Assange hints at more leaks

AP Fugitive WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has hinted that new leaks are coming from WikiLeaks.

Speaking over Skype from the Ecuadorian embassy in London, fugitive WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says his living situation is a bit like prison - with a more lenient visitor policy.

The Australian also hinted that new leaks are coming from WikiLeaks, though he gave no specifics on what these might be.

Assange, who has been confined to the embassy since June 2012, discussed government surveillance, journalism and the situation in Ukraine on Saturday in a streaming-video interview beamed to an audience of 3,500 attendees of the South By Southwest Interactive festival in Austin, Texas.

Assange's hour-long remote appearance was spiked with technical glitches. As the audio cut out, he sometimes asked audience members to raise their hands if they could hear him. Benjamin Palmer, the co-founder of marketing firm The Barbarian Group who interviewed Assange, at one point resorted to texting his questions.

Looking well-groomed in a white shirt, scarf and a black blazer, Assange blasted President Barack Obama's administration, saying it was not taking fellow secret leaker Edward Snowden's revelations about the NSA's surveillance activities seriously.

"We know what happens when the government is serious," he said.

"Someone is fired, someone is forced to resign, someone is prosecuted, an investigation (is launched), a budget is cut. None of that has happened in the last eight months since the Edward Snowden revelations."

Assange's appearance at this five-day conference - which will host Snowden in a similar remote interview on Monday - signal the growing concern in the tech community around issues of online privacy, surveillance and security, even as internet giants like Google and Facebook reap billions in advertising revenue from collecting information about their users.

"Now that the internet has merged with human society and human society has merged with the internet, the laws of the internet become the laws of society," he said, adding that through the NSA's "penetration of the internet" has led to a "military occupation" of civilian space.

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Assange hints at more leaks

Julian Assange draws a big SXSW crowd, which quickly loses interest

FORTUNE -- The South by Southwest festival is known for long lines to get into parties, panels, taxis and restaurants. But rarely is there a long line to leave a room.

That's what happened this afternoon, during a keynote interview with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

For the past two years, the SXSW Interactive festival has been evolving its reputation as more than a place for big social media apps to "break out." Last year, the festival focused on nerdier tech and science themes like 3D printing and space exploration. This year, there is an emphasis on politics and privacy, with keynotes from Assange and Edward Snowden.

MORE:Will Ben Horowitz be launching his rap career at SXSW?

The controversial and outspoken anti-censorship advocate drew a crowd of approximately 5,000, packing almost every seat in auditorium. The problem? He wasn't actually there in person. (He has been living in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012; the British government has been seeking to extradite him for a year.) Assange connected to Austin via Skype, and there were technical glitches. On first ring he didn't answer.

After a rocky logistical start, the interview began slowly, with softball questions like, "How did you start Wikileaks?" Despite that, Assange managed to offer a few choice Tweet-able sound bytes, such as:

"There has been a militarization of our civil space, an occupation of our civilian space."

"The best way to achieve justice is to expose injustice."

and

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Julian Assange draws a big SXSW crowd, which quickly loses interest

Snowden, Assange top bill at Texas tech gathering

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) Surveillance. Online privacy. Robots. Food processing. Wearable computers. To get a sense of what's on the minds of the tech industry's thinkers, leaders and tinkerers, it's a good idea to head to Austin, Texas, rather than Silicon Valley this time of the year.

More than 30,000 people descend on this eccentric city for the South By Southwest Interactive Festival each March. This year, NSA leaker Edward Snowden and WikiLeaks founder and secret spiller Julian Assange are topping the bill, alongside Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone and Anne Wojcicki, CEO of genetics testing company 23andMe.

Snowden and Assange won't be making the trip to Texas, however. They'll appear on live video, since both are living as fugitives, in Moscow and the Ecuadorian embassy in London, respectively. Their inclusion illustrates how the festival is trying to balance holding on to its independent roots even as it's flooded by a barrage of corporate sponsors and threatens to grow too big for its hometown.

"We have always said that South By Southwest is a very big tent and we have all different types of people," said Hugh Forrest, director of the interactive festival. "This is a feature and not a flaw."

