Um, I Think It's Time for a Thread on WikiLeaks

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yeah that was dumb. but he does make a few criticisms of the article that seem valid to me.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:03 (nine years ago)

I'll get to them! Once I stop laughing.

But seriously, his response seems to be something like 'the idea that just because the dnc docs were hacked by the russian government, that I would have gotten them from the russian government, is totally circumstantial speculation, and also the journalist tweeted about Hillary proving this is all a conspiracy!'

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:07 (nine years ago)

why don't you actually read them before writing that "his response seems to be something like..."?

his responses are mostly him asserting that he /has/ been critical of things the NYT article implies he hasn't been critical of.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:10 (nine years ago)

sorry i don't really have a "side" in this argument but it seems like Frederik's last post is textbook jumping to conclusions based on preconceived opinions rather than actually giving something a fair shake. i'm not singling Frederik out -- we all do this. but sometimes the way that people fall immediately into familiar (opposed?) camps in these threads is a little dispiriting.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:11 (nine years ago)

Ok, 'the first two lines of his response seems to be...'

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:13 (nine years ago)

:)

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:14 (nine years ago)

But quite honestly, at this point, Assange and wikileaks has become so rotten, that I don't feel particularly bad for not giving them 'a fair shake' or something like that.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:14 (nine years ago)

I'll jump to conclusions on Trump as well, for instance, and won't feel particularly bad about it.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:15 (nine years ago)

i feel like there's got to be a good sitcom about assange at the ecuadorian embassy.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:16 (nine years ago)

in principle i don't like wikileaks' carelessness wrt to publishing of sensitive personal information, but...has there ever been any actual reporting on people who have been materially harmed by this? it seems like there's a lot of handwringing and speculation and then...nothing

have you ever even read The Drudge Report? Have you gone on Stormfron (k3vin k.), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:25 (nine years ago)

Yeah, some of the DNC donors were then immediately attacked by identity thieves. Nobody knows what their spreading of personal information has done in Turkey or Saudi Arabia, but from interviews some of the targets sound pretty terrified.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:44 (nine years ago)

i feel like even if there wasn't a specific report on people being harmed, it's a good principle not to expose non-public-figures to harassment or worse if you can help it

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:45 (nine years ago)

otm. Spreading personal information on almost every Turkish woman for no good reason, in a country where domestic violence and honor killings is still a big problem, is evil on it's face. We don't need to actually count how many murderers got the victims information from their twitter account.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:48 (nine years ago)

absolutely, the standard has to be strict liability.

by the light of the burning Citroën, Thursday, 1 September 2016 12:51 (nine years ago)

how do you enforce those standards and preserve anonymity?

a confederacy of lampreys (rushomancy), Thursday, 1 September 2016 13:17 (nine years ago)

Read the response. I won't say that it challenges the story on 'factual grounds', it just repeatedly says 'It is false'. Some of the 'false' things aren't in the article to begin with, others are refuted by either bad evidence (as in the idea that because wikileaks has leaked 650.000 documents on Russia, it's been critical of Russia. Leaking American diplomatic cables criticizing Russia is not being anti-Russia) or no evidence at all (such as just saying that it's false that Assange considered going to Russia). A couple of the most serious cases, such as the attack on the Panama Papers and the apparent critical leak of Russian documents that was promised but then shelved, isn't mentioned at all.

Really, wikileaks response is weak on the evidence, and is undermined by trying to paint it as a conspiracy. And another thing, the evidence of mischief is that nyt has endorsed Hillary against Trump! So now you can't be anti-Trump if you want to be 'pure'?

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 13:23 (nine years ago)

Wikileaks also released Russian diplomatic cables. The report doesn't mention why the leaked materials Assange promised about domestic corruption didn't get published extensively - Wikileaks is thought to have sold them to Novaya Gazeta (the same Novaya Gazeta that released some of the Panama papers, is described in glowing terms as "one of the last independent newspapers in Russia", etc, in the article). There's a big question mark over why those materials were never published in their entirety but the question is largely with Novaya Gazeta and not with Wikileaks. NG doesn't dispute having access to the archive.

