This key's fingerprint is A04C 5E09 ED02 B328 03EB 6116 93ED 732E 9231 8DBA

-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
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=/E/j
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
		

Contact

If you need help using Tor you can contact WikiLeaks for assistance in setting it up using our simple webchat available at: https://wikileaks.org/talk

If you can use Tor, but need to contact WikiLeaks for other reasons use our secured webchat available at http://wlchatc3pjwpli5r.onion

We recommend contacting us over Tor if you can.

Tor

Tor is an encrypted anonymising network that makes it harder to intercept internet communications, or see where communications are coming from or going to.

In order to use the WikiLeaks public submission system as detailed above you can download the Tor Browser Bundle, which is a Firefox-like browser available for Windows, Mac OS X and GNU/Linux and pre-configured to connect using the anonymising system Tor.

Tails

If you are at high risk and you have the capacity to do so, you can also access the submission system through a secure operating system called Tails. Tails is an operating system launched from a USB stick or a DVD that aim to leaves no traces when the computer is shut down after use and automatically routes your internet traffic through Tor. Tails will require you to have either a USB stick or a DVD at least 4GB big and a laptop or desktop computer.

Tips

Our submission system works hard to preserve your anonymity, but we recommend you also take some of your own precautions. Please review these basic guidelines.

1. Contact us if you have specific problems

If you have a very large submission, or a submission with a complex format, or are a high-risk source, please contact us. In our experience it is always possible to find a custom solution for even the most seemingly difficult situations.

2. What computer to use

If the computer you are uploading from could subsequently be audited in an investigation, consider using a computer that is not easily tied to you. Technical users can also use Tails to help ensure you do not leave any records of your submission on the computer.

3. Do not talk about your submission to others

If you have any issues talk to WikiLeaks. We are the global experts in source protection – it is a complex field. Even those who mean well often do not have the experience or expertise to advise properly. This includes other media organisations.

After

1. Do not talk about your submission to others

If you have any issues talk to WikiLeaks. We are the global experts in source protection – it is a complex field. Even those who mean well often do not have the experience or expertise to advise properly. This includes other media organisations.

2. Act normal

If you are a high-risk source, avoid saying anything or doing anything after submitting which might promote suspicion. In particular, you should try to stick to your normal routine and behaviour.

3. Remove traces of your submission

If you are a high-risk source and the computer you prepared your submission on, or uploaded it from, could subsequently be audited in an investigation, we recommend that you format and dispose of the computer hard drive and any other storage media you used.

In particular, hard drives retain data after formatting which may be visible to a digital forensics team and flash media (USB sticks, memory cards and SSD drives) retain data even after a secure erasure. If you used flash media to store sensitive data, it is important to destroy the media.

If you do this and are a high-risk source you should make sure there are no traces of the clean-up, since such traces themselves may draw suspicion.

4. If you face legal action

If a legal action is brought against you as a result of your submission, there are organisations that may help you. The Courage Foundation is an international organisation dedicated to the protection of journalistic sources. You can find more details at https://www.couragefound.org.

WikiLeaks publishes documents of political or historical importance that are censored or otherwise suppressed. We specialise in strategic global publishing and large archives.

The following is the address of our secure site where you can anonymously upload your documents to WikiLeaks editors. You can only access this submissions system through Tor. (See our Tor tab for more information.) We also advise you to read our tips for sources before submitting.

wlupld3ptjvsgwqw.onion
Copy this address into your Tor browser. Advanced users, if they wish, can also add a further layer of encryption to their submission using our public PGP key.

If you cannot use Tor, or your submission is very large, or you have specific requirements, WikiLeaks provides several alternative methods. Contact us to discuss how to proceed.


(on 2013-08-27)

Op-ed: The Banality of ‘Don’t Be Evil’

By JULIAN ASSANGE

This article - a review of The New Digital Age by Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen - was originally published as an op-ed in the New York Times on June 1 2013.

“THE New Digital Age” is a startlingly clear and provocative blueprint for technocratic imperialism, from two of its leading witch doctors, Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen, who construct a new idiom for United States global power in the 21st century. This idiom reflects the ever closer union between the State Department and Silicon Valley, as personified by Mr. Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, and Mr. Cohen, a former adviser to Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton who is now director of Google Ideas.

The authors met in occupied Baghdad in 2009, when the book was conceived. Strolling among the ruins, the two became excited that consumer technology was transforming a society flattened by United States military occupation. They decided the tech industry could be a powerful agent of American foreign policy.

The book proselytizes the role of technology in reshaping the world’s people and nations into likenesses of the world’s dominant superpower, whether they want to be reshaped or not. The prose is terse, the argument confident and the wisdom — banal. But this isn’t a book designed to be read. It is a major declaration designed to foster alliances.

“The New Digital Age” is, beyond anything else, an attempt by Google to position itself as America’s geopolitical visionary — the one company that can answer the question “Where should America go?” It is not surprising that a respectable cast of the world’s most famous warmongers has been trotted out to give its stamp of approval to this enticement to Western soft power. The acknowledgments give pride of place to Henry Kissinger, who along with Tony Blair and the former C.I.A. director Michael Hayden provided advance praise for the book.

