New Zealand: Snowden exposes NSA facilities during ‘Moment of Truth’ – Video


New Zealand: Snowden exposes NSA facilities during #39;Moment of Truth #39;
Video ID: 20140915-026 W/S People arriving on stage for the panel discussion M/S Kim Dotcom blows kisses to the crowd, cheering SOT, Julian Assange, Wikileaks editor-in-chief (English): "The...

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New Zealand: Snowden exposes NSA facilities during 'Moment of Truth' - Video

Reddit Mods did not ban a user for asking Julian Assange about #GamerGate – Video


Reddit Mods did not ban a user for asking Julian Assange about #GamerGate
https://twitter.com/TheStrangeOneR/status/511646977927675904/photo/1 https://i.imgur.com/rdyrOx6.jpg http://www.reddit.com/r/SubredditDrama/comments/2gi3pn/julian_assange_thinks_censorship_is_pat...

By: MundaneMatt

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Reddit Mods did not ban a user for asking Julian Assange about #GamerGate - Video

LXC Coin crowdfunds in challenge to Bitcoin

LXC Coin will work with a network of P2P lenders across the world, and could evolve into its own P2P vehicle over the coming years.

Unlike many other cryptocurrencies, the LXC Coin is real, according to Ellefsen. If crypocurrencies were banned tomorrow - and Russia is looking to do that right now - our coin would keep its value. You could reclaim your investment from us.

Cryptocurrencies havent been real money until now, he claims.

Bitcoin, which currently trades for around $500 per coin, is seen as a volatile currency by investors. It can lose up to 30pc of its value in a single day. LXC Coin will control supply and demand, much like a central bank, ensuring a consistent price for the coin.

Some 1.1bn of these new coins will be issued over the next four to five years.

The LXC Coin is based on the code from the worlds most famous cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, mixed with BlackCoin technology. Unlike Bitcoin, BlackCoin does not have to be mined. It is based on a proof of stake concept, which means that it has become a dominant digital currency through the sheer proliferation of coins held in wallets by users.

By using the BlackCoin model, LXC Coin does not require vast amounts of computing power and electricity to exist.

Customers must pay hard cash or exchange it for other digital currencies.

The company was founded in Denmark in 2012 and became a UK holding company in 2014.

Ellefsen chose to raise money on Crowd For Angels, the UKs FCA-regulated debt and equity platform, to generate awareness for the start-up and prove that its model was FCA compliant.

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LXC Coin crowdfunds in challenge to Bitcoin

WikiLeaks posts ‘weaponized malware’ for all to download

Summary: The long and sordid story of WikiLeaks takes an astonishingly irresponsible and very dangerous turn.

Sometimes when we seek to understand the impact of a digital scenario, we recast it in meatspace and describe an analogous situation. In seeking to understand the most recent (and probably most epically irresponsible) WikiLeaks posting, the meatspace analogy will come in handy.

Imagine, if you will, that a company located in Germany was doing biological warfare research, possibly under the guidance and using the funding of various allied governments.

As part of their research, the company has produced a strain of virus that's Ebola-dangerous and Ebola-virulent, that might be used by the varied governments to fulfill certain unspecified and undisclosed objectives.

But this time, WikiLeaks didn't just release documents. They posted the actual software.

Now imagine that a group of concerned scientists discovers this research and illegally gets their hands on vials containing the biowarfare agent. Their justification in this theft is the desire to develop a defense against it, in case it is loosed upon an unsuspecting public.

At this point, you might side with the scientists. After all, biological warfare is nasty stuff, and protecting the public from exposure and harm is a laudable goal.

What if the thieves aren't biological scientists? They're violent activists. Similarly disturbed about the activities going on in the biowarfare lab, they also manage to get a sample of the deadly biological agent.

However, instead of securely and safely transporting the deadly biohazard back to a lab for safe and secure analysis leading to an antidote agent, the thieves inexplicably set up a kiosk at a local mall. And instead of securely managing the biohazard, they give out sample vials of the biohazard to anyone who wants one.

Anyone with a brain would immediately call the authorities and insist that this incredibly dangerous behavior be stopped, and that all the loose vials of biological warfare agent be rounded up and secured or destroyed.

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WikiLeaks posts 'weaponized malware' for all to download

Wikileaks releases Finfisher malware to help developers defend against it

WIKILEAKS HAS RELEASED Finfisher "weaponised malware" that it claims is being used by governments around the world to spy on journalists and activists, in order to help developers defend against it.

Finfisher, which was first revealed in Wikileaks documents published in December 2011, can be used to intercept data from Mac OS X, Windows and Linux computers, as well as mobile devices running Android, Blackberry, iOS, Symbian and Windows Phone.

Wikileaks editor in chief Julian Assange said, "Finfisher continues to operate brazenly from Germany selling weaponised surveillance malware to some of the most abusive regimes in the world. The Merkel government pretends to be concerned about privacy, but its actions speak otherwise.

"Why does the Merkel government continue to protect Finfisher? This full data release will help the technical community build tools to protect people from Finfisher including by tracking down its command and control centers."

In its latest internet splash, Wikileaks has decided to make the weaponised malware available to download, so developers and security researchers can build defences against it. According to Wikileaks, the software is still being used by governments and other organisations across the world to spy on journalists, activists and political dissidents.

"In order to challenge the secrecy and the lack of accountability of the surveillance industry, analyzing the internals of this software could allow security and privacy researchers to develop new fingerprints and detection techniques, identify more countries currently using the Finfisher spyware and uncover human rights abuses," Wikileaks said.

Wikileaks added that Finisher's revenues from sales of its malware to such organisations totals around 50m with its customers including law enforcement and government agencies in Australia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Estonia, Hungary, Italy, Mongolia, Netherlands, Nigeria, Pakistan, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa and Vietnam.

