The Wikileaks Question

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby JackRiddler » Mon Aug 22, 2011 1:25 pm

.


https://twitter.com/#!/holger_stark/sta ... 0273636353

@holger_stark
Holger Stark
The old cache of unreleased #wikileaks
docs seems 2 be gone 4ever. #DDB said 2
me that he has destroyed it. See new #SPIEGEL

#openleaks
#ccc
20 Aug via TweetDeck
Retweeted by tina_nguyen and 100+ others


Domscheit-Berg destroyed No-Fly List and Bank of America documents? No back-up? Aren't they in the Insurance file?


http://www.thetechherald.com/article.ph ... -documents

Former WikiLeaks associate destroyed potentially explosive documents

by Steve Ragan - Aug 22 2011, 06:00


Former WikiLeaks associate destroyed potentially explosive documents


Daniel Domscheit-Berg, the former spokesperson for WikiLeaks, is said to have destroyed more than 3,000 documents, taken when he left the organization. Based on statements from WikiLeaks, the documents would have been explosive to say the least, considering the topics they covered.

The news comes from German reporters at Der Spiegel, who said that more than 3,500 unpublished files were gone, after Daniel Domscheit-Berg claimed to have destroyed them. The documents were taken by Domscheit-Berg when he left WikiLeaks. They were destroyed, according to Der Spiegel, to prevent the sources from being compromised.

“We can confirm that the DDB claimed destroyed data included a copy of the entire US no-fly list,” WikiLeaks said in a comment on Twitter.

In addition, WikiLeaks said that the data lost also included five gigabytes from the Bank of America, the internals of around 20 neo-Nazi organizations, and US intercept arrangements for over a hundred internet companies.


Based on public statements, the destruction happened after Domscheit-Berg failed to use the data to blackmail WikiLeaks.

“Over the last 11 months, we have tried to negotiate the return of various materials taken by Mr. Domscheit-Berg, including internal communications and over 3000 unpublished, private whistleblower communications to WikiLeaks. Mr. Domscheit-Berg has repeatedly attempted to blackmail WikiLeaks by threatening to make available, to forces that oppose WikiLeaks, these private communications... He has stated he will commit this action, should WikiLeaks move to charge him with sabotage or theft. Mr. Domscheit-Berg has refused to return the various materials he has stolen, saying he needs them, solely, to carry out this threat,” a statement from WikiLeaks explained.

“The negotiations have now been terminated by the mediator, Andy Müller-Maguhn, who has stated that he doubts Mr. Domscheit-Berg's integrity and claimed willingness to return the material and that under those circumstances Müller-Maguhn cannot meaningfully continue to mediate. In response, Mr. Domscheit-Berg has stated that he has, or is about to, destroy thousands of unpublished whistleblowers disclosures sent to WikiLeaks.”

[Julian Assange also released a statement, you can read that here.]

The statement later explains that the source identities for the lost material were not at risk, due to policies preventing WikiLeaks from collecting or retaining source identifying information. This renders the reported logic from Domscheit-Berg moot, because if true, there was no worry of source compromise.

However, the lost data is damning to say the least. Like other news agencies, The Tech Herald would have been interested in the intercept agreements, as well as the BoA data. Sadly, it would appear that no one will ever know the full contents.

For the curious, there is no mention on either side about releasing the AES key needed to unlock the “insurance” file, or if the lost documents are contained within it.

Additional coverage and background can be seen here and here.





http://wlcentral.org/category/content-t ... cheit-berg

Daniel Domscheit-Berg
2011-08-21 Former Wikileaks spokesman destroyed unreleased files

Submitted by Heather Marsh on Sun, 08/21/2011 - 06:59

Rough translation, apologies. Original at Der Spiegel
http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/vorab/0,1 ... 52,00.html

Former Wikileaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg claims to have destroyed more than 3,500 unpublished files that had been sent from unknown informants and are now apparently lost irrevocably. These are documents which were stored until the late summer of 2010 on the Wikileaks server and were taken by a group including Domscheit-Berg upon their leaving the organization. Domscheit-Berg has "in the last days shredded [the files] to ensure that the sources are not compromised," said Domscheit-Berg. He said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange could not guarantee a safe handling of the material. In the data base was among other things, the so-called "no-fly list" of the U.S. government, on which the names of suspects were listed, which are prohibited from entering an aircraft. Assange said the material would also have insider information from 20 right-wing organizations. Domscheit-Berg would not confirm that. Assange had been asking him to return the data since early this year.

.

2011-08-20 WikiLeaks Statement on Daniel Domscheit-Berg and OpenLeaks
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 08/20/2011 - 23:52

Sat Aug 20 23:41:31 2011 GMT

Five days short of a year ago, on 25 August 2010, WikiLeaks suspended former employee "Daniel Domscheit-Berg". Over the last 11 months, we have tried to negotiate the return of various materials taken by Mr. Domscheit-Berg, including internal communications and over 3000 unpublished, private whistleblower communications to WikiLeaks. Mr. Domscheit-Berg has repeatedly attempted to blackmail WikiLeaks by threatening to make available, to forces that oppose WikiLeaks, these private communications and to which Mr. Domscheit-Berg is not a party. He has stated he will commit this action, should WikiLeaks move to charge him with sabotage or theft. Mr. Domscheit-Berg has refused to return the various materials he has stolen, saying he needs them, solely, to carry out this threat. Mr. Domscheit-Berg has already, secretly, and with malicious intent, disclosed portions of the private communications content to other parties, to the harm of WikiLeaks.

The negotiations have now been terminated by the mediator, Andy Müller-Maguhn, who has stated that he doubts Mr. Domscheit-Berg's integrity and claimed willingness to return the material and that under those circumstances Müller-Maguhn cannot meaningfully continue to mediate. In response, Mr. Domscheit-Berg has stated that he has, or is about to, destroy thousands of unpublished whistleblowers disclosures sent to WikiLeaks. The material is irreplaceable and includes substantial information on many issues of public importance, human rights abuses, mass telecommunications interception, banking and the planning of dozens of neo-nazi groups. Our sources have in some cases risked their lives or freedom attempting to convey these disclosures to WikiLeaks and to the public.

As a matter of policy and implementation WikiLeaks does not collect or retain source identifying information, so fortunately, source identities for this material are not significantly at risk.

.

2011-08-20 Statement by Julian Assange on the reported destruction of WikiLeaks source material by Daniel Domscheit-Berg
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 08/20/2011 - 22:31

Sat Aug 20 23:25:00 2011 GMT

WikiLeaks does not record or retain source identifying information, however the claimed destruction of documents entrusted to WikiLeaks between January 2010 and August 2010 demands the revelation of inside information so sources can make their own risk assessments.

Early in 2010, Daniel Domscheit-Berg, (then "Daniel Berg", "Daniel Schmitt") (born 1978), who was responsible for keeping selected WikiLeaks backups, met and entered into a relationship with Anke Domscheit-Berg (then, "Anke Domscheit") (born 1968) who described her job title as "Director Government Relations" for Microsoft, Germany.

DDB told me that ADB's role was to interface with the German government on behalf of Microsoft. He was proud that he had been to a party at the German ministry of the interior, as ADB's consort, and that ADB was on intimate terms with senior figures in the German government and bureaucracy.

DDB told me that he had moved into ADBs house in Berlin, without any counter-intelligence cover, going so far as to place his legal name on a street visible mail box and the interior door and that he would work from this location.

At this point WikiLeaks issued a policy directive that DDB not be permitted contact with source material.

ADB and DDB officially married within a few weeks and changed their surnames to "Domscheit-Berg".

DDB secretly, and in clear violation of WikiLeaks internal security directives, recorded internal WikiLeaks encrypted "chat" conversations. He initially publicly denied having done so, but attempted to place many of these recordings into his ghostwritten book, most of which were rejected by his publishers' lawyers as violations of german privacy law. Others he secretly conveyed to hostile media, such as Wired magazine, which had been involved in the arrest and persecution of US intelligence analyst Bradley Manning.






http://rixstep.com/1/20110624,00.shtml


The WikiLeaks Palace Revolt

Revolt or man overboard? A spectacle seen through the spectacles of Daniel Domscheit-Berg.


Daniel Domscheit-Berg was with the WikiLeaks organisation just over two years. He started visiting the WikiLeaks chatroom and made inquiries about volunteering in 2007 and was finally given 'menial' tasks towards the end of the year. He met up with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange at the Berlin Conference Centre in the last week of 2007, first greeting him at the spiral staircase as he tells it in his book.

Two years and nine months later, Daniel Domscheit-Berg was out of the organisation he wished he'd founded, after two unsuccessful attempts to yank control from Julian Assange and the WikiLeaks staff.

There have been many stories about what happened with WikiLeaks in the late summer/early autumn 2010, about who was involved and what they did, and most of these stories are incompatible with one another. Even Daniel Domscheit-Berg's story is incompatible with itself. But as Daniel Domscheit-Berg is at the epicentre of these events, as he's the cause of most if not all of them and likely the only player involved, and as he's going to portray himself in the best possible light, his own writings might be the best starting point for approaching the truth.

No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

Introduction

Julian and DDB traveled back to DDB's hometown Wiesbaden after the CCC conference at the BCC on New Year's Day 2008, both sick with the flu. Julian stayed with DDB off and on for two months. Those two months become the 'meat and cauliflower' of DDB's book on WikiLeaks.

The book is a sad experience, as related in The Life and Times of the Leberkäse Kid. Leberkäse is a particularly funky spam product popular with people in the south of Germany (and abhorred by everyone else). But DDB loves Leberkäse and ironically is turning into it - in the eyes of his countrymen.

Although much of DDB's book is about his conflicted (and conflicting) relationship with Julian and the WikiLeaks concept, he does deal with some actual events. The reader can follow him and Julian through the Bär controversy, through the fight with L Ron, through the Trafigura incident, and so forth.

