Topic of the weeki
Everybody's talking about Wikileaks, so in general, I haven't. People like John are doing a much better job than I ever could.
There was some discussion on a couple of the Twit.tv podcasts about the heightened emotions directed at Wikileaks itself, though, and I thought they came to some sane conclusions, which were roughly as follows:
- The person who committed a crime was the original source, who is now being dealt with by the law
- Wikileaks did no more than any newspaper would have done if it got its hands on the material, and is no more or less culpable than the New York Times and the Guardian and others who have been republishing it.
- Wikileaks just did it more efficiently and for different, and some would argue, more honourable, motivations than a newspaper's. [This is the real novelty. People know how to interpret newspapers' actions.]
- Those hackers attempting to target organisations that failed to support Wikileaks are guilty of suppressing the kind of freedoms of speech and action for which Wikileaks stands.
- The big danger is that any measures brought in to 'deal with' Wikileaks could be used against the New York Times and the Guardian in the future.
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