Privacy International deputy director Eric King praised Wikileaks' latest move in a statement seen by The Guardian. He said, "These new documents from Wikileaks give us greater insight into how companies like Finfisher and the governments they supply compromise our personal devices, and spy on the most private parts of our lives.

"More transparency is needed to hold companies like Finfisher to account, as well as the governments purchasing such equipment. Without public scrutiny of the surveillance technology industry, activists will continue to be targeted by repressive regimes and the damaging practices of Finfisher will be allowed to continue unabated."

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Wikileaks releases Finfisher malware to help developers defend against it

Chelsea Manning Breaks Silence to Criticize U.S. Airstrikes on ISIS

Chelsea Manning, the U.S. soldier currently serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking government documents to WikiLeaks, wrote a column for The Guardian criticizing Obama's approach to ISIS. "Based on my experience as an all-source analyst in Iraq during the organization's relative infancy, ISIS cannot be defeated by bombs and bullets," she writes.

Manning wrote the article from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where she's in military custody. She explains:

Attacking ISIS directly, by air strikes or special operations forces, is a very tempting option available to policymakers, with immediate (but not always good) results. Unfortunately, when the west fights fire with fire, we feed into a cycle of outrage, recruitment, organizing and even more fighting that goes back decades. This is exactly what happened in Iraq during the height of a civil war in 2006 and 2007, and it can only be expected to occur again.

Manning recommends a policy of containment instead: "Let ISIS succeed in setting up a failed 'state'in a contained area and over a long enough period of time to prove itself unpopular and unable to govern. This might begin to discredit the leadership and ideology of ISIS for good."

This is the first time she's spoken out since entering custody. She's in the process of appealing her sentence.

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Chelsea Manning Breaks Silence to Criticize U.S. Airstrikes on ISIS

From military prison, Chelsea Manning offers punditry on Iraq

The simmering debate about the evolving U.S. military strategy in Iraq and Syria was joined on Tuesday by an unlikely pundit: Army Pvt. Chelsea Manning.

Manning, a former U.S. intelligence analyst convicted last year of leaking classified U.S. information to the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, argues in a new piece for the Guardian newspaper that the United States cannot defeat the Islamic State militant group by bombing them, and should focus on containing them instead.

The piece says only that the writer, who joined the Army as a man known as Bradley Manning, was in Fort Leavenworth, and does not mention her conviction or passing of military secrets. In a separate piece, the Guardian reports Tuesday that Manning wrote the Guardian article in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where she is in military custody.

Mannings piece was published as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appeared on Capitol Hill for a hearing on the U.S. strategy against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Dempsey said that U.S. military advisers could find themselves involved in ground combat missions if needs dictate it.

Conversely, Manning argues in herpiece that the Islamic State should be allowed to set up itsown region to control. Doing so is a stated goal for the militants, who want to establish a caliphate, a state under the control of strict Islamist law.

Let Isis succeed in setting up a failed state in a contained area and over a long enough period of time to prove itself unpopular and unable to govern, Manning argues. This might begin to discredit the leadership and ideology of Isis for good.

Manning argues for the U.S. to pursue three other initiatives. They include countering the narrative the militants have pushed in online recruitment videos and setting up clear, temporary borders that would discourage Isis from taking certain territory where humanitarian crises might be created.

Herfourth initiative to pursue includes a series of measures to cut off funding from the militants, including establishing a moratorium on anyone paying ransom for hostages and preventing the Islamic State from stealing valuable artifacts and taking over oil reserves in Baiji, Iraq.

Writes Manning:

The Islamic State (Isis) is without question a very brutal extremist group with origins in the insurgency of the United States occupation of Iraq. It has rapidly ascended to global attention by taking control of swaths of territory in western and northern Iraq, including Mosul and other major cities.

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From military prison, Chelsea Manning offers punditry on Iraq

Chelsea Manning offers punditry on Iraq from prison

By Dan Lamothe The Washington Post September 17, 2014

The simmering debate about the evolving U.S. military strategy in Iraq and Syria was joined on Tuesday by an unlikely pundit: Army Pvt. Chelsea Manning.

Manning, a former U.S. intelligence analyst convicted last year of leaking classified U.S. information to the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, argues in a new piece for the Guardian newspaper that the United States cannot defeat the Islamic State militant group by bombing them, and should focus on containing them instead.

The piece says only that the writer, who joined the Army as a man known as Bradley Manning, was "in Fort Leavenworth," and does not mention her conviction or passing of military secrets. In a separate piece, the Guardian reports Tuesday that "Manning wrote the Guardian article in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where she is in military custody."

Manning's piece was published as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, appeared on Capitol Hill for a hearing on the U.S. strategy against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Dempsey said that U.S. military advisers could find themselves involved in ground combat missions if needs dictate it.

Conversely, Manning argues in her piece that the Islamic State should be allowed to set up its own region to control. Doing so is a stated goal for the militants, who want to establish a caliphate, a state under the control of strict Islamist law.

"Let Isis succeed in setting up a failed 'state' in a contained area and over a long enough period of time to prove itself unpopular and unable to govern," Manning argues. "This might begin to discredit the leadership and ideology of Isis for good."

Manning argues for the U.S. to pursue three other initiatives. They include countering the narrative the militants have pushed in online recruitment videos and setting up clear, temporary borders that would "discourage Isis from taking certain territory where humanitarian crises might be created."

Her fourth initiative to pursue includes a series of measures to cut off funding from the militants, including establishing a moratorium on anyone paying ransom for hostages and preventing the Islamic State from stealing valuable artifacts and taking over oil reserves in Baiji, Iraq.

Writes Manning:

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Chelsea Manning offers punditry on Iraq from prison