EFF, ACLU Back WikiLeaks
souls writes "Seems like the forces to protect freedom-of-speech in the groundsetting Wikileaks.org case have spoken: Henry Weinstein at LA Times reports that a coalition of media and public interest organizations today urged judge Jeffrey White to rescind the shutdown of Wikileaks.org, which presents 'restraint on free speech that violated the First Amendment,' and is generally considered to become a representative case for free online speech.
The dirty dozen organizations fighting for your voice and mine include the EFF, the ACLU, The Times, AP, Gannett, Hearst, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, and the Society of Professional Journalists. Lets hope that is enough muscle to stop a judge running wild in favor of a bunch of offshore bankers!
Meanwhile wikileaks is still going strong via all available other domains, and is currently organizing support and donations."
UCLA != ACLU
Wikileaks IS national security. it secures against the threat of the corrupt and criminal within our own government. They are the anonymous that watch the watchmen.
Which nation?
"Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
What did bother me was how Dynadot just rolled over and took this without batting an eye. They simply complied and let it happen without bother to contest it. Is it possible for wikileaks to get wikileaks.org changed to another domain registrar or should they just jump ship from this spineless drone?
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
WTF is "ground setting? *&$^#% editors...oh, wait, this is /.
Nevermind.
"As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
Next time, the government will react faster.
When was the last time the US government wasn't either at war with someone or claiming that a threat to national security was imminent?
I think you've missed the whole point of WikiLeaks.
It's designed to be immune to national court orders, because it's meant to report on abuses by governments and their legal processes.
It's also designed to be unaccountable because it's meant to be immune to pressure on individuals by governments and corporations.
The fact that wikileaks has to go to these lengths to ensure that reporting corruption and abuse is possible is a reflection on the societies we live in, not the organisation itself.
Wikileaks would not post the actual data, it would post a story about how the data had been compromised. They are in the business of reporting whistle-blowing activities - not committing the same crimes they are trying to prevent by making them public.
And if they did post protected medical information, it would be very easy to legally have it removed under the HIPAA laws, and would likely be fined heavily for the violation.
*read-->think-->understand-->post* in that order only
"But this one goes to 11!"