WikiLeaks blasts Google for handing emails to government

WikiLeaks, founded by Julian Assange, landed in the public spotlight in 2010 when it published a trove of classified government information, including leaked US diplomatic cables.

San Francisco: WikiLeaks criticized Google Inc on Monday, alleging that the company waited 2-1/2 years to notify members of the anti-secrecy group that it had turned over their private emails and other information to the US government.

In a letter to Google, lawyers representing WikiLeaks said they were astonished and disturbed by Googles actions relating to search warrants it received from federal law enforcement officials and asked for a full accounting of the information Google gave the government.

The revelation follows leaks by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden detailing controversial US government surveillance practices and assurances from technology firms like Google that they would do their utmost to safeguard users personal information.

While it is too late for our clients to have the notice they should have had, they are still entitled to a list of Googles disclosures to the government and an explanation why Google waited more than two and a half years to provide any notice, read the letter from the Center for Constitutional Rights on behalf of WikiLeaks and addressed to Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and General Counsel Kent Walker.

WikiLeaks, founded by Julian Assange, landed in the public spotlight in 2010 when it published a trove of classified government information, including leaked US diplomatic cables.

Google, whose online services include the worlds No.1 Internet search engine as well as the popular Web email service Gmail, notified three members of WikiLeaks on December 23, 2014 that it had provided all of their email content, subscriber information, metadata and other content to law enforcement officials more than two years earlier, according to the letter.

Google provided the information in response to warrants for an investigation concerning espionage, conspiracy to commit espionage and the theft or conversion of property belonging to the US government, among other items, the letter said.

Google said in a statement on Monday that it has a policy of informing users about government requests except in limited cases, like when we are gagged by a court order, which sadly happens quite frequently.

Google noted that it has pushed to unseal all the documents related to the investigation.

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WikiLeaks blasts Google for handing emails to government

Seems there’s one law for Roman Polanski. Another for Ched Evans

Roman Polanski: celebrities have queued up to back him. Photograph: Valery Hache/AFP/Getty Images

Maybe its inevitable, now that Julian Assange, has spent almost 1,500 days in the bowels of the Ecuadorian embassy, that memories of how he came to be in there grow ever more hazy. With a forgetfulness that, if genuine, demonstrates how rapidly the most preposterous inventions can acquire the status of fact, even his colleagues at WikiLeaks have convinced themselves that Assange was incarcerated by a British government determined to keep him quiet.

Among the more opportunistic tweets responding to the massacre in Paris, came this, from the WikiLeaks account: David Cameron pontificates about freedom of speech while spending millions detaining #Assange without trial. At this impressive rate of fabulation, the 2,000th day should see our unhappy visionary gagged in a dripping cell as he awaits the death sentence applied to all fugitives who dare speak freely in the Kafkaesque nightmare that is 21st-century Britain. It would bear as much relation to the facts, after all, as the current myth of his forced detention without trial.

So, to recap: in June 2012, Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, was in the UK, free to speak on any subject he liked, and fighting extradition from Britain to Sweden, where he faced allegations of sexual assaults on two women. Preferring to break his bail conditions rather than clear his name in Sweden, he sought asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy, where he remains to this day. It is a source of consternation, at least outside his support base, that the cost of policing the embassy so as to enforce the legal process should Assange ever emerge, has now exceeded 9m. Last November, an arrest warrant for Assange was upheld in a Swedish court.

In short, #Assange is not detained by anyone or anything other than his own reluctance to face questioning about alleged sex offences, in a country where extradition to the US is no more likely than it is here. But maybe this confusion about his journey from free-speech celebrity to pallid hermit helps one understand why Assange, though accused of sex offences, has survived much of the public opprobrium, internet gossip and suspicion that dogs other individuals associated with accusations of sexual misconduct, such as the harassment expert Julien Blanc or the Lib Dem octopus, Lord Rennard.

To the contrary. On the website where a petition denounces the footballer and convicted rapist Ched Evans, thousands demand the Nobel prize, along with freedom and protection, for Assange; his admirers even attempted to kickstart funds for a statue, honouring the man who has portrayed his Swedish accusers as instruments in a smear campaign. Other analysts, however, have detected enough evidence of female self-determination to attribute the womens hostility to everything from sexual jealousy to a bad case of radical feminism.

Clearly, Assanges better-informed supporters, who include celebrities such as Lady Gaga, Arundhati Roy and Vivienne Westwood, will be aware of the Swedish allegations and have chosen, for one reason or another, to set them aside. A similar immunity seems to have been conferred on Prince Andrew, following allegations of his sexual impropriety with a minor who worked for his American friend, a convicted paedophile. Though emphatically denied, with the extra benefit of a character reference from Andrews ex-wife, who was lent money by the paedophile, there has been no announcement of the type of legal manoeuvre that the similarly accused Alan Dershowitz is pursuing after allegations that he also took sexual advantage of the 17-year-old.

Yet Andrew, too, has so far escaped a petition objecting to him assisting the economic success of our United Kingdom, as the palace describes his various holidays. Perhaps, as happened to the creepy Blanc when he attempted to visit the UK, some other country would be good enough to help out with a banning order.