Still, it's clear that online privacy and government surveillance is on top of the technology set's mind this year. Snowden, the former NSA contractor who appears Monday, faces felony charges in the U.S. after revealing the agency's mass surveillance program by leaking thousands of classified documents to media outlets. He is living under temporary asylum in Russia, which has no extradition treaty with the U.S.

Snowden is unlikely to talk about the case against him during the session and will focus instead on "how technology enables surveillance and how technology can protect us from surveillance," said Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union. Soghoian will be speaking to Snowden along with Snowden's legal adviser, the ACLU's Ben Wizner. Snowden is being represented by the ACLU in the U.S. government's case against him.

Speaking at South By Southwest rather than in front of Congress or at a conference of lawyers gives Snowden a chance to talk to the technology community, "his peers," Soghoian said.

"The reason the NSAs collected as much information as it did is because of technology," he said. "Technology got us into this mess and technology will get us out of it."

Assange, meanwhile, will speak on Saturday with Benjamin Palmer, the co-founder of The Barbarian Group, a marketing agency whose clients range from Pepsi to Samsung to New York City. As to why a marketing executive is interviewing a figure as controversial as Assange? A hint: Visitors to the group's website are greeted with the message "We create ideas that provoke a reaction."

Part of the larger South By Southwest festival that also includes music, film and recently education segments, SXSWi, as it's dubbed, became a separate event in 1994, when it was still called "SXSW Multimedia." Past speakers have ranged from the computer scientist and virtual reality pioneer Jaron Lanier in 1997 to investor Mark Cuban in 1999 and Friendster founder Jonathan Abrams in 2004.

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Snowden, Assange top bill at Texas tech gathering

SXSW 2014: Snowden, Assange top bill at tech gathering

AUSTIN, Texas -- Surveillance. Online privacy. Robots. Food processing. Wearable computers. To get a sense of what's on the minds of the tech industry's thinkers, leaders and tinkerers, it's a good idea to head to Austin, Texas, rather than Silicon Valley this time of the year.

More than 30,000 people descend on this eccentric city for the South By Southwest Interactive Festival each March. This year, NSA leaker Edward Snowden and WikiLeaks founder and secret spiller Julian Assange are topping the bill, alongside Google Chairman Eric Schmidt, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone and Anne Wojcicki, CEO of genetics testing company 23andMe.

Snowden and Assange won't be making the trip to Texas, however. They'll appear on live video, since both are living as fugitives, in Moscow and the Ecuadorian embassy in London, respectively. Their inclusion illustrates how the festival is trying to balance holding on to its independent roots even as it's flooded by a barrage of corporate sponsors and threatens to grow too big for its hometown.

"We have always said that South By Southwest is a very big tent and we have all different types of people," said Hugh Forrest, director of the interactive festival. "This is a feature and not a flaw."

Still, it's clear that online privacy and government surveillance is on top of the technology set's mind this year. Snowden, the former NSA contractor who appears Monday, faces felony charges in the U.S. after revealing the agency's mass surveillance program by leaking thousands of classified documents to media outlets. He is living under temporary asylum in Russia, which has no extradition treaty with the U.S.

Snowden is unlikely to talk about the case against him during the session and will focus instead on "how technology enables surveillance and how technology can protect us from surveillance," said Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist at the American Civil Liberties Union. Soghoian will be speaking to Snowden along with Snowden's legal adviser, the ACLU's Ben Wizner. Snowden is being represented by the ACLU in the U.S. government's case against him.

Speaking at South By Southwest -- rather than in front of Congress or at a conference of lawyers -- gives Snowden a chance to talk to the technology community, "his peers," Soghoian said.

"The reason the NSAs collected as much information as it did is because of technology," he said. "Technology got us into this mess and technology will get us out of it."

Assange, meanwhile, will speak on Saturday with Benjamin Palmer, the co-founder of The Barbarian Group, a marketing agency whose clients range from Pepsi to Samsung to New York City. As to why a marketing executive is interviewing a figure as controversial as Assange? A hint: Visitors to the group's website are greeted with the message "We create ideas that provoke a reaction."

Part of the larger South By Southwest festival that also includes music, film and recently education segments, SXSWi, as it's dubbed, became a separate event in 1994, when it was still called "SXSW Multimedia." Past speakers have ranged from the computer scientist and virtual reality pioneer Jaron Lanier in 1997 to investor Mark Cuban in 1999 and Friendster founder Jonathan Abrams in 2004.

