Wikileaks - who does it hurt and who does it help?
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
Re:
Posted before I thought of the Supreme Court case. Think I should blank it?Will Robinson wrote:Like I said, we have Judges and courts to sort it out...
So, if you knew that what was the purpose of your The Espionage Act is falling from the sky post there Mr. Little?
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
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There is a secret grand jury in Virgina looking into wikileaks. Wikileaks already leaked it
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-13/just ... s=PM:CRIME
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-13/just ... s=PM:CRIME
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Okay, that is just funny.Heretic wrote:There is a secret grand jury in Virgina looking into wikileaks. Wikileaks already leaked it
http://articles.cnn.com/2010-12-13/just ... s=PM:CRIME
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
I find myself curious as to the legal argument the US would use to get Assange shipped to the US to face trial.
Lothar made the (IMO accurate) observation that Wikileaks don't seem to follow US law at all. But is Wikileaks even bound by US law if it's not based or registered in the US and the crimes were committed elsewhere?
IIRC, many US organisations have cut tied with Wikileaks, which is understandable as they ARE bound by US law and are committing illegal acts by aiding or associating with Wikileaks. But what about Wikileaks themselves? What are the legal grounds for extradition of Assange from the UK / Sweden to the US if the crimes were not committed on US soil and the actions themselves were not illegal in the country of their origin?
(I am not a lawyer BTW and am far from an expert in these matters - I'm merely curious how they the US would go about it.)
Lothar made the (IMO accurate) observation that Wikileaks don't seem to follow US law at all. But is Wikileaks even bound by US law if it's not based or registered in the US and the crimes were committed elsewhere?
IIRC, many US organisations have cut tied with Wikileaks, which is understandable as they ARE bound by US law and are committing illegal acts by aiding or associating with Wikileaks. But what about Wikileaks themselves? What are the legal grounds for extradition of Assange from the UK / Sweden to the US if the crimes were not committed on US soil and the actions themselves were not illegal in the country of their origin?
(I am not a lawyer BTW and am far from an expert in these matters - I'm merely curious how they the US would go about it.)
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IMO Wiki is with-in it's rights to publish those documents. even though thay are not based in this country our Constitution guarantee's the freedom of the press. that being said if I was Assange I would probably be in Hiding myself, because there are many countries out there that do not have that same stance as we do and have probably been embarrassed about the leaks and might not be as forgiving about it.
HOWEVER, the Army private that gave Wiki the information should be executed for treason.
HOWEVER, the Army private that gave Wiki the information should be executed for treason.
“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”
― Theodore Roosevelt
― Theodore Roosevelt
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CUDA, I agreed with everything you said until this point:
We should exile him to France instead, I think that would be worse.
(added emphasis, obviously.)CUDA wrote:HOWEVER, the Army private that gave Wiki the information should be executed for treason.
We should exile him to France instead, I think that would be worse.
Fear is the engine that destroys freedom.
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That goes explicitly against the reasoning of the Nuremburg Trials and supposed moral foundations of this country, we are already torturing the private as we speak, who saw illegal activity and with accordance of those decisions back in the 40s/50s sent information to Wikileaks as a whistleblower. That's not treason, that's being a hero.CUDA wrote:IMO Wiki is with-in it's rights to publish those documents. even though thay are not based in this country our Constitution guarantee's the freedom of the press. that being said if I was Assange I would probably be in Hiding myself, because there are many countries out there that do not have that same stance as we do and have probably been embarrassed about the leaks and might not be as forgiving about it.
HOWEVER, the Army private that gave Wiki the information should be executed for treason.
Bump.
Wikileaks entire collection of leaked diplomatic cables has been acquired by a Norwegian newspaper. They do not say where they sourced the files from. They *do* say that in effect they will release these documents when, as, and if it suits them (Wikileaks has only released 2,000 or so of the 250,000 cables on offer so far. (Link)
Norway is a part of NATO and the newspaper in question has just released a story on a new joint US/German spy satellite development.
I wonder if the US government will lean equally hard on this new source of leaks as it has on Wikileaks and Julian Assange.
Wikileaks entire collection of leaked diplomatic cables has been acquired by a Norwegian newspaper. They do not say where they sourced the files from. They *do* say that in effect they will release these documents when, as, and if it suits them (Wikileaks has only released 2,000 or so of the 250,000 cables on offer so far. (Link)
Norway is a part of NATO and the newspaper in question has just released a story on a new joint US/German spy satellite development.
I wonder if the US government will lean equally hard on this new source of leaks as it has on Wikileaks and Julian Assange.
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I don't know if they will be, but they have already raided ISPs and took servers and hard drives in response to the DDoS attack on Visa.com, PayPal.com, and Mastercard.com but they can't find the ones doing the attack on Wikileaks.
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/a ... ation.html
http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/a ... ation.html