Has WikiLeaks Morphed Into A Malware Hub? (backchannel.com)
Slashdot reader mirandakatz writes:
In releasing an unredacted database of emails from the Turkish party AKP, WikiLeaks exposed the public to a collection of malware -- and even after a Bulgarian security expert pointed this out publicly, the organization only removed the select pieces of malware that he identified, leaving well over a thousand malicious files on the site.
That AKP leak also included the addresses and other personal details of millions of Turkish women, not unlike the recent DNC leak, which included the personal data of many private individuals. WikiLeaks says this is all in the name of its "accuracy policy," but the organization seems to be increasingly putting the public at risk.
The article opens with the question, "What the hell happened to WikiLeaks?" then argues that "Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."
That AKP leak also included the addresses and other personal details of millions of Turkish women, not unlike the recent DNC leak, which included the personal data of many private individuals. WikiLeaks says this is all in the name of its "accuracy policy," but the organization seems to be increasingly putting the public at risk.
The article opens with the question, "What the hell happened to WikiLeaks?" then argues that "Once an inspiring effort at transparency, WikiLeaks now seems more driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."
Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states: "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no." It is named after Ian Betteridge, a British technology journalist, although the principle is much older.
Betteridge's law of headlines - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Once an inspiring effort at tech news, Slashdot now seems more driven by marketing and reckless government propaganda...
Yes. Let's shut it down. And ban encryption.
Which personal grudge does Wikileaks represent?
Should Wikileaks not release information given to it because it belongs to someone that it opposes?
If Wikileaks removed malware from email then it would be editing the raw information given to it. Wikileaks's goal is to provide raw information, unlike that of mainstream journalism.
It's not Wikileaks's role to scan email for viruses or prevent us from getting the raw data given to it.
Wikileaks doesn't represent any political position aside from the push for the freedom of information. It doesn't choose what information is given to it and information given to it is released once verified to be authentic.
The question you should be asking is of the people that supply and have the potential to supply information to Wikileaks, what grudges do those people have?
If they had a grudge against you and sent information to Wikileaks, would it be Wikileaks that has the grudge or the people that send the information?
I really don't care.
Wikileaks is the only place around that still fights against corporations and governments. No one else does, and its always going to be lined up and screwed with to try and stop this from happening.
When they leak shit about people you don't like: "...an inspiring effort at transparency..."
When they leak shit about people you support: "...driven by personal grudges and reckless releases of information..."
-Styopa