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No Secrets: A Look at Assange
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General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01491294
Message ID:
01491303
Views:
49
>>It's very interesting. I was reading along, getting a view of this individual, and feeling a little bit of understanding of how he got where he is mixed in with some pity, until I came to this:
>>
>>Assange does not recognize the limits that traditional publishers do. Recently, he posted military documents that included the Social Security numbers of soldiers, and in the Bunker I asked him if WikiLeaks’ mission would have been compromised if he had redacted these small bits. He said that some leaks risked harming innocent people—“collateral damage, if you will”—but that he could not weigh the importance of every detail in every document. Perhaps the Social Security numbers would one day be important to researchers investigating wrongdoing, he said; by releasing the information he would allow judgment to occur in the open.
>>
>>A year and a half ago, WikiLeaks published the results of an Army test, conducted in 2004, of electromagnetic devices designed to prevent IEDs from being triggered. The document revealed key aspects of how the devices functioned and also showed that they interfered with communication systems used by soldiers—information that an insurgent could exploit. By the time WikiLeaks published the study, the Army had begun to deploy newer technology, but some soldiers were still using the devices. I asked Assange if he would refrain from releasing information that he knew might get someone killed. He said that he had instituted a “harm-minimization policy,” whereby people named in certain documents were contacted before publication, to warn them, but that there were also instances where the members of WikiLeaks might get “blood on our hands.”

>>
>>Interesting that collateral damage is perfectly fine for him but not in war (that is earlier on in the article). Neither is ok when it can be prevented.
>>
>>http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/06/07/100607fa_fact_khatchadourian?currentPage=1
>
>This is really stunning, but is pretty much what I would expect. I understand why someone might want to release particular documents that represent a misuse of classification to uncover government misdeeds, but I don't think the kind of "dump it all out there just because we can" approach of wikileaks is about truth. It is about ego.

I'm sure ego plays a HUGE part in it - but at the same time if he was to go though the data and pick-and-choose what gets posted and what doesn't then of course people would want to know what he's hiding and why he didn't release it all.

>I am genuinely surprised this guy hasn't had a terrible accident. He really deserves to be collateral damage.

The person who stole the data is the problem (along with the fools that gave 2 million folks access to it)- don't shoot the messenger.
ICQ 10556 (ya), 254117
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