Things are looking very good at the end of 2009. Julian and DDB once again guest the annual conference of the Chaos Computer Club in Berlin, get a standing ovation for their talk, and very much seem to be a dynamic duo. Yet things were to turn sour little more than a month later.

Julian and DDB join up with other WikiLeaks collaborators and meet on Iceland where they hole up in a hotel flat for a month. But by 5 February DDB has had it, is losing his cool, has shattered nerves, and runs out. He never meets with Julian again.

One month after their triumph in Berlin and Daniel Domscheit-Berg and Julian were no longer on good terms. Daniel had run from the group on Iceland. He felt himself returning to 'normal' back in Berlin, he'd run into his future wife, he more and more saw Iceland as something remote, and above all he understood intuitively he wasn't welcome back anymore. Daniel stayed on in the organisation with a limited role until August 2010 when he was further phased out, this time completely.

It's what happens between 5 February and 14 September 2010 that'll be interesting here. Particularly the month of August: things are put in motion by DDB that have come to be referred to as the mythical 'WikiLeaks Palace Revolt'.

But back on track. The year is 2009.

Daniel & The Benjamins (2009)

Julian took WikiLeaks offline early in 2010 to boost donations. And it worked. The organisation made over $200,000 in the first big push. This represented cash like never before. And Daniel's eyes popped.

So Daniel argued with Julian argued about the money. Daniel always found something he didn't like, found a reason to challenge Julian's wisdom and way of running WikiLeaks, but most of all he argued about the money - he wanted it.

Daniel suggested splitting WikiLeaks into two parts - one for him in Germany and one for everyone else - including Julian - anywhere else in the world. He wanted exclusive control of the great bulk of donations to use as he saw fit.

Daniel was given authentication to withdraw money from the Wau Holland Foundation where WikiLeaks donations went. But he had a bad habit of doing things without checking with the others first. He admitted he'd taken somewhere between 15 and 20 thousand euros to buy new computer equipment for WikiLeaks, and also a German rail pass for €3,800. He also took 'advances' on his own expenses. Most of the time he didn't check with the others and consequently caused a lot of friction.

The following passage from his book is very telling in several aspects.

'The foundation advanced me money and I bought things and submitted the receipts. Once I received €10,000 and later on another occasion €20,000, which went to buy hardware and pay for transportation and travel costs. In late August we updated our infrastructure again.'

'When I left WikiLeaks in September 2010, the project was in the sort of technological shape I'd always dreamt of. We had Cryptophones, satellite pagers, and 'state of the art' servers - everything we needed. We were on solid footing and our architecture was exemplary.'


No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

WikiMail in the Ruhr (2009)

A telling aspect of Daniel's tale concerns a WikiLeaks mail server set up in Germany's infamous Ruhr valley, an industrial area known to scare away the most hardened of heart. Things will improve over time as environmentalists get to speak their minds, but try to imagine smoke billowing out of a hundred smokestacks all at once, covering the sky and clouding out the sun. Yet it was here years earlier Daniel suggested putting up the WikiLeaks mail server - he and Julian packed all the computer gear they could afford into an automobile and then motored around the country, finding colocations for their network.

Image

DDB was to get into real trouble with everyone in WikiLeaks for something he did with that mail server two years later - more precisely on 14 September 2010. DDB claims in his book that he needed to repair the server as it was 'ancient' and kept going down for the count.

There's something that doesn't add up there. DDB had only recently spent up to €20,000 on new computer hardware for WikiLeaks. He was proud that the organisation now had top class computer hardware. Yet what happened to the mail server? That server had their most precious work - their internal correspondence, external mail. That mail server was the life line of the organisation. Yet DDB didn't replace that 'ancient' box as he called it when he splurged €20,000 on new equipment? Why? Or is there something DDB isn't telling us in his book?

No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

Nerves! (2010)

Things started going south for DDB on Iceland. He couldn't get along with anyone. The lack of sunlight affected him deeply - that happens to a lot of people, even Icelanders. But DDB showed the most wear and tear by far. DDB ran for it on 5 February 2010 when he could take it no longer.

Yet the irony is it's now WikiLeaks really takes off. The month of March was used to assemble their Collateral Murder video; shortly afterward they released the Afghan War Diaries. They were front page news all across the globe. But Daniel wasn't part of that news - he was no longer on the team.

The new WikiLeaks people were doing the amazing things now and they were doing them in a class like never before. Kristinn Hrafnsson and Ingi Ingason traveled to Iraq to meet with the victims of the helicopter attack. Everything was documented and a lot of time went into validating the video itself. The team included even a real founding member of The Pirate Bay. The clip was decrypted, edited, and readied for public consumption. Daniel Domscheit-Berg was nowhere around.

Image

But it's getting ahead of one's story to call DDB 'Domscheit-Berg'. That's the name he goes by today - but it's not the name he used back then and it's not his real name either. DDB was known back then as Daniel Schmitt. He's a bit vague on why and how he chose a fake name. But he claims he named himself after his cat.

When he finally decided to come out about his breakup with WikiLeaks and contacted Spiegel, he made sure they ended his interview by asking him about his real name. Up to then he'd gone under what most people assumed was his real name. DDB is most likely only 'Daniel Berg' but even that's not a sure bet anymore.

It's impossible to understand what went on with DDB in August 2010 without knowing a bit about the person DDB himself. Although DDB writes his book as if he's a fly on the wall, he gives a lot away about who and what that fly is. DDB has so much to say about everyone and everything, not just Julian. And in so doing - in serving up too much information for the reader - he inadvertently exposes himself.

And yet DDB's break with WikiLeaks was much the same as his break with EDS only months earlier.
'Increasingly, my job was getting on my nerves. Investing my energies on behalf of my clients was leading me nowhere. What was the point of Opel producing more cars, or another of my customers boosting his turnover? That didn't make the world a better place.'


Nerves nerves nerves.

Interlude: What's in a (Fake) Name

Daniel never quite explains why he chose to use a fake name. There are a few references to the name in his book but none really explain why he did this. The first reference is the following.
'Of course, we ourselves were hardly free of this sort of self- referentiality: WikiLeaks was WL, Julian was J, I was S (for my alias last name Schmitt) and others on the team were also referred to by individual letters. There was an internal logic to the abbreviations. The more important someone was within WL, the shorter his nickname.'


A few chapters after that first mention he waxes a bit more revelatory.
'My pseudonym was Daniel Schmitt. That wasn't particularly creative - it was the name of my cat. But I hoped it would be good enough to keep the private detectives at bay. We had heard from other people that big banking houses didn't shy away from hiring a detective agency to shadow anyone who made their lives uncomfortable. I had no desire to be spied upon. Since the Julius Bär leak I've been stuck with my pseudonym. The press knew me only as Daniel Schmitt.'


No one else in the WikiLeaks organisation ever used a fake name.

Daniel consistently accuses Julian and the others of being paranoid - something he implies he never is. And yet when he figures out the Cablegate files are about to be released, he drops everything, rushes home to Anke's flat, and begins dumping anything that might remotely be construed as incriminating - this despite his being formally severed from the organisation.

At any rate: Daniel's official name is Domscheit-Berg. For now. And the cat's name is officially 'Herr Schmitt'. Though who can tell what tomorrow might bring.

Interlude: DDB's Background

Not much is known about DDB's background other than what he tells. And he's shy and doesn't tell much. EN Wikipedia's page says simply: 'Domscheit-Berg grew up in Germany.'

And later in a new section: 'He began working with WikiLeaks through his work with the Chaos Computer Club.'

DDB does admit to being a member of the CCC (who doesn't like paying his dues) but he never explains what he did there.

DE Wikipedia is a bit more informative: "Domscheit-Berg studierte ab 2002 angewandte Informatik [applied computer science] an der Berufsakademie Mannheim [State University of Cooperative Education Mannheim] und schloss sein Studium 2005 ab. Danach arbeitete er bis Januar 2009 bei Electronic Data Systems wo er bereits den Praxisteil des dualen Studiums absolviert hatte als Netzwerkingenieur. [He did an apprenticeship with EDS.] Sein beruflicher Schwerpunkt lag auf IT-Sicherheit und WLAN-Technologie. [He specialised in security and wireless technology.]"

DE Wikipedia also mentions DDB was a spokesman for WikiLeaks 'after Julian Assange and Kristinn Hrafnsson'.

Daniel himself is the most informative - in a loose jawed interview with Wired from 2009 where he takes credit for the development of the entire galaxy we live in.

But who is behind Wikileaks? The site claims to have been founded by a concerned group of journalists, political dissidents and hackers. Curious to learn more, Wired travelled across Europe to track down the people behind the organisation.'

With a slow, lilting walk, weighed down by a laptop bag that is rarely out of his sight, Daniel 'Schmitt' - he won't give his real surname - sits down at a table in the rear of a café in central Italy. He got involved with Wikileaks prior to its launch in December 2006, he says, giving up his career, and salary, to work for the group. Born Daniel, he adopted the nom de plume 'Schmitt' after his cat, Mr Schmitt. His background is in computer security: he worked as a network engineer at an international technology-services company. He is cagey about his previous life and says it isn't relevant.

Image

Dressed in his signature black shirt, combats and Doc Martens boots, he begins his explanation of what Wikileaks is. His words are guarded, almost rehearsed, and the more he talks, the more the syntax of his native German permeates his English.

'When we started, we thought we'd become the Intelligence Agency of the People', says Schmitt. 'There would be thousands of people involved, digging out the dirt on their governments. It would create a revolutionary spirit.'


The latest is DDB's claim he never took anything from WikiLeaks. That's a new one. So mix it all together: he says in his book he discovered the WikiLeaks site in the autumn of 2007, was given menial tasks in December, met Julian at the CCC conference in Berlin the same month, and started working more on the 'inside' the following month. Yet for Wired a year and a few months before that, he claimed he founded the organisation and had been with it since 2006.

