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The US Government Has Amassed Terabytes of Internal WikiLeaks Data (gizmodo.com)

An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from a Gizmodo report, written by national security reporter and transparency activist Emma Best: Late last year, the U.S. government accidentally revealed that a sealed complaint had been filed against Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks. Shortly before this was made public, the FBI reconfirmed its investigation of WikiLeaks was ongoing, and the Wall Street Journal reported that the Department of Justice was optimistic that it would be able to extradite Assange. Soon after, portions of sealed transcripts leaked that implicate WikiLeaks and Assange in directing hackers to target governments and corporations. The charges against Assange have not been officially revealed, though it's plausible that the offenses are related to Russian hacking and the DNC emails. The alleged offenses in the complaint notwithstanding, the government has an abundance of data to work with: over a dozen WikiLeaks' computers, hard drives, and email accounts, including those of the organization's current and former editors-in-chief, along with messages exchanged with alleged Russian hackers about DNC emails. Through a series of search warrants, subpoenas, equipment seizures, and cooperating witnesses, the federal government has collected internal WikiLeaks data covering the majority of the organization's period of operations, from 2009 at least through 2017.

In some instances, the seized data has been returned and allegedly destroyed, such as in the case of David House, a technologist and friend of Chelsea Manning when she famously became a source for WikiLeaks. In others, the seized materials include communications between WikiLeaks and their sources. Some of these discussions show WikiLeaks discussing their other sources and specific identifying details about them. Other seizures gave authorities a deeper view of the internal workings of WikiLeaks, including one of the earliest known seizures of WikiLeaks-related data, executed on December 14, 2010, when the messages and user information of several WikiLeaks-linked Twitter accounts were ordered. This search-and-seizure order included direct messages associated with WikiLeaks and its founder, former Army private first class and WikiLeaks source Chelsea Manning, WikiLeaks editor Rop Gongrijp, former WikiLeaks associate Jacob Appelbaum, and former WikiLeaks associate and Icelandic MP Birgitta Jonsdottir, between November 1, 2009, and the order's execution.

3 of 130 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Any New Info? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Affirmative. However, while she committed crimes, someone in some other branch of government that doesn't have the authority to make the decision stated that she shoudn't be prosecuted ... and somehow that stuck.

  2. Re:Any New Info? by ArchieBunker · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Bernie had a better chance of winning than Hillary but they didn't want him. They bet everything on her and lost.

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
  3. Re:Slashdot should just block comments on some pos by guruevi · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Yeah, this place has become an extremist left-wing haven. I remember when Wikileaks were considered the good guys by this site, but then they went after the DNC and suddenly they were eeeevil.

    IF you have nothing to hide etc...

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