Have you heard of the decentralised (no HQ, no office, no CEO) WIKILEAKS??

[This has since been started up again due to a change of heart by the
judge in question.]

http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/contributors/1545
Wikileaks Exposes Corporate and Government Secrecy, So It Has Been
Shut Down in the U.S.
Submitted by BuzzFlash on Sat, 02/23/2008 - 9:43am. Guest Contribution
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION (Special to BuzzFlash.com)
By Jonathan Franklin

An attempt by a Swiss bank to shut down Wikileaks, a website that
publishes secret military and corporate documents, has backfired into
a fiery debate over Internet freedom. On February 15, Bank Julius Baer
won a court order in San Francisco Federal Court to have the US domain
for the site shuttered, after the controversial whistleblower site
published hundreds of pages of internal bank documents.

The documents, allegedly given to Wikileaks by a former bank vice
president, purport to show money laundering and tax evasion by the
venerable Geneva-based institution, which manages an estimated 405
billion Swiss francs (GBP 189.7 billion). Following the court victory,
however, Bank Julius Baer instantly lost what may have been its most
valuable asset – anonymity.

Hundreds of bloggers, online columnists and websites decried the
bank's move as they launched a counterattack and lobbied in favor of
Wikileaks right to anonymously publish secrets. By Wednesday evening,
less than a week after the court decision, a Google search for the
court case turned up a staggering 69,000 hits. Four hours later, the
tally was 78,000 hits.

"The infrastructure that wikileaks uses is easily replicated. It is
not unique but potentially very important as it is a format that is
simple, inexpensive to design and easily mirrored. …from a technical
standpoint it is trivial," said John Paulfrey, Executive Director of
the Berkman Center at Harvard. "In a way it is a censors nightmare and
a very good friend to democracy activists in repressive regimes."

While the Judge's order has blocked the US website address, the banned
documents were plastered around the world on websites from South
Africa to Switzerland. Founders of Wikileaks long ago made contingency
plans by setting up sites around the world including here that
continued to publish thousands of documents and promote what the
website calls "an uncensorable system for untraceable mass document
leaking and public analysis."

Whether the controversy will also derail Julius Baer's attempt to spin
off Julius Baer Americas, its $73 billion US subsidiary in an IPO
remains unclear. With thousands of Internet users and the worldwide
media now carousing through the bank's internal records, however,
Goldman Sachs will bring a most unusual IPO to market – a secretive
Swiss bank with a controversial Caymen Islands subsidiary under
worldwide scrutiny.

"The bank is in a tough position. They've gotten an order out of a
judge on very short notice and without Wikileaks represented; as the
case matures, I think the American courts will be reluctant to
maintain the broad remedy of trying to block access to an entire Web
site," says Oxford's Jonathan Zittrain, Professor of Internet
Governance and Regulation. "Wikileaks is just a small example of a
larger phenomenon on today's Internet - data is treated as just heaps
of information, whether it's a song recording or a sensitive bank
document or someone's medical records."

Wikileaks itself is amorphous. The site has no office. There is no
CEO, no staff list, no organizational chart, just a skeleton advisory
committee that includes Chinese dissidents, an Australian broadcaster,
a Brazilian human rights activist and CJ Hinge, an American draft
resister now living in Thailand. "Wikileaks is a decentralized
phenomenon and that means there are wikileaks volunteers in dozens of
countries. These volunteers form a very loose network so that in fact,
government can't home in on anybody and take drastic action against
them," said Hinge, in a telephone interview from Thailand. "Ordinary
people come across things that governments or companies or individuals
would prefer to keep secret. I think it is possible for almost
everybody to expose these kinds of events on wikileaks."

The idea of leaking secrets over the web is hardly new. Sites like
www.thesmokinggun have been publishing government secrets for years,
but often stuck between party picturess of drunk celebrities those
documents get lost in the cleavage. John Young's one man
www.cryptome.org has thousands of secret government documents posted,
but the format is so user unfriendly that the information is
practically encrypted to the average internet user. Enter wiki – not
wikipedia, the collaborative online encyclopaedia which allows
everyday readers to edit and post encyclopaedic information. No, this
is wiki, the concept of collaborative intelligence. Much like open
source software designs, the wiki concept is based on the simple
premise that thousands of people working together through loose peer
review and public participation can create brilliant results.
Wikileaks has no official relation to the wikipedia site, though both
websites share a faith in free forming networks of Internet users to
produce a better world.