This isn't a case of 'he says/he says' - two people with conflicting stories. This is a case of the same person - the one and same person - unable to make up his mind about the Truth of the Month™.

No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

The Revolt (2010)

Daniel claims a lot of people were involved in the 'palace revolt' but that isn't at all clear. What's clear is that Herr Hyperbole was involved - perhaps him and no more. And on 25 August, just when Julian Assange was in the thick of it in Stockholm, he decided to strike. He waited until his opponent was at his weakest.

And what did he do? The way he excuses his behaviour in his book has such brio: 'Nothing major, nothing nasty. Just a symbolic act of protest.'

A 'symbolic act of protest'. The type of thing that's done all the time in corporations across the globe. The type of thing he did to his employer EDS. Only worse. Far worse. But it was major, it was nasty, and it's grounds for dismissal anywhere.

Deftly switching blame to others for what happened, DDB writes: 'On 25 August 2010 the architect and technician switched the system into maintenance mode.'

They evidently needed two people to pull the lever. Perhaps it was rusty: 'The submission system, the email system, and the chat room remained online. Only the wiki was down. We tweeted to say there was temporary maintenance work going on. We also changed the password for accessing the Twitter and email accounts.'

Nothing major, nothing nasty. DDB now gives his retrospective blessing to it all: 'We were trying to shake Julian up.'

So what happened? So how well planned was that 'nothing major, nothing nasty' 'symbolic act of protest'? Julian saw what happened and he did what any responsible administrator would do - he shut the whole thing down. That's the first thing you do in situations like that - stop activity on the system and conduct a thorough post mortem. DDB comments: 'We caved in almost immediately, restored the wiki, and gave him the passwords.'

There's a lot of detail missing. The 'we' is not a given no matter what. Julian couldn't have known DDB sabotaged the system that fast unless DDB told him. Something along the lines of the following, to quote from his chat with Julian the following day: 'BAHAHAHA you are not anyones king or god you behave like some emporer or slave trader haha.'

For Julian knew by later that same day 25 August who had done what to the system. And he confronted DDB in chat the following day. DDB tries to make out the topic is the release of the Iraq War Logs - something he's not involved in - but it's obvious from the context what's happening. DDB had also scheduled a leak to Newsweek for 26 August, so he was really in the thick of it.

DDB was suspended on very good grounds and was never reinstated. He'd been kept out of the innermost loops for all of the year because of his erratic unstable behaviour. But now this was it. He'd begged Julian for forgiveness in the past. Julian wasn't interested. And understandably so. He'd asked Julian to iterate what he was doing wrong. Julian told him the list was too long and it wouldn't help things anyway. So now a stupid temper tantrum - a 'symbolic act of protest'.

But 'nothing major, nothing nasty'. Of course not. It's the sort of thing mature people do all the time.

No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

The Second Attack I (2010)

DDB is a loose cannon. The people at MI6 know how to deal with loose cannons. Take a look at 'Licence to Kill'. They give them a sedative and fly them home. DDB's not getting a sedative even if he needs a whole box.

DDB, more out of control all the time, will next target a critical piece of WikiLeaks infrastructure: the mail server located in the Ruhr valley. There are a number of things to keep in mind when reviewing this part of the DDB narrative:

- DDB has already admitted (to Birgitta J and others and mentioned in his book) that he spent perhaps as much as €20,000 on new computer hardware. He's also stated he's very happy with the way things are with WikiLeaks hardware at this point - that this is the way he's always wanted it. Top drawer, current generation nuts and bolts.

- Julian, not particularly confident in DDB anymore, blocked DDB from the mail server. DDB claims others were blocked too but again: that's not a given when one's dealing with fairytale weaver DDB.

- DDB now claims the mail server crashed. That new piece of fantastic hardware DDB had purchased with unapproved funds from WikiLeaks donations? Not quite. DDB now has to tie conflicting versions of his story together.

- DDB says 'a discussion commenced about whether I should go and repair it, something I had done on quite a few occasions in the past'. That's patently untrue, as any reader can see from the story that follows. The discussion did not include Julian, that's for sure, and most likely involved only DDB and the Man in the Mirror™. DDB certainly isn't naming names - he's not even using his pat 'architect and technician' to implicate others.

- Furthermore, DDB was suspended, and no one working for WikiLeaks would have considered such a thing. And it's important to remember why DDB had been suspended: for sabotage. Would Kristinn and Ingi and the rest have seriously discussed the use of a suspended saboteur to repair a mail server - if something were in fact truly wrong with it?

- How could DDB claim in his book he was so happy with the current WikiLeaks hardware he'd taken upon himself to upgrade - and then write in pseudo-casual fashion as he braces his reader for the next adventure: 'It was the only server we hadn't updated.'

This adventure is going to take several days as DDB has to muster the courage. Feel for him.

The Second Attack II (2010)

The adventure now begins: 'On September 10 or 11, I got on a train. It was a very hot late-summer day. The train wasn't particularly full, and luckily, the few people in my open-seating compartment were all preoccupied with their own affairs. I spent the whole time typing in the chat window of my computer and tapping on the floor with my feet.'

Tap tap tap. Bojangles smiles: 'I continued the discussion in the chat room, unsure of whether I was doing the right thing.'

Discussion with who precisely? DDB names names when he needs to shift blame away from himself, but he doesn't like to name them when he wants to give the impression he's got everybody on his side. They might either appear too few or come out in public and deny it.

And don't buy a train ticket until you're sure, dude. Oh that's right: you already allocated €3800 from WikiLeaks donations for a year's rail pass: 'Should I in fact access the server without Julian's knowledge?'

So Julian is not involved. What a surprise. What a shocker: 'It was a matter of conscience: should we mutiny?'

So deftly put: there is no 'we', it's not a matter of conscience as DDB's type of actions aren't constructive anyway, and all this is really about is DDB not being able to keep his hands to himself and not trying to take over someone else's organisation.

Ask yourself this. Try to picture all that's transpired in the past year with WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, but now take Julian out of the pictures you see in your mind and put Daniel in there instead. How would Daniel handle the threat of a 'WTF' - WikiLeaks Task Force - out of Washington and Langley? How would he have measured up in conference after conference?

How would he have dealt with the death threats? With the suggestions his children be kidnapped?

Would Daniel ever have won Time's readers poll for person of the year? Would he have cornered an Amnesty award? The Sydney Peace Medal? Would you have listened to him speak? Be honest now.

Could Daniel have run the WikiLeaks organisation, dealt with the media, orchestrated the releases?

Daniel can't even stay on the train to sabotage the WikiLeaks mail server: 'After three hours I decided to turn around. I can't remember the name of the station, but as we pulled in I grabbed my backpack, pressed a button to open the train door, and jumped out onto the platform. It was like when you spot a police car in your rearview mirror and suddenly get the irrational feeling that you've done something wrong. That was the way I felt.'

Nerves of steel. Irrational feelings. Copyright © Daniel Domscheit-Berg. All rights reserved.

The Second Attack III (2010)

But he's gonna try again, folks! 'On 14 September I set off for the computer centre again. I switched off my cellphone and computer for the duration of the journey and did my best to read a book. I wanted to force myself to remain firm.'

Those irrational feelings can be devastating: 'I had tried to contact the person who had registered the server for us but hadn't managed to get in touch with him. He didn't know a lot about what had been going on recently, but he had reacted very sceptically when I had told him about my first trip.'

Aha. So there weren't really all that many people who approved of what you were doing or approved of you, were there? 'To him, it sounded as if we were doing something behind Julian's back.'

Sounded as if? Wherever did he get that idea? 'It didn't matter how many times I told him that I just wanted to get the server back up to speed again so we could continue our work.'

No it wouldn't. He's probably been warned about you. Or worse still: he knows you. And there's no way he can or should do anything but what he did. And for that matter: 'our work'? What work? You're out of all the loops.

So DDB somehow makes it all the way to the data centre with the brand new WikiLeaks server that somehow isn't brand new at all, despite DDB taking €20,000 without approval and somehow missing just this one server on his rogue spending spree.

And he enters the centre and is immediately struck by how no one reacts to him being there. He speculates it might be because he's been there so many times before to repair that very same mail server.

Hold on just a sec. That mail server was breaking down all the time? DDB mentions this several times in his narrative: the mail server kept breaking down and he kept taking the trip out to repair it.

How noble of him. So he had other servers that broke down more often? O RLY? For that must be the case if he actually did purchase computer hardware for that money (and not pocket it). In fact that would mean that each and every other WikiLeaks server prior to DDB's phenomenal upgrade was worse off than the mail server. And what are the odds of that? 'I waited impatiently for the server to boot up. My laptop was next to me. I was online, of course, and in touch with the others.'

Of course you were, DDB. You were only doing it for them. All the others in WikiLeaks except Julian of course. And Kristinn. And Ingi. And the new interns. And Gavin. And all the hundreds of volunteers worldwide. And... But yeah, everybody else.

'I didn't feel very comfortable.'

That's good to know, DDB, in more ways than one.

'It was much too hot in the data centre, and I was sweating. The air-conditioning unit was humming loudly, but pumping out far too little cool air. It was no wonder our ancient machine broke down.'

Ah that ancient machine. Yet far better than the rest before your super-upgrade. Don't complain, DDB.

Now someone from the data centre comes in to see what DDB is up to. Something's up. He comes and goes and comes back again. He's obviously not happy to see DDB there. He goes again, ostensibly to check the console to see what DDB is doing - better chance of getting a reliable answer. And now someone pops onto DDB's computer screen. Things are happening fast.

'What are you doing?'
'I'm here at the server.'
'I know. The centre informed me. What on earth are you up to?'
'Listen, I'm just carrying out repairs. I'm not doing anything that anyone should have a problem with.'
'I've been in contact with Julian. He freaked out.'
'He has no reason to.'


