hear from him speaking, it’s sort of like if you had a surgeon who had a cancer patient riddled with tumors and was removing huge tumors, this complaint, "Well, there was an ingrown toenail that he left and didn’t extract that very well." And just the more—no matter what you say, they just keep focusing on those relatively trivial flaws. I think that, you know, in order to criticize WikiLeaks—and it’s legitimate to do so—if you don’t think that their approach to bringing transparency and subverting the secrecy regime is an effective one or a commendable or noble one, you’re obligated to say what the alternative is, not in some fantasy world, but in the real world. And I don’t see one.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, Glenn, I’d like to ask you, because the focus of so much of this is in killing the messenger and not dealing with the messages that are being released here. First of all, the comment on just the fact that as the internet and computerization of information has grown, it has made it easier for folks to download troves of information about an institution or a government, so that our societies have not dealt with this other side of the internet and computerization. And also, if this information was so secret, why did the government do such an amateurish job of protecting supposedly vital information that a—supposedly a PFC, as they suspect, downloaded so much of this critical information about Afghanistan, Iraq and even diplomatic cables?

GLENN GREENWALD: Well, I think that’s really—that last point is one of the critical issues, which is, the reality is that of all the hundreds of thousands upon hundreds of thousands of pages that WikiLeaks has released just in the last six months alone, a tiny portion of it is even interesting, let alone legitimately secret. And that underscores one of the real problems, is that the secrecy regime that we’re talking about is just—is not just a little bit excessive on the margins. What it means is that the government, the United States government, and all of its permanent national security state institutions reflexively do virtually everything behind a shield of secrecy. Essentially, the presumption is that whatever the government does in our name is secret, when the presumption is supposed to be the opposite. And you see that as clearly as you possibly can in these leaks, how much innocuous information is simply marked and stamped "secret."

And the reason that there’s not many safeguards placed on it is because what WikiLeaks is releasing—and I think this is so important—is that, you know, despite how much corruption and wrongdoing and impropriety and criminality it has revealed, this is really the lowest level of secrecy that the United States government has. The truly awful things exist on a far higher level of secrecy, at the top-secret level or even above. And it is true that if the United States government’s claim is correct, that what WikiLeaks has done has jeopardized so much that’s good and important in the world, a lot of the blame lies with the United States and the government and the military for not having safeguarded it more securely.

And the first question that you asked is, I think, critical, too, which is, we can debate WikiLeaks all we want, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter, because the technology that exists is inevitably going to subvert these institutions’ secrecy regimes. It’s too easy to take massive amounts of secret and dump it on the internet. You know longer need the New York Times or the network news to agree. And I think that what we’re talking about is inevitable, whether people like Steven Aftergood or Joe Lieberman or others like it or not.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to get Steven Aftergood’s response, but first, here on Democracy Now!, we’ve conducted three extensive interviews with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The archives of the interview are on our website. But I wanted to play for you part of what he told us in July on government transparency.

JULIAN ASSANGE: We have clearly stated motives, but they are not antiwar motives. We are not pacifists. We are transparency activists who understand that transparent government tends to produce just government. And that is our sort of modus operandi behind our whole organization, is to get out suppressed information into the public, where the press and the public and our nation’s politics can work on it to produce better outcomes.

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Julian Assange on Democracy Now! Yesterday, NBC News highlighted Democracy Now!’s interview yesterday with his attorney. And we are linking to all of this on our website. She says that Julian Assange is not in hiding from the authorities—they are contacting him through his lawyers—but in hiding from harm, that this character assassination, the possibility that could lead to an actual real one. Steven Aftergood, your response to what Assange said and Glenn Greenwald before that?

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: Well, I actually agree with everything that Assange said in that statement. What I don’t agree with is that it’s an accurate characterization of what WikiLeaks has done.