Assange has become more desperate since 2011 and more reliant on favours and positive exposure so it's not beyond the bounds of possibility that he has an arrangement to publish state-hacked materials but he does remain fairly critical of Russia and has frequently campaigned on the same bill as Pussy Riot, etc.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 1 September 2016 14:30 (nine years ago)

Lol, so you're saying wikileaks will publish personal information that might lead to murder in a heartbeat, but if they've 'sold' the information, they throw up their hands and say 'nothing we can do'. Come on.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 14:46 (nine years ago)

Ultimately, yes. It doesn't reflect well on Assange or Wikileaks and is clearly not intended as a defence of either. Assange appears to regard information in the Wikileaks archive as his personal property to dispose of as he wishes. He is thought to have sold the Russia archives to Alexander Lebedev. It's one of the relatively few cases where there was a willing, slightly unscrupulous and deep-pocketed buyer for his data. I assume that Assange could still release the information but won't because it would compromise his chances of selling similar data in the future. Selling the info to an opposition newspaper doesn't particularly fit the narrative WP is going for though.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 1 September 2016 14:51 (nine years ago)

Also, been going through the wikileaks section called 'leaks', and no, there is nothing from Russia. Which cables are you talking about?

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 14:56 (nine years ago)

May be my mistake - i was under the impression that they had released Russian diplomatic communication with the US but that may not be accurate.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 1 September 2016 15:06 (nine years ago)

i should note that it's one thing for assange to say that he's publicly criticized russia -- as indeed he has. but it's also true that he hasn't been nearly as aggressive in soliciting leaked materials that might damage russia. you can choose to buy his justification that russia just isn't as important (or as damaging) globally as the USA, or not.

it's a familiar response from leftists when they are criticized for focusing their outrage on the US and Europe and not speaking out against the human-rights disasters of other countries. certainly you can't expect someone to express an equal amount of outrage at everything--that strikes me as close to the kind of performative outrage-policing people do on social media, and equally unhelpful. i guess the question is whether there's a /pattern/ to assange's actions that suggests that his choices of what and when to leak, and how to spin it, are echoing putin talking points in ways that are more than coincidental.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 15:17 (nine years ago)

I guess they could definitely have released diplomatic communications between Russia and US, but it would be in one of the leaks of US information, I think.

My big issue with Assange's justification of his priorities is that they're just based on his own assumptions. The whole point of leaking organizations was to set information free, but now he act as just another gatekeeper, and this new gatekeeper is also an egomaniacal rapist. That's not progress in my book.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 15:29 (nine years ago)

What I am not clear on is the extent to which Wikileaks really does act as a gatekeeper or even solicits hacks. In its current form it looks more like a branded clearing house for stuff other people have leaked. Does Assange set priorities or direct a dedicated hacking team?

Most of the stuff they leak is either against people with a specific set of local actors who don't like them (the AKP stuff, the Saudi leaks, the anti-Assad leaks) or the one universal target every disgruntled individual in the world dislikes (the US).

Actually hacking Russian government servers would require a high degree of proficiency in Russian which narrows the pool considerably. It would be telling if Russian or Ukrainian hackers did release info to them and they refused to publish it but, again, I don't know what would stop them just sticking it all on Pastebin.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 1 September 2016 15:56 (nine years ago)

I don't know if they actually act as a gatekeeper either, there's a bunch of logistical reasons as to why getting documents from autocratic regimes might be tougher than from pretty open democracies. But Assange speaks as if he's a gatekeeper.

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 16:00 (nine years ago)

Oh absolutely.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 1 September 2016 16:03 (nine years ago)

yeah, it's interesting that wikileaks even exists, in a sense. since any hacker could just post a torrent file to an entire terabyte of leaked stuff to pastebin or whatever

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 16:10 (nine years ago)

i mean, since you don't /need/ wikileaks to post stuff, the whole point of wikileaks is as a kind of amplifier/curator of leaked stuff. which means that assange's judgement is important.

wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 1 September 2016 16:11 (nine years ago)

Back in the day wikileaks could help with curation and redaction. But now that they just publish everything, and several other newslets are more than willing to help with the work, they frankly are quite pointless to most whistleblowers. Which is probably why they get their stuff from Putin now :)

Frederik B, Thursday, 1 September 2016 16:18 (nine years ago)

@ggreenwald
The NYT partners quite often with a group that today it suggests is a Russian asset. Very suspicious behavior.