And so forth. What's amazing about DDB at this point is he doesn't see the obvious. What's even more amazing is he's so psychotic he doesn't understand how this is going to look in print in a book. He's suspended for sabotage - and he goes out to fix a mail server that shouldn't be broken? Unless he squandered the WikiLeaks donations money he took without approval?

DDB was even aghast that the other party in the above conversation didn't begin by saying 'hello'. How psychotic can psychotic be? Has the DDB of Iceland taken over the spirit of DDB of Berlin again?

You don't go fucking with somebody's mail server if you've already been suspended for fucking with their networks. Not unless you want to get permanently booted out of the organisation.

Which is what DDB must have realised would happen when he finally got back to Anke's flat and took more of her Prozac. For DDB didn't wait for the official reaction - he resigned the following day.

And he registered the OPENLEAKS domains (org, net, et al) two days after that.
Domain ID:D160176152-LROR
Domain Name:OPENLEAKS.ORG
Created On:17-Sep-2010 20:06:16 UTC
Last Updated On:16-Dec-2010 00:32:45 UTC
Expiration Date:17-Sep-2011 20:06:16 UTC
Registrant Street1:Level 14, Perak Techno Trade Centre (PTTC)
Registrant Street2:Bandar Meru Raya, Off Jalan Jelapang
Registrant State/Province:Perak Darul Ridzuan
Registrant Postal Code:30020
Registrant Country:MY


No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself.

Epilogue: Who Left, What DDB Stole (2010 - Present)

No one but DDB has yet to comment on what he stole from the WikiLeaks organisation. No one would have suspected him of being a thief if he hadn't mentioned it himself. The latest from DDB is that he didn't take anything at all.

DDB does say between the lines what the WikiLeaks Watership Down was all about - it wasn't a 'mass migration' at all.

'Why did the architect and I decide in the early morning hours of 15 September 2010 to quit WikiLeaks?'

Everyone knows why you quit WikiLeaks, DDB. You were up shit's creek worse than ever before, had absolutely no chance of being pardoned, had attempted to get back on good terms with everyone for over half a year, and had now been caught with your fingers in the till and your hands on the hardware. It was either quit or be sacked and publicly disgraced.

No one can damn Daniel Domscheit-Berg quite like he damns himself. The mythical 'WikiLeaks Palace Revolt' wasn't so much a revolt as a single deranged individual going berserk and wreaking havoc in an organisation.

Image

Pathological liars always have great faith in their own honesty. That's what helps them lie.
- Julian Assange
I was an incorrigible dreamer. A starry eyed idealist. It was time to wake up and smell the coffee.
- Daniel Domscheit-Berg
You have fucked up in so many ways and you want me to enumerate them but what is the point if you can't see things for yourself?
- Julian Assange to DDB May 2010
Anything I'd do differently? Yes. One staff hire.
- Julian Assange

See Also
The Technological: Daniel Domscheit-Berg: The Reviews
Rixstep Industry Watch: Schmitt Suspended from WikiLeaks
The Technological: The Life and Times of the Leberkäse Kid
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Aug 23, 2011 1:29 pm

.


http://www.theage.com.au/technology/tec ... z1VrVcWovG

Wiki war: 3500 unpublished leaks destroyed forever as Assange hits out

Asher Moses
August 22, 2011


WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's former right-hand man has irrevocably destroyed 3500 unpublished files leaked to the whistleblower site including the complete US no-fly list, five gigabytes of Bank of America documents and detailed information about 20 neo-Nazi groups.

Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who left WikiLeaks last year after a falling out with Assange, revealed the document destruction in an interview with Der Spiegel.

WikiLeaks has hit back, accusing Domscheit-Berg of being in bed with US intelligence agencies and of jeopardising the leaking of “many issues of public importance, human rights abuses, mass telecommunications interception, banking and the planning of dozens of neo-nazi groups”.

Along with the thousands of files, Domscheit-Berg also took the entire Wikileaks encrypted submission system with him on his way out to start a rival site, OpenLeaks. It has resulted in WikiLeaks being unable to receive leaked documents online for a year, with the site instead resorting to snail mail via an Australian P.O. Box at the University of Melbourne.

In a translation of the Der Spiegel interview, Domscheit-Berg said he had the files “shredded to ensure that the sources are not compromised”.


A large factor in Assange and Domscheit-Berg falling out was the fear that Assange released the 400,000 classified US documents about the Iraq war too early without taking the time to properly redact names of US collaborators and informants in Iraq.

In his book released this year, Inside WikiLeaks (review), Domscheit-Berg accused Assange of being autocratic and said the reason he took the submission system and unpublished documents was because “children shouldn't play with guns”.

“We will only return the material to Julian if and when he can prove that he can store the material securely and handle it carefully and responsibly,” he writes.

WikiLeaks has confirmed the breadth of documents that were destroyed in several tweets over the weekend. The organisation labels Domscheit-Berg's actions as “theft” and “sabotage”.

“DDB spits on every courageous whistblower who leaked data if they destroy the keys and refuse to return it. This is not acceptable,” WikiLeaks tweeted.

“Leak organisations don't destroy information whistleblowers risked their lives to leak.”

One Guatemalan human rights lawyer, Renata Avila, published an open letter earlier this month asking what happened to the material she submitted to WikiLeaks.

In a lengthy further statement, WikiLeaks reveals how it spent the past 11 months unsuccessfully trying to negotiate the return of the unpublished leaks and internal communications taken by Domscheit-Berg.

“Mr. Domscheit-Berg has repeatedly attempted to blackmail WikiLeaks by threatening to make available, to forces that oppose WikiLeaks, these private communications and to which Mr. Domscheit-Berg is not a party,” the statement reads.

“He has stated he will commit this action, should WikiLeaks move to charge him with sabotage or theft.”

The statement claims the negotiations were terminated by the mediator who had “doubts” about Domscheit-Berg's “integrity and claimed willingness to return the material”.

In response Domscheit-Berg threatened to destroy the files, WikiLeaks claimed. He now appears to have followed through on that threat.

“The material is irreplaceable and includes substantial information on many issues of public importance, human rights abuses, mass telecommunications interception, banking and the planning of dozens of neo-nazi groups. Our sources have in some cases risked their lives or freedom attempting to convey these disclosures to WikiLeaks and to the public,” the statement reads.

WikiLeaks says that because it does not collect or retain source identifying information, sources are not significantly at risk.

In a separate statement, Assange accuses Domscheit-Berg of being in contact with the FBI, implying that he is helping out the US investigation into WikiLeaks and Assange. He also links Domscheit-Berg's wife, Anke, to the CIA.

In addition to the US no-fly list, neo-Nazi material and Bank of America data, which was tipped to reveal serious corrupt practices at the bank, Domscheit-Berg also destroyed information on US intercept arrangements for over 100 internet companies, WikiLeaks said.

The no-fly list, maintained by the US government's Terrorist Screen Center, is a list of people forbidden from travelling in or out of the US on commercial aircraft.

The falling out between Domscheit-Berg and Assange was played out in full public view after a private instant messaging conversation between the pair was leaked.

“You are not anyone's king or god,” Domscheit-Berg told Assange in the chat.

“And you're not even fulfilling your role as a leader right now. A leader communicates and cultivates trust in himself. You are doing the exact opposite. You behave like some kind of emperor or slave trader.”

Assange's statement at the weekend references Domscheit-Berg leaking the chat logs “in clear violation of WikiLeaks internal security directives”. The Inside WikiLeaks book, Assange said, “contains many proven malicious libels”.

Domscheit-Berg's WikiLeaks rival, OpenLeaks, promises to be more transparent than WikiLeaks and route information to media organisations and interest groups instead of publishing material itself. The site still appears to be starting up and there has yet to be any high-profile leaks.


Yeah, as if anyone is going to allow themselves to be screwed over by this fucker.

By his own admission, Schmitt/Domscheit-Berg destroyed a leak of the US no-fly list (which would have started a huge controversy in the US and surely led to an end or restriction of a tyrannical system), several gigs of the long-awaited Bank of America release (which had BoA executives fearful for the future of their criminal organization, as well as hiring spook consultants to prepare dirty-tricks campaigns against wikileaks, prompting the HBGary affair), and files about Nazi groups.

Homeland Security, BoA and the Nazis are the institutions DDB ends up protecting, supposedly to protect the whistleblowers who were brave enough to provide the information (and who almost certainly will not do so again).

He has also effectively shut down Wikileaks altogether for almost a year. (Which I guess wasn't so hard due to the open culture of it, given that this dweebus was able to walk in and do the damage he did.)

What a mother fucker.

And does anyone believe a person of decent motives would ever act this way? Seems plausible DDB is a fucking spook or friend thereof, and I wouldn't be surprised if the supposedly erased material still exists and is being scrutinized by the likes of Homeland Security to see if they can catch the leakers.

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby JackRiddler » Tue Aug 23, 2011 6:37 pm

.

Hm, Amazon showed its political reliability in obediently shutting down Wikileaks. And now...


http://gizmodo.com/5831973/amazon-the-o ... government

Amazon: The Official Cloud Server of the US Government

The US Gov is no stranger to Amazon's data centers: they've used them for sites like Recovery.gov and Energy.gov. But after shuttering 40% of their data centers, the Government is looking to Amazon to house data that's considerably more sensitive.

Not-so-creatively dubbed "GovCloud," Amazon says that the server will require anyone accessing it to be a US citizen. Because Amazon follows stringent regulations, agencies can now store data, such as weapons info and health care records on these GovCloud servers.

Because AWS GovCloud is physically and logically accessible by U.S. persons only, government agencies can now manage more heavily regulated data in AWS while remaining compliant with strict federal requirements.


Is it careless/reckless/unsafe to house sensitive data, like weapons info and health care records, on a server operated in the private sector? Probably not. Amazon, after all, is the biggest and best cloud storage operator, and have occupied that spot with relatively few hiccups over the years. In the event that someone tried to break into the data center, would the actual, IRL security precautions for this Amazon-operated data center be the same as a Government-owned one? Who would take the blame for a security breach?