Glenn Greenwald had a lot to say. Let me just mention a couple of things. I don’t believe that it’s a choice between the WikiLeaks approach and giving up. This year, for the first time, the United States declassified and disclosed the size of its nuclear weapons arsenal. This year, for the first time, the U.S. government issued its first unclassified Nuclear Posture Review Report, the basic statement of nuclear weapons employment policy. This year, for the first time, the U.S. government disclosed the total intelligence budget, including both its civilian and military components. There is an alternative mechanism for progress. In today’s paper, there’s a story about ACLU having uncovered reports of violations of the Freedom—the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act amendments. So it’s really not a question of WikiLeaks or nothing. It’s a question of a smart, well-targeted approach or a—you know, a reckless shotgun approach.

My concern about where we—you know, going forward, I basically have two agenda items. In the security review process, I want to try and inject the idea, as Glenn Greenwald said, that overclassification is a problem here and that as we fix the other security measures, we also need to focus on fixing the classification system, reducing the scope of classification sharply. The other agenda item, which WikiLeaks has made more difficult, is to prevent a rewriting of the Espionage Act statutes in order to make them more versatile and useful against both those who disclose classified information and those who publish such information. That is now building up steam, and I think we’re likely to see efforts in that direction in the next Congress.

AMY GOODMAN: Glenn Greenwald?

GLENN GREENWALD: Yeah, I mean, let me just say, I mean, you know, I have respect for the work that Steven Aftergood and other transparency activists do in Washington, working within the Congress and other American political institutions to try and bring about incremental reform. I think he’s well intentioned. I think we probably share the same values. The problem is that I just don’t think that his perspective is, A, realistic or, B, sufficiently urgent. I don’t think it’s realistic that the Congress of the United States, now dominated by the Republican Party in the House of Representatives and an extremely conservative Democratic Party in the Senate and led by an administration, the Obama administration, that has actually increased secrecy weapons, including the state secrecy privilege and other forms of immunity designed to shield high-level executive power wrongdoing and lawbreaking from all forms of accountability or judicial review, I think it’s incredibly unrealistic to take an optimistic view that that political system, dominated by those factions, is somehow on the verge of starting to bring about meaningful increases in transparency.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to—

GLENN GREENWALD: And I think it’s insufficiently—go ahead, I’m sorry.

AMY GOODMAN: I’m going to interrupt, because I want to get to some memos that we’ve been getting from around the country that are very important and interesting. University students are being warned about WikiLeaks. An email from Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, that we read in headlines, reads—I want to do it again—quote, "Hi students,

"We received a call today from a SIPA alumnus who is working at the State Department. He asked us to pass along the following information to anyone who will be applying for jobs in the federal government, since all would require a background investigation and in some instances a security clearance.

"The documents released during the past few months through Wikileaks are still considered classified documents. He recommends that you DO NOT post links to these documents nor make comments on social media sites such as Facebook or through Twitter. Engaging in these activities would call into question your ability to deal with confidential information, which is part of most positions with the federal government.

"Regards, Office of Career Services."

That’s the email to Columbia University students at the School of International and Public Affairs.

Now, I want to go on to another memo. Democracy Now! has obtained the text of a memo that’s been sent to employees at USAID. This is to thousands of employees, about reading the recently released WikiLeaks documents, and it comes from the Department of State. They have also warned their own employees. This memo reads, quote, "Any classified information that may have been unlawfully disclosed and released on the Wikileaks web site was not 'declassified' by an appopriate authority and therefore requires continued classification and protection as such from government personnel... Accessing the Wikileaks web site from any computer may be viewed as a violation of the SF-312 agreement... Any discussions concerning the legitimacy of any documents or whether or not they are classified must be conducted within controlled access areas (overseas) or within restricted areas (USAID/Washington)... The documents should not be viewed, downloaded, or stored on your USAID unclassified network computer or home computer; they should not be printed or retransmitted in any fashion."

That was the memo that went out to thousands of employees at USAID. The State Department has warned all their employees, you are not to access WikiLeaks, not only at the State Department, which they’ve blocked, by the way, WikiLeaks, but even on your home computers. Even if you’ve written a cable yourself, one of these cables that are in the trove of the documents, you cannot put your name in to see if that is one of the cables that has been released. This warning is going out throughout not only the government, as we see, but to prospective employees all over the country, even on their home computers. Steven Aftergood, your response?

