Wikileaks: Difference between revisions

From P2P Foundation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Wikileaks = site for open government whistle-blowing'''
'''Wikileaks = site for open government whistle-blowing'''


Line 9: Line 8:




From the Washington Post at
From the Washington Post (copied via the Cooperation Commons mailing list, source URL not known)





Revision as of 13:39, 17 January 2007

Wikileaks = site for open government whistle-blowing


URL = http://www.wikileaks.org


Description

From the Washington Post (copied via the Cooperation Commons mailing list, source URL not known)


"Wikileaks.org is a Web-based way for people with damning, potentially helpful or just plain embarrassing government documents to make them public without leaving fingerprints. Modeled on the participatory, online encyclopedia Wikipedia, the site is expected to go live within the next two months.

Organizer James Chen said that while its creators tried to keep the site under wraps until its launch, Google references to it have soared in recent days from about eight to more than 20,000.

"Wikileaks is becoming, as planned, although unexpectedly early, an international movement of people who facilitate ethical leaking and open government," he said.

The site, whose FAQs are written in flowery dissident-ese -- "What conscience cannot contain, and institutional secrecy unjustly conceals, Wikileaks can broadcast to the world" -- targets regimes in Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, but not exclusively. It was founded and partially funded, organizers say, by dissidents, mathematicians and technologists from China, the United States, Taiwan, Europe, Australia and South Africa. The site relies on a worldwide web of volunteers and contributors to post and vet the information, and dodge any efforts to shut it down. To protect document donors and the site itself, Wikileaks uses its own coded software combined with, for the techies out there, modified versions of Freenet and PGP."