Questions to consider, at the very least. [Amazon via NextGov]






http://www.nextgov.com/nextgov/ng_20110 ... ef=topnews

Amazon launches gov-only cloud

By Joseph Marks 08/17/2011

Amazon Web Services is launching a new government-only cloud storage service that will require employees to be American citizens, the company announced Tuesday.

That restriction will open up the cloud provider's services to more sensitive data from agencies that must comply with strict data-handling regulations such as the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, Amazon said.

The ITAR regulations prohibit government agencies from sharing information with non-Americans about weapons and other items banned from export on the U.S. munitions list.

Microsoft's Office365 offers a similar option for American-only handling of data in a subsection of its cloud, but the product is geared specifically to Microsoft Office functions, such as word processing, email and PowerPoints, rather than to more complex computer operations.

Amazon's new "GovCloud" offers the same basic security features as other portions of its public cloud, the company said, and also allows agencies to comply with other regulations governing treatment of federal data, such as the Federal Information Security Management Act and the Health Insurance Accountability and Portability Act, the company said.

Computer clouds essentially are large banks of off-site computer servers that can operate much closer to full capacity than standard servers by rapidly repacking data as one customer surges in usage and another one dips. Cloud customers pay for data storage based on use, as with electricity or another utility, rather than with a set fee.

Federal officials have established a cloud-first policy for new information technology endeavors and estimate the government can move a quarter of it's IT infrastructure to the cloud by 2015, saving about $5 billion annually.

Federal agencies have historically been hesitant to move sensitive data and services to the cloud because of security concerns over housing their data off-site.

Several agencies are already housing their public websites -- such as a newly revamped Energy.gov -- and other data that doesn't require enhanced security inside Amazon's public EC2 cloud.

The EC2 cloud's highest-profile government resident is Recovery.gov, the $18 million website that tracks federal stimulus spending.

Stay up-to-date with federal technology news alerts and analysis - sign up for Nextgov's email newsletters.



On the whole, this sounds like a brilliant plan to create a privatized SIPRNET. Complete with SECRET/NOFORN status. Because we know that disclosure risks come mostly from non-US persons running a server! It also occurs to me Amazon will offer this to other governments -- put your cloud on servers run exclusively by fellow Belgians!

.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby hanshan » Wed Aug 24, 2011 11:10 am

...


JackRiddler wrote:.


http://www.theage.com.au/technology/tec ... z1VrVcWovG

Wiki war: 3500 unpublished leaks destroyed forever as Assange hits out

Asher Moses
August 22, 2011


WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's former right-hand man has irrevocably destroyed 3500 unpublished files leaked to the whistleblower site including the complete US no-fly list, five gigabytes of Bank of America documents and detailed information about 20 neo-Nazi groups.

Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who left WikiLeaks last year after a falling out with Assange, revealed the document destruction in an interview with Der Spiegel.

WikiLeaks has hit back, accusing Domscheit-Berg of being in bed with US intelligence agencies and of jeopardising the leaking of “many issues of public importance, human rights abuses, mass telecommunications interception, banking and the planning of dozens of neo-nazi groups”.

Along with the thousands of files, Domscheit-Berg also took the entire Wikileaks encrypted submission system with him on his way out to start a rival site, OpenLeaks. It has resulted in WikiLeaks being unable to receive leaked documents online for a year, with the site instead resorting to snail mail via an Australian P.O. Box at the University of Melbourne.

In a translation of the Der Spiegel interview, Domscheit-Berg said he had the files “shredded to ensure that the sources are not compromised”.


A large factor in Assange and Domscheit-Berg falling out was the fear that Assange released the 400,000 classified US documents about the Iraq war too early without taking the time to properly redact names of US collaborators and informants in Iraq.

In his book released this year, Inside WikiLeaks (review), Domscheit-Berg accused Assange of being autocratic and said the reason he took the submission system and unpublished documents was because “children shouldn't play with guns”.

“We will only return the material to Julian if and when he can prove that he can store the material securely and handle it carefully and responsibly,” he writes.

WikiLeaks has confirmed the breadth of documents that were destroyed in several tweets over the weekend. The organisation labels Domscheit-Berg's actions as “theft” and “sabotage”.

“DDB spits on every courageous whistblower who leaked data if they destroy the keys and refuse to return it. This is not acceptable,” WikiLeaks tweeted.

“Leak organisations don't destroy information whistleblowers risked their lives to leak.”

One Guatemalan human rights lawyer, Renata Avila, published an open letter earlier this month asking what happened to the material she submitted to WikiLeaks.

In a lengthy further statement, WikiLeaks reveals how it spent the past 11 months unsuccessfully trying to negotiate the return of the unpublished leaks and internal communications taken by Domscheit-Berg.

“Mr. Domscheit-Berg has repeatedly attempted to blackmail WikiLeaks by threatening to make available, to forces that oppose WikiLeaks, these private communications and to which Mr. Domscheit-Berg is not a party,” the statement reads.

“He has stated he will commit this action, should WikiLeaks move to charge him with sabotage or theft.”

The statement claims the negotiations were terminated by the mediator who had “doubts” about Domscheit-Berg's “integrity and claimed willingness to return the material”.

In response Domscheit-Berg threatened to destroy the files, WikiLeaks claimed. He now appears to have followed through on that threat.

“The material is irreplaceable and includes substantial information on many issues of public importance, human rights abuses, mass telecommunications interception, banking and the planning of dozens of neo-nazi groups. Our sources have in some cases risked their lives or freedom attempting to convey these disclosures to WikiLeaks and to the public,” the statement reads.

WikiLeaks says that because it does not collect or retain source identifying information, sources are not significantly at risk.

In a separate statement, Assange accuses Domscheit-Berg of being in contact with the FBI, implying that he is helping out the US investigation into WikiLeaks and Assange. He also links Domscheit-Berg's wife, Anke, to the CIA.

In addition to the US no-fly list, neo-Nazi material and Bank of America data, which was tipped to reveal serious corrupt practices at the bank, Domscheit-Berg also destroyed information on US intercept arrangements for over 100 internet companies, WikiLeaks said.

The no-fly list, maintained by the US government's Terrorist Screen Center, is a list of people forbidden from travelling in or out of the US on commercial aircraft.

The falling out between Domscheit-Berg and Assange was played out in full public view after a private instant messaging conversation between the pair was leaked.

“You are not anyone's king or god,” Domscheit-Berg told Assange in the chat.

“And you're not even fulfilling your role as a leader right now. A leader communicates and cultivates trust in himself. You are doing the exact opposite. You behave like some kind of emperor or slave trader.”

Assange's statement at the weekend references Domscheit-Berg leaking the chat logs “in clear violation of WikiLeaks internal security directives”. The Inside WikiLeaks book, Assange said, “contains many proven malicious libels”.

Domscheit-Berg's WikiLeaks rival, OpenLeaks, promises to be more transparent than WikiLeaks and route information to media organisations and interest groups instead of publishing material itself. The site still appears to be starting up and there has yet to be any high-profile leaks.


Yeah, as if anyone is going to allow themselves to be screwed over by this fucker.

By his own admission, Schmitt/Domscheit-Berg destroyed a leak of the US no-fly list (which would have started a huge controversy in the US and surely led to an end or restriction of a tyrannical system), several gigs of the long-awaited Bank of America release (which had BoA executives fearful for the future of their criminal organization, as well as hiring spook consultants to prepare dirty-tricks campaigns against wikileaks, prompting the HBGary affair), and files about Nazi groups.

Homeland Security, BoA and the Nazis are the institutions DDB ends up protecting, supposedly to protect the whistleblowers who were brave enough to provide the information (and who almost certainly will not do so again).

He has also effectively shut down Wikileaks altogether for almost a year. (Which I guess wasn't so hard due to the open culture of it, given that this dweebus was able to walk in and do the damage he did.)

What a mother fucker.

And does anyone believe a person of decent motives would ever act this way? Seems plausible DDB is a fucking spook or friend thereof, and I wouldn't be surprised if the supposedly erased material still exists and is being scrutinized by the likes of Homeland Security to see if they can catch the leakers.

.


say it ain't so...


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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Aug 24, 2011 2:50 pm

.

Some in the media may be expressing their secret hope with the "destroyed forever" verdict. Seems premature. The sources presumably are still out there. But it's a set-back in credibility for all exposure efforts and intimidates future whistleblowers.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby hanshan » Wed Aug 24, 2011 4:26 pm

...

JackRiddler wrote:.

Some in the media may be expressing their secret hope with the "destroyed forever" verdict. Seems premature. The sources presumably are still out there. But it's a set-back in credibility for all exposure efforts and intimidates future whistleblowers.


Was thinking more along the lines of a secret back-up cache. Perhaps a tad too optimistic, .

Keen on seeing that no-fly list. Of course the dirt on BoA, whom exactly,...

The war on whistle blowers an historical reality. Credibility? Viability works.


Mit der Dummheit kampfen Gotter selbst vergebens


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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Wed Aug 24, 2011 8:13 pm

He's a dom shite alright.

He has also effectively shut down Wikileaks altogether for almost a year. (Which I guess wasn't so hard due to the open culture of it, given that this dweebus was able to walk in and do the damage he did.)

What a mother fucker.

And does anyone believe a person of decent motives would ever act this way? Seems plausible DDB is a fucking spook or friend thereof, and I wouldn't be surprised if the supposedly erased material still exists and is being scrutinized by the likes of Homeland Security to see if they can catch the leakers.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Thu Aug 25, 2011 1:54 am

Thumbing Through WikiLeaks' Fresh Batch of Diplomatic Cables
Adam Clark Estes Aug 24, 2011

WikiLeaks appeared to be emptying its file cabinets with the announcement of the release of over 55,000 U.S. diplomatic cables on Tuesday night. No major bombshells have been uncovered in the immediate wake of the data dump, but some bumps in the road suggests that the organization could be in some trouble. Not long after announcing the massive release, WikiLeaks tweeted that they were "under a sustained DOS attack and have regressed to backup servers" and soon thereafter reported that their "Californian DNS hoster, Dynadot, has received [and complied with] a PATRIOT act production order for information on Julian Assange." The servers appeared to be back online Wednesday morning when the organization posted the rest of the cables.