The first wikileak came in late 2006, as a network of Chinese
dissidents and privacy activists sought to create a public advisory
board. They approached Stephen Aftergood from Secrecy News who not
only refused the offer but criticized the concept, saying "without
accountable editorial oversight, publication can more easily become an
act of aggression or an incitement to violence, not to mention an
invasion of privacy or an offense against good taste." Another
recruit, Young, of Cryptome, went a step further and published on his
website, the private emails from wikileaks soliciting his involvement.
Both incidents created a buzz online.

"The website essentially exploded," said David Zetland, who was
involved in early planning of the wikileaks site in December 2007. "I
looked at it one day and it was nothing and 3 months later it was
packed with stuff, that was mainly due to Julian's efforts," said
Zetland, founder of www.Rumor-Mill.org, a site that also promotes
whistleblowing. "Julian is the face (of wikileaks). Every once in a
while there were other people's emails ,but he is the one responsible
party. Julian is it."

"Julian", is Julian Assange, an Australian activist who is widely
credited with being the organizing force behind wikileaks. Assange who
spent years researching the world of computer hacking helped write
"Undercover", the acclaimed history of a band of hackers. In writing
"Undercover," Assange was given front row access to the power of
untraceable computer networks and the splash of releasing secret
information. Assange harvested his knowledge of untraceable computer
networks and the thrill of releasing secret information into his dream
website, creating what one wikileaks press release calls "the most
powerful "intelligence agency" on earth -- an intelligence agency of
the people. "It will be an open source, democratic intelligence
agency."

With the unanticipated leak by Young, wikileaks lept into the internet
age. Before the site was even working, thousands of internet users
were looking for the page and so by Spring 2007, the website was
public. Wikileaks grew rapidly as activists worldwide turned to its
simple system, log onto a secure server and drop documents. "I got on
board because I saw the perfect opportunity to publish the block
lists. We (Freedom Against Censorship Thailand) were one of the first
aboard. The minute wikileaks was announced we sent them a huge trove
of secret documents," said Hinke, the advisory board member who had
spent years meticulously compiling lists of websites which the Thai
Kingdom deemed off limits for its subjects.

"Their censorship was not that smart, pretty much anyone with a
rudimentary knowledge of computing could get around it, so we provided
the tools to do it," says Hinke, who noted that in Thailand he could
publicly fight for censorship without fearing for his life. "There are
a lot of countries in the world where wikileaks has exposed government
corruption such as Kenya…as the current slaughter shows, it is not
difficult to be disappeared, tortured or extra judicially murdered in
Kenya right now," explained Hinke. "By decentralizing the network,
whistleblowers are never exposed."

Kenya is one example of how wikileaks can affect public policy. On
August 31, 2007 , an article in The Guardian cited wikileaks in a
front page story that outlined massive corruption evidence against
former Kenyan president Daniel Arap Moi. The 110-page document
prepared by Kroll Associates detailed an estimated US $2 billion in
shell companies, offshore investments and properties run by members of
the Moi administration and its allies. The report destroyed the
anti-corruption platform of Kenyan President Kibaki and helped shift
support to opposition candidate Raila Odinga.

"In countries where the institutions of power are so entrenched and
the media relatively weak, this is a tremendous leveller of the
playing field," said David Ardia, Director, Citizen Media Law Project
at Harvard law school. "These sites can play a critical role just as
major newspapers in prior decades have in showing abuses of power."
Ardia, who confidently predicted that the current court stipulations
against wikileaks will be overturned, expects that wikileaks-type
sites will proliferate in the future. "There has been a
democratization of the power to publish and users can go to wikileaks
and make their own decision."
While wikileaks founders designed the system to counter the power of
states censors and authoritarian regimes, the website has been hugely
succesful at breaking news in Western democracies. In November 2007,
wikileaks made a huge media splash in the US with the publication of
the 238-page manual for the US Army´s prison at Guantanamo Bay.
Entitled, "Standard Operating Procedures for Camp Delta" the document
is still the most comprehensive guide to day-to-day operations at the
controversial prison. The Guantanamo document, including detailed
descriptions of everything from transfering prisoners to evading
protocols of the Geneva Convention was cited by The New York Times and
The Washington Post.

Following the Guantanamo revelations, wikileaks continued to publish
sensitive government documents, ranging from lists of military
equipment in Afghanistan to procedures for chasing insurgents from
Iraq into Iran. Earlier this week, wikileaks posted a Homeland
Security guide to the sensitive missile shootdown by the US Navy. "It
used to be a lot easier to deal with whistleblowers you could fire
them, attack them and leave them defenseless," said Greg Mitchell, the
top editor at US magazine Editor & Publisher. "Now the stuff goes up
on the web and when you try and take it down it doesn't go down."
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
Jonathan Franklin also writes for the Guardian (UK) and GQ. He can be
reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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