In the book the authors happily take up the white geek’s burden. A liberal sprinkling of convenient, hypothetical dark-skinned worthies appear: Congolese fisherwomen, graphic designers in Botswana, anticorruption activists in San Salvador and illiterate Masai cattle herders in the Serengeti are all obediently summoned to demonstrate the progressive properties of Google phones jacked into the informational supply chain of the Western empire.

The authors offer an expertly banalized version of tomorrow’s world: the gadgetry of decades hence is predicted to be much like what we have right now — only cooler. “Progress” is driven by the inexorable spread of American consumer technology over the surface of the earth. Already, every day, another million or so Google-run mobile devices are activated. Google will interpose itself, and hence the United States government, between the communications of every human being not in China (naughty China). Commodities just become more marvelous; young, urban professionals sleep, work and shop with greater ease and comfort; democracy is insidiously subverted by technologies of surveillance, and control is enthusiastically rebranded as “participation”; and our present world order of systematized domination, intimidation and oppression continues, unmentioned, unafflicted or only faintly perturbed.

The authors are sour about the Egyptian triumph of 2011. They dismiss the Egyptian youth witheringly, claiming that “the mix of activism and arrogance in young people is universal.” Digitally inspired mobs mean revolutions will be “easier to start” but “harder to finish.” Because of the absence of strong leaders, the result, or so Mr. Kissinger tells the authors, will be coalition governments that descend into autocracies. They say there will be “no more springs” (but China is on the ropes).

The authors fantasize about the future of “well resourced” revolutionary groups. A new “crop of consultants” will “use data to build and fine-tune a political figure.”

“His” speeches (the future isn’t all that different) and writing will be fed “through complex feature-extraction and trend-analysis software suites” while “mapping his brain function,” and other “sophisticated diagnostics” will be used to “assess the weak parts of his political repertoire.”

The book mirrors State Department institutional taboos and obsessions. It avoids meaningful criticism of Israel and Saudi Arabia. It pretends, quite extraordinarily, that the Latin American sovereignty movement, which has liberated so many from United States-backed plutocracies and dictatorships over the last 30 years, never happened. Referring instead to the region’s “aging leaders,” the book can’t see Latin America for Cuba. And, of course, the book frets theatrically over Washington’s favorite boogeymen: North Korea and Iran.

Google, which started out as an expression of independent Californian graduate student culture — a decent, humane and playful culture — has, as it encountered the big, bad world, thrown its lot in with traditional Washington power elements, from the State Department to the National Security Agency.

Despite accounting for an infinitesimal fraction of violent deaths globally, terrorism is a favorite brand in United States policy circles. This is a fetish that must also be catered to, and so “The Future of Terrorism” gets a whole chapter. The future of terrorism, we learn, is cyberterrorism. A session of indulgent scaremongering follows, including a breathless disaster-movie scenario, wherein cyberterrorists take control of American air-traffic control systems and send planes crashing into buildings, shutting down power grids and launching nuclear weapons. The authors then tar activists who engage in digital sit-ins with the same brush.

I have a very different perspective. The advance of information technology epitomized by Google heralds the death of privacy for most people and shifts the world toward authoritarianism. This is the principal thesis in my book, “Cypherpunks.” But while Mr. Schmidt and Mr. Cohen tell us that the death of privacy will aid governments in “repressive autocracies” in “targeting their citizens,” they also say governments in “open” democracies will see it as “a gift” enabling them to “better respond to citizen and customer concerns.” In reality, the erosion of individual privacy in the West and the attendant centralization of power make abuses inevitable, moving the “good” societies closer to the “bad” ones.

The section on “repressive autocracies” describes, disapprovingly, various repressive surveillance measures: legislation to insert back doors into software to enable spying on citizens, monitoring of social networks and the collection of intelligence on entire populations. All of these are already in widespread use in the United States. In fact, some of those measures — like the push to require every social-network profile to be linked to a real name — were spearheaded by Google itself.

THE writing is on the wall, but the authors cannot see it. They borrow from William Dobson the idea that the media, in an autocracy, “allows for an opposition press as long as regime opponents understand where the unspoken limits are.” But these trends are beginning to emerge in the United States. No one doubts the chilling effects of the investigations into The Associated Press and Fox’s James Rosen. But there has been little analysis of Google’s role in complying with the Rosen subpoena. I have personal experience of these trends.

The Department of Justice admitted in March that it was in its third year of a continuing criminal investigation of WikiLeaks. Court testimony states that its targets include “the founders, owners, or managers of WikiLeaks.” One alleged source, Bradley Manning, faces a 12-week trial beginning tomorrow, with 24 prosecution witnesses expected to testify in secret.

This book is a balefully seminal work in which neither author has the language to see, much less to express, the titanic centralizing evil they are constructing. “What Lockheed Martin was to the 20th century,” they tell us, “technology and cybersecurity companies will be to the 21st.” Without even understanding how, they have updated and seamlessly implemented George Orwell’s prophecy. If you want a vision of the future, imagine Washington-backed Google Glasses strapped onto vacant human faces — forever. Zealots of the cult of consumer technology will find little to inspire them here, not that they ever seem to need it. But this is essential reading for anyone caught up in the struggle for the future, in view of one simple imperative: Know your enemy.

For more on Google, see:

Transcript of secret meeting between Julian Assange and Google CEO Eric Schmidt

Google and the NSA: Who’s holding the ‘shit-bag’ now?

emailSend to Friend printPrint