The countries involved span the globe and represent some of America's most tenuous international relationships. The sheer volume of the dump ensures that journalists and volunteers will be digging through the data for days, but WikiLeaks has made it easier for everyone. The cables are available at a searchable database and sorted based on the location of the U.S. Embassy involved: Libya, China, Israel, Russia, Venezuela, Iran, Germany, Afghanistan, France, Indonesia, Rwanda, Turkey, Poland, Syria, Bahrain, South Africa, Somalia. WikiLeaks has asked volunteers to tweet their findings with the #wlfind hashtag on Twitter, where we've found a few interesting revelations.

* U.S. saw a benefit in the privatization of Libyan banks. "There may be opportunities for increased private sector cooperation with U.S. banks and opportunities for the USG to help train Libya's next generation of bankers." [Full cable from March 2008]

* Israel believed "the Palestinians are only Israel's number four threat in the IDI's assessment, following Iran, Syria, and Hizballah" [Full cable from December 2008]

* The U.S. "Ask an Ambassador" query attracted some insults in Israel. "Most messages condemned the U.S. for "double standard" policies, with some asking why the U.S. did not take action to stop Israel. One message read, "Stop the Israeli violence in Lebanon. Zionist barbarians are killing babies. You are not a super power; only a super Masonic puppy." [Full cable from August 2008]

* Diplomats closely monitored Israel's opinion of Bush during his re-election campaign. Among the quotes collected: "Conventional wisdom in Israel," wrote a senior columnist from pluralist Yediot Aharonot on November 1, "is that Bush was and will be the ideal American president from Israel's perspective. The best there is. Israel has no interest in seeing him replaced, and it has every interest in seeing him reelected." [Full cable from December 2004]

* Turks don't like Americans, homosexuals, bikinis. "Istanbul's Bahcesehir University conducted a face-to-face survey with 1,714 Turks on radicalism and extremism as measured by neighborhood tolerance in 34 cities. The poll revealed high levels of intolerance toward non-Muslim, American, homosexual, and non-married neighbors. It also revealed conservative attitudes toward atheists, alcohol consumption, and modern revealing clothes such as women's bathing suits and shorts." [Full cable from June 2009]

* Iran got a hold of some German-made weapons equipment. "We want to advise German officials of information indicating that as of June 2009, two Iranian intermediary firms offered test equipment manufactured by the German firms Rohde & Schwarz and Hottinger Baldwin Messtechnik (HBM) to Iran's primary developer of liquid-fueled ballistic missiles, the Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group (SHIG)." [Full Cable from December 2009]

* Anti-terrorism efforts in the Philippines included building "dual use" airports. "Our $10 million Philippine 1207 initiative would build upon existing U.S. Agency for International Development and Joint Special Operations Task Force-Philippines activity to improve dual-use infrastructure on the islands of Jolo and the neighboring island of Tawi-Tawi, where we have made significant gains in separating the terrorists from the population." [Full cable from April 2007; report from an activist]

We'll update this post with more interesting findings as they're revealed, but based on recent news, some of WikiLeaks best secrets might be lost. Meanwhile, it was also reported earlier this week that former WikiLeaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg had destroyed a cache of 3,500 important documents, including Bank of America secrets and the U.S. no-fly list. Domscheit-Berg has since disputed that allegation.

Update: Salon's Justin Elliott post about "a pair of fascinating cables about American citizens who are living in illegal West Bank settlement" is also worth a look.

Update 2: Vivian Giang at Business Insider caught some interesting factoids in the cables from China, including but not limited to the fact that China thinks "the U.S. should 'not be paranoid' about the alleged Chinese hacking. Saying Chinese technology is 'so sophisticated that it scares the United States'.

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/2 ... les/41659/


Wikileaks invited crowdsourcing of this new batch of cables and tweeps are posting their finds, lots of which are far more interesting than those tame ones reported in the Atlantic.

Here's a selection:

wikileaks WikiLeaks
Less than 2 years ago, the US were selling military parts to the Libyan Air Force through 3rd countries: wikileaks.org/cable/2009/11/… #wlfind
11 hours ago
wikileaks WikiLeaks
Prorogation would "ensure that the government has clear political sailing through the 2010 Winter Olympics" bit.ly/rqhvPK #wlfind
12 hours ago
bailey_carlson Bailey Carlson
Israel and US talk openly about political assassination of leaders of Hamas to "change the paradigm". wikileaks.org/cable/2008/12/… #wlfind
3 hours ago Favorite Retweet Reply
RT @wikileaks: UN, Redcross confirm being attacked by #Israeli military during 2008 war on Gaza http://t.co/hqCC6lC #wlfind
(Original Tweet)
RT @wlfind: RT @farof: #french officials & media lie about #syria and #assad role in hostage liberation just to please him #wlfind http://t.co/lTvSRKp
(Original Tweet)
RT @wlfind: Opposition in #Venezuela asks for #US intervention against #Chavez - http://t.co/NmfddKc - #wlfind #wikileaks via @AdamJung
(Original Tweet)
RT @wikileaks: French Total Oil's in Yemen asked US govt to cover up any diversions of cargo for "national security" reasons http://t.co/6f2fJjs #wlfind
(Original Tweet)
wikileaks WikiLeaks
#wlfind UK: Afghan War is failing, 'young lives thrown away'. uleak.it/?6lz
13 hours ago



WikiLeaks to Release 35,000 Cables: What’s Been Revealed So Far
By: Kevin Gosztola Tuesday August 23, 2011 10:32 pm


Just Over 5,000 Cables Released Already

WikiLeaks is about to release 35,000 US State Embassy cables, nearly fifteen percent of the 250,000 or so cables it obtained and began to release last November as part of Cablegate.

The organization made the announcement on Twitter. Immediately following the announcement, WikiLeaks asked its followers to help “crowd source” the tens of thousands of cables that would be released. Followers could tweet out what they found in the cables and attach the hashtag #wlfind.

Of the cables released, 2,170 are from Taiwan, 3,004 are from China, and 349 are from Libya. It told followers to stay tuned for 4,000 from Israel and that Russia, Venezuela, Indonesia, Syria, Somalia, Bahrain, South Africa, Yemen, Cuba, Germany, Iran, Afghanistan, Poland, France, Turkey, Romania and Rwanda were on the way.

WikiLeaks tweeted out some revelations. One major bombshell involved a congressional delegation led by Sen. John McCain, which went over and met with the Gaddafi regime. In exchange for agreeing to relinquish its WMD program, Libya expressed to the US that it wanted to purchase “lethal weapons from US firms.” The congressional delegation led by McCain was to provide “congressional perspectives on lethal sales to Libya and the security commitments that must be fulfilled prior to any US consideration of lethal sales.”

Two more cables related to Libya were tweeted. One shows in 2007 US companies won $2 billion worth of infrastructure contracts as a reward for political relationships. The other provides an update on Libya’s “banking reform” program and how privatization of Libya banking would provide “opportunities for increased private sector cooperation with US banks.”

With regards to China, WikiLeaks unearthed a cable that shows the All China Federation of Trade Unions (AFCTU) has unions in at least five of the sixty Wal-Marts in China. Despite the fact that this might sound amazing given the fact that Wal-Mart will not allow organized labor in US Wal-Marts, US diplomat David S. Sedney concludes, “The Wal-Mart unions have have more to do with the role of politics in the ACFTU than with advancing workers’ rights.”

The majority of the cables are UNCLASSIFIED. There are a few cables that are CONFIDENTIAL or SECRET. That so many of the cables being put out are unclassified further indicates how US government suffers from secrecy cancer. (And, one of the cables I already used in a story I posted in February when I was writing for WL Central: “The Abu Salim Massacre: Cables on Libya’s Continued Impunity for the 1996 Killings.”

Here is what has been discovered in the first hours since WikiLeaks asked its followers to crowd-source the cables:

—McDonald’s and Yum! Brands (which owns KFC and Pizza Hut) managed to get the Chinese Labor Bureau to conclude they were not violating any labor laws (April 13, 2007). The companies assert they do not have to pay student part-time workers minimum wage. The Bureau didn’t find this to be a violation. However, it did find that in some cases employees were working “more hours than allowed under law” and that some employees didn’t have employment contracts.

—Minister of Justice Abduljalil tried to resign from his posting as Libya’s Justice Minister-equivalent and failed (February 4, 2010) Abduljalil is now the head of the National Transitional Council (NTC) in Libya. After the country is secured, he is likely to become the interim leader of Libya until a constitution is drawn up and elections are able to be held. Reportedly he was not allowed to resign because Saif al-Islam Gaddafi would not give his resignation his blessing.

—Abduljalil told former ambassador Gene Cretz Libya would be opening up its economy to other countries and would be seeking international assistance for the development of Libya’s private sector (January 27, 2010) Abduljalil wanted help with strengthening the commercial legal environment. The cabled indicates the US had been working closely to develop the law in Libya, even with regards to the country’s Criminal Code. There was one small problem, however; Abduljalil said Libyans are “concerned” about US support for Israel and that Europe and US is creating terrorism because the countries are “against” Muslims.

—Consulting firm McKinsey & Co. engaged in Libyan Central Bank study on potential privatization of state-owned banks (October 2, 2006) The firm found that Libya’s “top priority” was to attract business from foreign banks. One major problem was the absence of “clear property rights.” Clear titles for Libyan properties no longer existed because the Libya government destroyed private title records in the 1980s. The cable suggests this would make work in real estate, construction and tourism sectors very complicated for investors.

