WikiLeaks Sues the Guardian Over Leak
An anonymous reader writes "WikiLeaks complaining of a leak is hard to get one's head around. That it's suing The Guardian — its great ally — is even harder. That The Guardian did such a ridiculous thing to warrant litigation in the first place almost defies belief."
Update: 09/01 04:59 GMT by S : Changed the first link to point to the statement on WikiLeaks' website. The Guardian has denied the allegations, saying, "Our book about WikiLeaks was published last February. It contained a password, but no details of the location of the files, and we were told it was a temporary password which would expire and be deleted in a matter of hours."
No this is a huge issue for Wikileaks. They got most of their documents from people on the inside who needed and WANTED the ASSURANCE that some of what they were handing wikileaks would be redacted, like operative names, and informant information. They wanted it to be a RESPONSIBLE release of information, one that doesn't have to be OK'd by the very people it would embarrass.
Now that wikileaks can't be trusted with keeping the UNREDACTED versions safe, they will lose a lot of sources.
The point of leaking is to expose malfeasance. The point of redacting the leaked material was to limit collateral damage to those who had not acted poorly. You only leak what you need to leak in order to expose the bad acts and bad actors, but no more than that.
WikiLeaks' act of leaking the original (redacted) leaks and their suit against this new (non-redacted) leak are a consistent stance from the point of doing the most good while avoiding the most damage. But oh, to live in your simple world...
Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
FTFA:
Wikileaks complaining of a leak?
Yes, and damned well they should unless your moral views are very shallow.
How many US politicians are laughing at the Wikileaks/Guardian partnership exploding so spectacularly?
I'd say it's the CIA laughing. This is incredibly valuable for them. They lose some secrets, but they discredit the messenger (And anyone who tries to replace them) to prevent future leaks. If I was running the CIA, I'd certainly run a program to discredit Wikileaks. A few rape allegations here, an ideological schism in the organization alleging untrustworthiness, some unveiling of sources to make future sources afraid...
Does Wikileaks finally realise there's a need for secrecy/privacy in the world?
Finally? They've said that all along. That's why they were redacting the documents in the first place.
Does privacy/secrecy all boil down to where someone draws an arbitrary line in the sand?
Yes. The world is a fuzzy place and doesn't lend itself to simple morals where you can divide things into the dark side and the light side. At some point it just comes down to someone looking at the situation and doing what they feel is right.
Should a lack of privacy/secrecy be all or nothing?
Of course not. In general, I believe that the larger an entity is, the less privacy they deserve.
Is Wikileaks cementing views that it is or isn't an organisation of journalists who are guided by traditional journalistic ethics?
They publish the truth and protect sources who need protection. They've pretty much always been in that camp.
Who in their right mind would think it okay to publish a password and publish the correct one? They could have published the same book with a fake password all the same, yet obviously it was the password.
As for it being temporary, it wasn't an access password, but a decryption password. And in the eyes of the law, why would what Wikileaks said even matter if non-disclosure was part of their arrangement?
Your post basically answers itself. They did change their position on the issue because they got a lot of heat for not redacting the cables. That is why for the past year (with the Cablegate cables) they have been working with news organisations to carefully redact them before releasing, and releasing them in small batches a few at a time. That has consistently been WL's position for the past year. Complaining that The Guardian released the cables that were supposedly sent to them for the sole purpose of redacting them is not inconsistent with their recent position.
(I have often said that one is not a hypocrite for changing one's beliefs, only for simultaneously saying one thing and doing another.)
That's just false.
Assange advocates for public knowledge and control about the things that governments and enterprises are doing. He also advocates for personal privacy.
Please, read what Assange says before writing nonsense about his believes.