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SXSW 2014: Snowden, Assange top bill at tech gathering

Julian Assange – NNDB

Julian Assange

AKA Julian Paul Assange

Born: 3-Jul-1971 [1] Birthplace: Townsville, Australia

Gender: Male Religion: Atheist [2] Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Hacker, Journalist

Nationality: Australia Executive summary: Founder of Wikileaks

Computer programmer and secretive hacker Julian Assange is the public spokesman for Wikileaks, an online publisher of classified documents, founded in December 2006. The site's funding is shadowy, its staff unpaid; it claims to be propagated on twenty separate servers worldwide, making it difficult to muzzle. According to Assange, the site's key collaborators know each other only by initials which might or might not represent their true names.

In its first few years, the site's major scoops included an operations manual from the US prison at Guantanamo, emails hacked from Sarah Palin's Yahoo account, interoffice communications from climate researchers at the University of East Anglia, secret Scientology texts. Their biggest media splash came in April 2010 with the release of Collateral Murder, a first-person video of American soldiers killing Reuters journalists from a gunship over Baghdad. It was followed over the next few months by several large leaks, coordinated with major newspapers, of American military reports from Iraq and Afghanistan, and a slow leak of 250,000 classified American embassy cables.

Wikileaks is believed to have received more than a quarter of a million classified embassy cables from a 22-year-old soldier, Bradley Manning, who was casually outed after confiding in ex-hacker Adrian Lamo in May 2010 and is now facing charges in a military prison. In 2010, Wikileaks published a secret American intelligence document assessing the perceived risk the site presents to US national security. Assange has said that the site's occasional technical difficulties are a consequence of on-line attacks launched by US operatives.

Beginning in 2010, Assange battled extradition to Sweden, where he faces charges of rape and sexual assault, charges he claims are "without basis". On 30 May 2012, he lost an appeal before the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, leaving his extradition a near certainty. A few weeks later, on 19 June 2012, Assange sought asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he has remained for more than a year.

[2] Per OkCupid profile.

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Julian Assange - NNDB

Julian Assange: A Ghost Even to Himself?

The novelist and essayist Andrew O'Hagan spent the better part of a year working as Julian Assange's ghostwriter, before Assange's inattention and ambivalence about writing a book at all sabotaged the project. O'Hagan has now written a long memoir of the experience which is the most intimate and trustworthy description of Assange to yet appear. Some supporters of WikiLeaks argue that all of the attention paid to Assange's peculiar character is a distraction from the substance of his work, but the more up-close accounts of Assange have been published, O'Hagan's now chief among them, the more inextricable from his personality his work comes to seem. O'Hagan's essay, in the current issue of the London Review of Books, is titled "Ghosting," and that is the dominant image the novelist chooses: Of the impossibility of writing on behalf of a man who is spectral himself, who for all his fame and conviction has little sense of who he is, who sees himself only as a "a ghost in the machine, walking through the corridors of power and switching off the lights." What that imagethe ghost in the corridorcaptures perfectly is the idea Assange presented of himself, the hacker stealthy and empowered, the agent of disruption. But this image seems less satisfying the deeper you get into the history of WikiLeaks it seems like the propaganda version of Assange rather than the real one. OHagan suggests the truth may be a bit simplerthat Assange grasped so eagerly for a persona because he didnt have a clue who he was. Not a ghost in the machine, but something more elusive and spectral still: A ghost even to himself.

The months that O'Hagan spent with Assange were rich in scenery: The Australian, world-famous but under house arrest, was cooped up with a few acolytes in a rambling British manor house, his girlfriend dispatched to check the bushes for assassins. The general shape of Assange's characterromantic, uncultured, childish, narcissistichas long been established. O'Hagan confirms the general picture, though in his hands Assange's weirdness is even more intense. "I made lunch every day and he'd eat it, often with his hands, and then lick the plate," O'Hagan writes.