—Nike had a former employee from one of its suppliers accuse the company of using child labor from 2003-2007 to make soccer balls (September 30, 2009) Nike said it had already investigated these allegations in 2007 and the soccer balls in question were likely counterfeit goods so whether they were made with child labor or not was not Nike’s problem.

—Dioxin contamination threatened Taiwan’s food supply (July 12, 2005) Researchers working for Taiwan’s Environmental Protection Administration (TEPA) determined sludge in two of Taiwan’s rivers had “more than fifty times TEPA’s established standard for ground pollution.”


I’ll be helping WikiLeaks crowd-source these cables, as I think that it isn’t only important to defend the idea and concept behind WikiLeaks. It’s also important to report on the documents released as well or else it would be too easy to suggest the organization poses no value to the world.

You can help too:

1. Here is a link to the 5,000 or so cables released on August 23.

2. Someone affiliated with Anonymous has put together this great URL shortener for tweeting. Copy and paste the link to the cable with the revelation you want to share on Twitter into the field on this page.

3. Come up with a way to summarize your finding in less than 140 characters and make sure to include the hashtag #wlfind in your tweet.

4. Let me know in the comments thread what you’ve found in the batch.

Together we’ll find out the truth that the media isn’t willing to give us. As WikiLeaks reminded its followers, each cable is a cable the New York Times has chosen to not cover.

Any corporate media outlet should want to be able to report on the scoops buried in this batch of cables. Since they are not interested in being adversarial to power and risking their access to government officials, it’s up to us to do the job they refuse to do.

http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/2011/0 ... ed-so-far/


Also, comprehensive leak resources here: http://wlcentral.org/cablegate
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Thu Aug 25, 2011 6:11 pm

The contra-PR:

"UNREDACTED CABLES FOUND ON INTERNET! WIKILEAKS IS NOT SECURE!! INNOCENTS ENDANGERED!!!" BLAH BLAH BLAH!!!!

Leak at Wikileaks
Wikileaks has a security problem. And much larger in scope than previously known. How safe are unveiling platforms?


Security | 25.08.2011 07:00 | Steffen force

They had the same goal: transparency. And they were friends. Today joins Julian Assange, the eccentric Aussie and Daniel Domscheit-Berg, the maverick German, only suspicion and hatred. The idea, for which they were both threatened, thereby causing damage. Assange and Domscheit-Berg started a mud fight, both Wikileaks, the mother of all whistleblowers platforms, as well OpenLeaks, the successor project of the German, can be dangerous. The war of the nerds casts doubt on it, how to deal responsibly, the self-appointed guardians of transparency with the data entrusted to them. Because Wikileaks leak itself is defeated. And much larger in scope than previously known.

... etc ...

http://translate.google.com/translate?j ... en&act=url


The reporting organization, der Freitag ^^^ is one of DDB's media partners and as far as I can tell, the unredacted cables were loosed by DDB himself - he is known to have passed documents around to his "friends" in past months. Sorry I haven't been able to track down where I read that but will post it here when I find it. Probably at Rixstep.

Wikileaks response:
wikileaks WikiLeaks
The Frietag story is mostly false. Their source is their business partner, DDB, who has for months engaged in reckless conduct.
5 hours ago



Similarly, at the Dailytech:
Wikileaks' Assange Mad That Admin "Stole" His "Stolen" Docs, Vows to Sue

Jason Mick (Blog) - August 22, 2011 9:48 AM
...
Mr. Domscheit-Berg is a supporter of a more disciplined brand of transparency, that's somewhat closer to traditional investigative journalism, versus the tactics of Anonymous and Wikileaks.

Notably, with his new site OpenLeaks, he promises to be careful to redacted potentially dangerous information before publication, and be careful that none of his publications reveal his sources.

In a recent interview with the BBC, Mr. Domscheit-Berg recalls the reason he felt the need to leave Wikileaks, commenting, "I felt that [Wikileaks] was crumbling apart because [Julian Assange] was so damn ignorant... [Assange was] behaving like a child clutching on his toy."
...

http://www.dailytech.com/Wikileaks+Assa ... e22507.htm
Lots of Assange-hate in the comments there ^^^


I suspect that Wikileaks is done for and will be "routed around" - the system engineer's solution.

Edit: It's in the works: LeakDirectory: http://leakdirectory.org/index.php/Leak_Site_Directory
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:45 am

Image

That's a captcha from David Leigh's Wikileaks book, the one he sold film rights to DreamWorks .

Where it says "That's the password", that really is the password to the encrypted, online, unredacted, entire cablegate file!!??!!

Leigh made public the password months ago and DDB made public the whereabouts of the file a few days ago.

This revelation caused a furor today. Here is a paste-binned/crowdsourced timeline that is in progress (check for further developments in a few hours):

The degree of confusion and conjecture about the release of the unredacted cables leads me to believe that a crowdsourced timeline, with references, could be useful. Please help build this and maybe we'll get closer to an accurate view of what went on.
Naomi, 1/09

You are all amazingly awesome. Thank you even more for including references with your entries.

Questions I think need answering:
1). Did The Guardian download their copy of the cables from the WL server? Statement this evening suggests not. // We can make further enquiries there.

2). How long was the file hosted at http://wikileaks.org/file/wikileaks_archive.7z

3). Can we confirm if/when it was pushed out to mirrors? DDB "returning files" theory implies that this was done by mistake, I think. // plan for this one too

4). It'd also be nice to shed some light on how Heather Brooke got hold of the cables.
WL torrents,, ordered by upload date: https://thepiratebay.org/search/wikileaks/0/4/0


April 12, 2010 at 9:22pm - creation/modification date of unzipped cables.csv file
https://twitter.com/#!/flyingmonkeyair/ ... 1814639616

June 2010
WL archive from this time includes unredacted cables file.
Source: https://twitter.com/#!/ncikjohnston/sta ... 0538428418

August 2010
The Guardian receives cables.csv from WL (confirming) Well ahead of Nov publication.
Context: early delivery quid pro quo for delaying Iraq releases for 6 weeks. Ch 11 (p157 and preceding of Guardian book) says Leigh received files before JA went to Sweden, mid-Aug.

September 2010
Domscheit-Berg leaves Wikileaks, taking contents of server.
Source: http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor ... 84,00.html
(resigns 15 Sept as per http://rixstep.com/1/20110829,00.shtml)
irrelevant, torrent already on interwebz. (could be... that's what we're trying to work out. We don't know whether files were hosted continually from June, they could have been removed but present in DDB back up) Torrents don't go away. They are in old torrents from June/July 2010. DDB story drew attention to these files though, so that relationship should be included.okay got you.

1st November
NYT receives copy of cablegate files from The Guardian, who have in turn received a copy independently from Heather Brooke. http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor ... -2,00.html

28th November 2010
Wikileaks begin publishing US embassy cables.
Source: http://www.wikileaks.nl/cablegate.html

2010-12-03
Econ Verlag announces Daniel Domscheit-Berg's upcoming book
http://www.bild.de/politik/2010/politik ... .bild.html

December ?? 2010 ("At the end of 2010")
"Domscheit-Berg finally returned to WikiLeaks a collection of various files that he had taken with him, including the encrypted cables"
http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor ... 84,00.html

15 December torrents (WL mirrors)
There seem to have been multiple torrent files uploaded around this date. At least one of them includes the encrypted cables.csv file. (Implication that returned DDB files pushed out to mirrors without being checked through carefully enough... if indeed file was no longer availabe on WL own server by that point).

Edit: magnet link removed. Go to original pirate pad for link.

http://www.torrentreactor.net/torrents/ ... ks-Archive
http://btjunkie.org/torrent/Compleat-Wi ... 6eef18ab9a

>> we will speak to mirror admins tomorrow to clarify some of this.
They are @p0bailey and @orioldehesa

21 Dec
Torrent includes xyz file:
http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/6055886 ... -ANONYMOUS

Febuary 1st 2011
David Leigh & Luke Harding Publish Paperback of Wikileaks Book
Source http://www.amazon.co.uk/WikiLeaks-Insid ... 852652399/

2011-02-11
Daniel Domscheit-Berg's book Inside WikiLeaks: Meine Zeit bei der gefährlichsten Website der Welt (Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website) is released
https://www.amazon.de/Inside-WikiLeaks- ... 430201217/

DDB book publicity; talks about holding back material from WL:
http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/helen ... -domscheit

10 August 2011
Ill fated Openleaks event at CCC Camp. http://events.ccc.de/camp/2011/Fahrplan ... 52.en.html

2011-08-13
Chaos Computer Club expels Domscheit-Berg
https://netzpolitik.org/2011/kommentar- ... ent-432843

14 August 2011
Der Spiegel reports that DDB has been expelled from CCC
http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/0,15 ... 75,00.html
2011-08-20
Holger Stark confirms deletion of WikiLeaks data by Domscheit-Berg after call with him
https://twitter.com/#!/holger_stark/sta ... 0273636353

26 August 2011
Freitag article - describes process of locating cables, reveals password is widely available (did we know this before?) http://translate.google.com/translate?j ... hne-nerven


August 29th 2011
Der Spiegel Article : Accidental Release of US Cables Endangers Sources
http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor ... 84,00.html


2011-08-29
xyz.7z could have cables in them
https://twitter.com/#!/Nin_99/status/108215394279501825

2011-08-30
Pastebin entry highlighting password described in David Leigh's book
http://pastebin.com/SBq9Xpsr

2011-08-30
Nin_99's tweet here got me trying the David Leigh password on them
https://twitter.com/#!/Nin_99/status/108988882862870529
and it worked:
https://twitter.com/#!/flyingmonkeyair/ ... 0035836928 first definititive tweet in the wild that the password worked

2011-08-30
Encrypted cables uploaded to Hotfile
http://twitter.com/#!/Nin_99/status/109024699903770624

NB: Naoimi, there's some good stuff here (longer DDB timeline): http://rixstep.com/1/20110829,00.shtml So there is, feel free to post some of that here if you think it helps.

http://piratepad.net/6Vyvjih0ja

Cablegate encryption: Truth from Berlin…
This article was written by http://pastebin.com/SBq9Xpsr
Image

Daniel Domscheit-Berg said he didn’t know the password before reading the Leigh book, but apparently *did* know the hidden file name on Bittorrent. Using these two facts (password and the hidden file location), he then went around ingratiating himself with various players by handing them the entire Cablegate archive under the mutually deniable cover of “warning” them about the Leigh book. Enraged after being expelled from the CCC he “gave” the cables in this way to more and more people in exchange for alliances and positive spin culminating with the now infamous Freitag [= german media partner of Domscheit-Berg's OpenLeaks] and Information.dk articles and now the thing is…

A Guardian editor, David Leigh, who had a legal run in with WikiLeaks last year, betrayed the entire Cablegate decryption password in his book. Page 135-139 of “Inside Julian Assange’s War on Secrecy”:

[Leigh] asked Assange to stop procrastinating, and hand over the biggest trove of all: the cables. Assange said, “I could give you half of them, covering the first 50% of the period.”

