A Raid on Ecuador's London Embassy Is Apparently In the Cards
WikiLeaks appeared to be emptying its file cabinets with the announcement of the release of over 55,000 U.S. diplomatic cables on Tuesday night. No major bombshells have been uncovered in the immediate wake of the data dump, but some bumps in the road suggests that the organization could be in some trouble. Not long after announcing the massive release, WikiLeaks tweeted that they were "under a sustained DOS attack and have regressed to backup servers" and soon thereafter reported that their "Californian DNS hoster, Dynadot, has received [and complied with] a PATRIOT act production order for information on Julian Assange." The servers appeared to be back online Wednesday morning when the organization posted the rest of the cables.
The countries involved span the globe and represent some of America's most tenuous international relationships. The sheer volume of the dump ensures that journalists and volunteers will be digging through the data for days, but WikiLeaks has made it easier for everyone. The cables are available at a searchable database and sorted based on the location of the U.S. Embassy involved: Libya, China, Israel, Russia, Venezuela, Iran, Germany, Afghanistan, France, Indonesia, Rwanda, Turkey, Poland, Syria, Bahrain, South Africa, Somalia. WikiLeaks has asked volunteers to tweet their findings with the #wlfind hashtag on Twitter, where we've found a few interesting revelations.
We'll update this post with more interesting findings as they're revealed, but based on recent news, some of WikiLeaks best secrets might be lost. Meanwhile, it was also reported earlier this week that former WikiLeaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg had destroyed a cache of 3,500 important documents, including Bank of America secrets and the U.S. no-fly list. Domscheit-Berg has since disputed that allegation.
Update: Salon's Justin Elliott post about "a pair of fascinating cables about American citizens who are living in illegal West Bank settlement" is also worth a look.
Update 2: Vivian Giang at Business Insider caught some interesting factoids in the cables from China, including but not limited to the fact that China thinks "the U.S. should 'not be paranoid' about the alleged Chinese hacking. Saying Chinese technology is 'so sophisticated that it scares the United States'.
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Adam Clark Estes
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