If the difference between unproven allegations and, in Ched Evanss case, a formal conviction, can satisfactorily explain this variability in public tolerance, the footballers supporters are surely entitled to compare his treatment unfavourably with, for example, that of Roman Polanski. Why have opponents of Evanss return to football, now or ever, not shown similar concern about the film directors rehabilitation? Polanskis return to Poland, for filming, has just prompted another US extradition request, that he be returned to face sentencing pending since 1978, when he admitted unlawful sex with a 13-year-old.

It must help, of course, that successful film directors have not been classified, by whichever national committee rules on fitness for role-modelling, as officially inspirational. Polanski, like his colleague Woody Allen, who embarked, in his mid-50s, on an affair with his partners 19-year-old daughter, sister to three of his children, cannot be accused of betraying impressionable fans, those millions of starstruck kiddies whose wee moral compasses are left spinning wildly when their idols fall short.

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Seems there’s one law for Roman Polanski. Another for Ched Evans

Australian Cyberthriller ‘Amnesia’ Echoes Julian Assange Story

Peter Carey's new novel, Amnesia, opens just as a computer virus is unlocking the cells of Australian prisons from Alice Springs to Woomera. And because those computer systems were designed by an American company, the virus also worms its way into thousands of U.S. prisons, from dusty towns in Texas to dusty towns in Afghanistan. Around the world, security monitors flash with this message: "The corporation is under our control. The Angel declares you free."

Carey won the Booker Prize twice for his novels Oscar and Lucinda and the True History of the Kelly Gang. He tells NPR's Scott Simon about how WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange inspired Amnesia and how his characters navigate a world where anything can be hacked.

On Gaby, the "Angel" who made the virus

She's a mere child, from my perspective. ... She's probably about 30. She's a political activist. She's a hacker. She is at war with corporations and the state in all sorts of ways. She happens to also be the child of '60s-era sort of social democrat idealist activists. And a lot about this story is about generational disappointment in the performance of one's elders, or her elders.

On the real-life Australian who inspired the character of Gaby Julian Assange

Julian Assange really was the reason I started writing the book, but I didn't want to write about Assange. ... I live in New York and I've lived here for 25 years, and the thing that really struck me was it didn't seem to occur to anyone that he was Australian. Because, of course, if he was Australian then he couldn't be a traitor, could he? But he was a traitor. So no one was really thinking that he was from another country.

And because I am from Australia, I felt I knew his accent. I felt I knew a lot about his history. I read a little bit about his mother, who had clearly been a supporter of the 1975 Whitlam government, which was later deposed by the CIA. So I had all sorts of feelings about somebody like that.

On Felix Moore, a veteran journalist who sets out to tell Gaby's story, using a typewriter

Well, if you use a typewriter you really can't be hacked. And so that's about as off-line you can possibly get. You then have the problem afterwards about how are you going to get the words that you typed to somebody else without emailing them. Well, we know how we used to do that.

So Felix is back using the sort of technology that he started with. And you know Gaby's friends drive an old model truck that doesn't have an onboard computer because we know that an outsider can take control of a motorcar and crash it and accelerate it and turn it over if they want to. So I think it's terribly porous. We're all very vulnerable.

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Australian Cyberthriller 'Amnesia' Echoes Julian Assange Story

Did Julian Assange and Pamela Anderson Do It?

There was a fun blind item revealed today on the unverifiable gossip site Crazy Days and Nights:

September 8, 2014

There is sleeping with someone for tracks, for a part, or even for money. This former A list mostly television actress turned A list celebrity and reality star for a paycheck slept with this international B list celebrity just for his endorsement. He didn't give it though.

Pamela Anderson/Julian Assange

It's difficult to gauge how much truth there is to such nuggets of gossip. However, in this case, the blind item might actually be onto something. According to the Daily Mail, a meeting between Assange and Anderson occurred last year, right around the time the original blind item was posted. As Charlotte Gill at the Mail reported:

Pamela Anderson has secretly visited Julian Assange at the Ecuadorian Embassy, I can report.

The meeting was arranged by fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood, a friend of them both.

Somewhat surprisingly, the Baywatch actress, right, was trying to encourage the Wikileaks founder to back her new foundation, which supports women who are victims of sexual abuse, among other causes.

Westwood later told Gill that Assange and Anderson "got on very well."

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Did Julian Assange and Pamela Anderson Do It?

SeX Podcast 6,7,8,9,10 – Julian Assange sex assault, DON’T ASK DON’T TELL in military! – Video


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Julian Assange has cost Britain £9m to police at Ecuador embassy

Julian Assange has claimed asylum at Ecuador embassy since June 2012 Metropolitan police officers have been standing outside building ever since Has cost taxpayers 9million as police officers stationed round the clock He is wanted in Sweden after allegedly sexually assaulting two women Fears he could be sent to US on charges of leaking government documents

By Thomas Burrows for MailOnline

Published: 07:25 EST, 3 January 2015 | Updated: 11:37 EST, 3 January 2015

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Guarding the Ecuadorian embassy in London where Julian Assange has claimed asylum has now cost taxpayers 9million, it has been revealed.