STEVEN AFTERGOOD: It’s obviously insane. I mean, if they’re not allowed to read the cables on WikiLeaks, they shouldn’t be allowed to read the cables on the New York Times or other sites. It’s obviously ridiculous. You know, this whole "cablegate" was intended as a provocation. Bradley Manning said it would give thousands of diplomats heart attacks. The system has been provoked. It is—you know, it is outrageous. It’s kind of disgusting. The question is, is it good politics? I don’t think so.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Glenn Greenwald, your final response?

GLENN GREENWALD: I think that that response is not one caused by WikiLeaks. I think that response is reflective of what our government is and the egos that prevails. And it’s every bit as severe as it was before WikiLeaks existed. And it’s WikiLeaks that is devoted to subverting it. And I think those memos, those disgustingly repressive and authoritarian memos, and the mindset in them, shows why WikiLeaks is so needed.

AMY GOODMAN: We want to leave it there, and we want to thank Glenn Greenwald, speaking to us from Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, a legal blogger at Salon.com, and Steven Aftergood of the Federation for American Scientists, for engaging in this debate.

The response on our website has been just overwhelming. We’ve got the highest number of viewers online right now than we’ve had since the beginning of this. The interview we did with Daniel Ellsberg on October 22, Juan, the day that he was flying off to London to have the news conference with Julian Assange announcing the latest trove of documents—they’re releasing something like a quarter of a million documents—has now been hit close to 2.8 million times, and it is just soaring every day. The hunger for this information has been astounding. You can go to our website to see all the different coverage, as well as our interview with Noam Chomsky responding to the specific cables that have been released. Our website is democracynow.org.

And we also just got this information: economy adds 39,000 jobs in November, far fewer than expected. Unemployment rate up to 9.8 percent.

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Sun Dec 19, 2010 7:48 pm

Is this guy deliberately stepping into the line of (US) fire?

In praise of David Leigh, WikiLeaks' unsung hero
The Guardian's investigations editor orchestrated turning the mass of secret US embassy papers into great copy

Peter Preston
The Observer, Sunday 19 December 2010

A little adulation with your turkey, sir? But let's not spend too long wondering whether Julian Assange is anyone's idea of a perfect Christmas house guest, for there are other nominated heroes in the great WikiLeaking saga.

It's a shame that "more medals aren't being pinned on the chest" of those who actually obtained the data, David Leigh of the Guardian told a Times reporter. And it's a shame, too, that Leigh himself isn't getting his fair share of praise either.

Leigh is investigations editor of the Guardian, professor of reporting at City University and, for well over 30 years, one of Britain's most resourceful turners-over of greasy stones. He can also take primary credit for the orchestration and delivery of the US embassy papers these past three weeks – a monumental task of good-tempered organisation, explanation and sheer news nous (as anyone who has tried to wander through the winding cyber corridors of WikiLeaks can attest).

Do you get awards for turning raw data into brilliant storytelling? Tony Gallagher and the Telegraph team did over MPs' expenses. Maybe Leigh won't get the same treatment – but then, as Assange is prone to say at length, there ain't no justice.
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Sun Dec 19, 2010 9:30 pm

Inside WIKILEAKS - UK TV from the Aug 2010:




tl:dr: Informal JA; holes is socks, mussed hair; behind the scenes; plain talk about expected ad hominim attacks; blowing off Larry King.

Worth watching.

Fxd!
Last edited by Plutonia on Mon Dec 20, 2010 12:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby vanlose kid » Sun Dec 19, 2010 10:41 pm

Plutonia wrote: Inside WIKILEAKS - UK TV from the Aug 2010:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AT7qrhr_QLc

tl:dr: Informal JA; holes is socks, mussed hair; behind the scenes; plain talk about expected ad hominim attacks; blowing off Larry King.

Worth watching.


embed doesn't work?

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