The Hon. J. Piedmont Mumblethunder (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 1 September 2016 18:49 (nine years ago)

glenn greenwald disingenuously accuses another media outlet of being disingenuous

and the painted ponies, they go up and down

wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 2 September 2016 04:38 (nine years ago)

http://www.dailydot.com/layer8/wikileaks-syria-files-syria-russia-bank-2-billion/

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Friday, 9 September 2016 16:36 (nine years ago)

http://www.theverge.com/2016/9/9/12864328/wikileaks-threat-reporters-syria-russia-emails

good guys

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Friday, 9 September 2016 18:30 (nine years ago)

I found good stuff
email messages from Ninja of Die Antwoord

https://wikileaks.org/sony/emails/emailid/19478

dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Thursday, 22 September 2016 00:36 (nine years ago)

I wish that had been in one of the State Department cable batches

Anacostia Aerodrome (El Tomboto), Thursday, 22 September 2016 01:06 (nine years ago)

for sure

dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Thursday, 22 September 2016 01:13 (nine years ago)

three weeks pass...

so what's going on?

(•̪●) (carne asada), Monday, 17 October 2016 14:24 (nine years ago)

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/6f997f97c5f140a29f385ea05f1b642c/wikileaks-assanges-internet-link-severed-state-actor

Was he hosting pitchfork.com there?

StanM, Monday, 17 October 2016 15:17 (nine years ago)

maybe pamela anderson really did poison him

geometry-stabilized craft (art), Monday, 17 October 2016 15:21 (nine years ago)

Idk how this can be any state actor other than Ecuador.

Bubba H.O.T.A.P.E (ShariVari), Monday, 17 October 2016 15:23 (nine years ago)

My impressions so far:

- There's a lot of stuff to sift through that hasn't been thoroughly sifted through, so it's premature to say "nothing to see here."
- However to the extent stuff has come out so far, there's no complete shocker/smoking gun stuff. There is however a lot of interesting stuff in terms of insights into how the Clinton campaign operates, what people inside it really think, arguably just how political power works in the US in 2016 and how it interacts with finance and other industries (speaking both to the transcripts and the podesta emails).

I don't like the knee-jerk "we already knew all of this" reactions because (1) it's not always exactly true and (2) it's the kind of stuff that Clinton supporters deny all the time. Nonetheless, if you are looking for bodies, bribes etc, that's not here, at least so far.

the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Monday, 17 October 2016 16:01 (nine years ago)

Can I just say, it's not okay to hack and leak peoples personal emails to find out how they 'really think'. It's illegal bullshit, and nothing that has come out of the podesta mails so far legitimates what's a gross breach of privacy.

Frederik B, Monday, 17 October 2016 16:05 (nine years ago)

The way certain parts of the hard left has become completely okay with illegal attacks on their 'liberal' opponents is gross and unhealthy.

Frederik B, Monday, 17 October 2016 16:06 (nine years ago)

seems likely Hillary called in some State Dept favors from Ecuador and if so good for her Assange should be in jail

Οὖτις, Monday, 17 October 2016 16:11 (nine years ago)

when you give 1.4 million people top secret clearance these things happen

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 17 October 2016 16:21 (nine years ago)

Clinton campaign shouldn't have given 1.4 million staff members security clearance. Thx Adam!

by the light of the burning Citroën, Monday, 17 October 2016 16:40 (nine years ago)

There is however a lot of interesting stuff in terms of insights into how the Clinton campaign operates, what people inside it really think, arguably just how political power works in the US in 2016 and how it interacts with finance and other industries (speaking both to the transcripts and the podesta emails).

i have yet to see anything particularly interesting or enlightening

Mordy, Monday, 17 October 2016 16:45 (nine years ago)

How about the proposal to put fake anti-wall-street rhetoric in the Deutsche Bank speech in order to then leak it and throw people off the scent.

the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Monday, 17 October 2016 16:48 (nine years ago)

At a minimum that's hilarious imo

the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Monday, 17 October 2016 16:52 (nine years ago)

It didn't happen. And hilarious doesn't make it legal to hack.

Frederik B, Monday, 17 October 2016 17:06 (nine years ago)


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