Metropolitan Police officers have been standing outside the Knightsbridge building since the WikiLeaks founder took refuge there in June 2012 - a vigil costing 11,000 per day.

The 43-year-old is wanted in Swedenafter allegedly sexually assaulting two women in Stockholm in 2010.

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Julian Assange has cost Britain £9m to police at Ecuador embassy

Exclusive: Julian Assange on "When Google Met WikiLeaks …

In a holiday special, we feature an exclusive Democracy Now! interview with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. In July, Amy Goodman spoke to Assange after he had just entered his third year inside Ecuadors embassy in London, where he has political asylum. He faces investigations in both Sweden and the United States. In the United States, a secret grand jury is investigating WikiLeaks for its role in publishing a trove of leaked documents about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, as well as State Department cables. In Sweden, he is wanted for questioning on allegations of sexual misconduct, though no charges have been filed. During his interview, Assange talked about his new book, which at that time had not yet been released, titled, "When Google Met Wikileaks." The book was later published in September.

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: In this holiday special, we begin with an exclusive Democracy Now! interview with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. In July, I interviewed Julian Assange after he just entered his third year inside Ecuadors Embassy in London, where he has political asylum. He faces investigations in both Sweden and the United States. In the U.S., a secret grand jury is investigating WikiLeaks for its role in publishing a trove of leaked documents about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, as well as State Department cables. In Sweden, hes wanted for questioning on allegations of sexual misconduct, though no charges have ever been filed.

During his interview, Julian Assange talked about his new book, which had not yet been released when I was in the embassy with him. Its called When Google Met WikiLeaks. The book was published in September. I began by asking Julian Assange to explain the books title.

JULIAN ASSANGE: The title of the book is When Google Met WikiLeaks. And so, thats the interesting thing: Did Google ever meet WikiLeaks? OK, bothlots of people have heard of both of these institutions, and in some ways they seem very different, in some ways they seem quite similar. Both are involved in, it seems, spreading information around the world, across borders, and also collecting information.

Eric Schmidt, the now chairman of Google, came to visit me under house arrest, secretly, in 2011. And the

AMY GOODMAN: When you were under house arrest in Britain?

JULIAN ASSANGE: When I was under house arrest in the U.K., in fact, rural U.K., quite isolated, our location. And he had a party of three other people that came with him. Now, the reason or pretext for that visit was that Eric Schmidt was working on a book, and the book was called The New Digital Age. In fact that book was eventually published last year. It wasntand is an interesting book to read to sort of understand where Google wants to position itself in terms of the Washington establishment. To sum it up, The New Digital Age, that book by Eric Schmidt, is Googles call to Washington to represent itself as Americas geopolitical visionary. So, as far as geopolitics is concerned and where its going and its integration with technology and the Internet as a global structure, Google has the answers, and Google can explain how to get there. Now, that was the outcome.

Who else came to the party back in 2011? It wasnt just Eric Schmidt who came to see me. He had a retinue of three people. And those were Jared Cohen, Lisa Shields and Scott Malcomson. Now, I didnt really think about that visit and the other people who came to see me for this interview until much later, until we were publishing State Department cables and, in fact, were going to publish a lot of State Department cables back in September 2011. And for various legal reasons, we needed to document that I had tried to make a telephone call to Hillary Clinton. And so, having been at this game for a while as a journalist, this is how you get to someone whos in an influential position of power. You say, "Theres a person-to-person call from Julian Assange to Hillary Clinton." You get one of your people to do it, say, "I am Julian Assanges PA," and gradually you rise up the levels of the bureaucracy. And so, we did that with Hillary, went in through the front door, and after, you know, some minutes, I got up to her senior legal adviser, who said that she was in a meeting and that they would call back.

And then we did get a call back, but it wasnt by Hillary Clinton. It wasnt by, at least initially, by anyone from the State Department. It was by Lisa Shields, the person who had come with Eric Schmidt, who was, in fact, at that time, Eric Schmidts girlfriend. So, Lisa Shields was used as a back channel by Hillary Clinton to check that it really was me that was trying to communicate with her. And that back channel turnaround happened in half an hour. So, at that moment, we came to understand that the chairman of Google was in fact very close to the State Department. In fact, he was literally sharing the bed, in some way, with the State Department.

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Exclusive: Julian Assange on "When Google Met WikiLeaks ...

Julian Assange to model for London Fashion Week

Julian Assange will model for Vivienne Westwood's son Ben during London Fashion Week.

According to the Daily Mail, the show will take place in September at the Ecuadorian Embassy, where the WikiLeaks founder has been seeking refuge for the past two years.

Anthony Devlin/PA Wire

"Julian's been in the embassy for two years and it's important that he doesn't slip into obscurity."

Ben explained that he has taken inspiration from Assange's sense of dress and his 'combat/beret look'.

"I've designed something for him along those lines and will be getting him to wear it," Ben said.

"I've got another garment with a Julian Assange print."

Assange is avoiding extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over claims of sex offences.

London Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2015 runs from September 12-16.

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Julian Assange to model for London Fashion Week