Leigh refused. All or nothing, he said. “What happens if you end up in an orange jump-suit en route to Guantánamo before you can release the full files?” In return he would give Assange a promise to keep the cables secure, and not to publish them until the time came. Assange had always been vague about timing: he generally indicated, however, that October would be a suitable date. He believed the US army’s charges against the imprisoned soldier Bradley Manning would have crystallised by then, and publication could not make his fate any worse. He also said, echoing Leigh’s gallows humour: “I’m going to need to be safe in Cuba first!” Eventually, Assange capitulated. Late at night, after a two-hour debate, he started the process on one of his little netbooks that would enable Leigh to download the entire tranche of cables. The Guardian journalist had to set up the PGP encryption system on his laptop at home across the other side of London. Then he could feed in a password. Assange wrote down on a scrap of paper:

ACollectionOfHistorySince_1966_ToThe_PresentDay#. “That’s the password,” he said. “But you have to add one extra word when you type it in. You have to put in the word ‘Diplomatic’ before the word ‘History’ Can you people to theremember that?” “I can remember that.” Leigh set off home, and successfully installed the PGP software. He typed in the lengthy password, and was gratified to be able to download a huge file from Assange’s temporary website. Then he realized it was zipped up – compressed using a format called 7z which he had never heard of, and couldn’t understand. He got back in his car and drove through the deserted London streets in the small hours, to Assange’s headquarters in Southwick Mews. Assange smiled a little pityingly, and unzipped it for him.

No-one took note of the Leigh book since where the encrypted file was located was a mystery!

Enter the 2nd bad guy of our story: Daniel Domscheit-Berg. DDB said he didn’t know the password before reading the Leigh book, but apparently *did* know the hidden file name on Bittorrent. Using these two facts (password and the hidden file location), he then went around ingratiating himself with various players by handing them the entire Cablegate archive under the mutually deniable cover of “warning” them about the Leigh book. Enraged after being expelled from the CCC he “gave” the cables in this way to more and more people in exchange for alliances and positive spin culminating with the now infamous Freitag [= german media partner of Domscheit-Berg's OpenLeaks] and Information.dk articles and now the thing is fucking everywhere…

http://crowdleaks.org/cablegate-encrypt ... wikileaks/


Statement from Wikileaks: http://www.wikileaks.org/Guardian-journ ... ently.html

Statement from the Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/se ... les-online

More details:http://boingboing.net/2011/08/31/wikileaks-guardian-journalist-negligently-published-password-to-unredacted-cables.html

Rixtep: "That Super-Secret WikiLeaks Encryption Key File": http://rixstep.com/1/1/20110830,00.shtml

Domscheit-Berg cease and desist from Wikileaks lawyer: http://translate.google.co.uk/translate ... 94685.html
Last edited by Plutonia on Thu Sep 01, 2011 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:54 am

This just up, a (thankfully) more intelligible analysis from Crikey:

Thursday, 1 September 2011 / One comment
It’s done: bruised egos lead to the release of uncensored WikiLeaks cables

by Bernard Keane

The full, unredacted set of WikiLeaks cables is now available online and in readable form, courtesy of a three-way clash of egos between Julian Assange, disgruntled ex-WikiLeaks volunteer Daniel Domscheit-Berg and the Guardian’s senior journalists.

The release places in potentially grave danger US diplomatic sources whose names have been removed from the publicly released cables.

How? A document containing the full set of over a quarter of a million cables was placed online in encrypted form late last year. In what circumstances is unclear — according to different sources, it was done either by Julian Assange himself or, it now seems more likely, posted unwittingly by a WikiLeaks supporter, after material taken by Domscheit-Berg was returned to WikiLeaks. By that time, full unencrypted sets of the cables had already been passed by WikiLeaks to the The Guardian, which passed them to The New York Times against Assange’s wishes.

In any event, the online material at that point was unreadable without a password.

The problem was, the password was made available, by none other than The Guardian’s David Leigh, in his book released in February this year co-written with Luke Harding, WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange’s War on Secrecy. An extract from the book, which was published after the encrypted material had gone online:

Eventually, Assange capitulated. Late at night, after a two-hour debate, he started the process on one of his little netbooks that would enable Leigh to download the entire tranche of cables. The Guardian journalist had to set up the PGP encryption system on his laptop at home across the other side of London. Then he could feed in a password. Assange wrote down on a scrap of paper:

CollectionOfHistorySince_1966_ToThe_PresentDay#

“That’s the password,” he said. “But you have to add one extra word when you type it in. You have to put in the word ‘Diplomatic’ before the word ‘History’ Can you remember that?” “I can remember that.” Leigh set off home, and successfully installed the PGP software.

Leigh thus, as part of his effort to cash in on his once-intense but by then-soured relationship with Assange, had revealed the key to decrypting the entire set of cables that had been available online.

However, it has taken an extended period for people to link up the material that is available, with the key. Enter Daniel Domscheit-Berg, whose “Open Leaks” project has flamed out spectacularly in recent weeks. According to Der Spiegel, someone from Domscheit-Berg’s group — which narrows the suspects very rapidly — has in recent days been drawing attention to the connection between the file online — long since mirrored and distributed beyond hope of retrieval — and the password.

The vast irony of the breach is that for over a year, WikiLeaks has been accused by sections of the media, governments and foreign policy wonks of placing informants and sources in danger by releasing the cables, in contrast to the “responsible” handling of leaked material by the mainstream media — The New York Times’s Bill Keller actually boasted of lengthy meetings with the State Department to agree which cables his paper would release. Now, it turns out, it was the mainstream media itself that was responsible for distributing the magic password that may well place lives at risk.

This has sparked a remarkable round of recriminations. WikiLeaks — presumably Julian Assange, although it’s unsigned —  has launched an extended spray at The Guardian, Leigh and his editor Alan Rusbridger for the breach, and accused The Guardian (again) of breaching the security conditions WikiLeaks placed on the material. WikiLeaks also says it immediately contacted human rights organisations and the State Department to advise of the breach, and to establish whether the State Department’s source notification program — put in place when the cables were first released last year — had contacted everyone identified as being at risk if their identities were revealed (bizarrely, its action of contacting the State Department was misrepresented by diehard WikiLeaks opponent and US apologist Michael Fullilove as WikiLeaks complaining to the Americans that it had been “hacked”). WikiLeaks also says the breach was behind its sudden, dramatic surge in cables release, which has seen thousands of cables released in the last few days.

In response, The Guardian has rejected all responsibility, in a piece by former WikiLeaks employee-turned-critic James Ball. The Guardian itself released a statement:

Our book about WikiLeaks was published last February. It contained a password, but no details of the location of the files, and we were told it was a temporary password which would expire and be deleted in a matter of hours. “It was a meaningless piece of information to anyone except the person(s) who created the database. No concerns were expressed when the book was published and if anyone at WikiLeaks had thought this compromised security they have had seven months to remove the files. That they didn’t do so clearly shows the problem was not caused by the Guardian’s book.”

However, The Guardian seems unaware that it would be impossible to “remove the files” once they had been mirrored and made available as a torrent, as if data could simply be pulled back off the internet by the body first posting it regardless of what others had subsequently done with it.

Shortly before deadline, Wikileaks was conducting a global consultation to determine if it should release the unredacted cables itself, with nearly all opinion favouring release.

The leak is the result of the vast egos involved in the WikiLeaks saga and the deep distrust, not to say visceral loathing, that has replaced once close relationships between the fractious Assange and WikiLeaks staff and external collaborators (however much they would reject the term) such as Leigh and his Guardian colleagues. And the latter appear to have preferred big-noting themselves with “meaningless pieces of information” to protecting potentially grave source material as closely as possible.

Note: Crikey has decided not link to the location of the unredacted cables or identify the file name.

http://www.crikey.com.au/2011/09/01/its ... ks-cables/
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Sep 01, 2011 1:34 am

Thanks for all this Plutonia.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Plutonia » Thu Sep 01, 2011 2:26 am

Joe Hillshoist wrote:Thanks for all this Plutonia.

NP Joe. :tiphat:

Sadly, this story is replacing the collective examination of the 100 000 + cables, Wikileaks just released.

BTW, there are some juicy ones about you folks down under - I don't know if you caught any of them?
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Sep 01, 2011 3:35 am

Plutonia, do you mind editing the magnet hash ID thingy? I have a humble netbook and it renders all this juicy brainfood quite hard to read.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Sep 01, 2011 6:16 am

Plutonia wrote:
Joe Hillshoist wrote:Thanks for all this Plutonia.

NP Joe. :tiphat:

Sadly, this story is replacing the collective examination of the 100 000 + cables, Wikileaks just released.

BTW, there are some juicy ones about you folks down under - I don't know if you caught any of them?


There's a no fly list thats quite interesting so far.
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