But the book project dissolves, over the course of O'Hagan's storyAssange rants about the publishers and lawyers who are out to get him, claims he has extensively marked up O'Hagan's draft but then will not produce the edit, sabotages interview sessions and then fixes on the conviction that instead of the autobiography he had contracted to produce he will deliver a manifesto, a description of his ideas. (The publishers predictably nixed this.) When the Assange tries to cut descriptions of his own life on the grounds that they will make him look "weak," O'Hagan comes to suspect that Assange, having been paid to assemble the story of his own life, has no story to tell.

"He dressed his objections in rhetoric and principles, but the reality was much sadder, and much more alarming for him," O'Hagan writes. "He didnt know who to be."

From the outset, Assange himself has been the central author of the Assange mythof the story in which the Australian is so completely an outsider that he seems less a character in a novel than a figure in a philosophical hypothetical, that the depths of his alienation from society make him destined to tell outsized truths. (The revelation at the end of The Fifth Estate, Paul Greengrass's based-in-fact biopic, is that Assange dyes his own hair white, perhaps in order to make himself seem stranger and more alien.) Here is how Assange described his childhood to the journalist Raffi Khatchadourian in 2010: I had my own horse. I built my own raft. I went fishing. I was going down mine shafts and tunnels. Assange told Khatchadourian that he and his mother had been tracked through his teens by a cult with moles in the government. In the excerpts that have surfaced of the autobiographical novel Assange once wrote (he calls the Assange character "Mendax," which is the hacker nom-de-guerre Assange used in real life) the Australian styles himself almost a video-game figure, an avatar: Mendax dreamed of police raids all the time. He dreamed of footsteps crunching on the driveway gravel, of shadows in the pre-dawn darkness, of a gun-toting police squad bursting through his backdoor at 5 am.

There are now a fairly large number of people who were once close to Assange and who continue to believe in the WikiLeaks project, but have fallen out with the Australian personally because of the sheer difficulty of dealing with him. To O'Hagan, add the celebrity journalist Jemima Khan, the Icelandic politician Brigitta Jonsdottir, the ex-WikiLeakers Daniel Domscheit-Berg and James Ball, and many other writers and thinkers. Among this group, the common lament is that Assange's personality doomed his causethat if he had simply been more capable of listening to other people, less certain that his allies were plotting against him, able to comprehend that young Swedish women did not necessarily want to have sex with him, then perhaps he would not be locked up in a Swedish embassy and WikiLeaks would be an enduring force for truth and transparency in global politics. There is a regret, as O'Hagan puts it, over "how far all this had taken us from the work WikiLeaks had started out doing."

That's one way of looking at it. Another is that the work WikiLeaks had started out doing would never have happened if not for Assange's own self-aggrandizing character. I mean this in two ways. First, one of the most unusual features of the Manning and Snowden episodes has beengiven the comparatively low security clearances each man enjoyed, and the obviously shocking material they uncoveredthat no one preceded them, that there weren't a hundred Snowdens and Mannings first, that details of the murderous conduct of American troops and the NSA's overreach took so long to be exposed. Second, had Assange not been goading the press from the sidelines, suggesting that his scoops were of a profound historical importance, it is not at all clear that the public response would have been as outraged as it was. (Consider, for instance, the New York Times first day coverage of the Afghan war logs, in which news of the major war crimes the logs contained is barely detectable.) These three figures Assange, Manning and Snowdenhave been widely derided for the detectable traces of alienation, narcissism, and strangeness in their personalities. But given the context, it seems possible that their alienation from other people is part of what compelled them to see the excesses of the state more clearly, and to broadcast their evidence more loudlythat their alienation was a feature, not a bug.

None of which does much to illuminate the nature of Assange's character, of what is behind this grasping construction of a two-dimensional persona. Perhaps the Australian suffered from a great sentimental wound, OHagan hypothesizes, like Orson Welless Citizen Kane. But thats a guess, and OHagan doesnt seem to have much certainty about it.

But I do think that we have underestimated the tragedy of Assange a little bit, as the reports of his self-involvement and obsessiveness and endless capacity for mistaking the big picture for the small have mounted. To see Assange as O'Hagan leaves him"like a cornered animal in the embassy," fixated on the undulations of his public reputation and fame, declaring himself to be the third-greatest hacker on earthis to feel a twinge of complicity, as one does with Chelsea Manning, as one does with the now-disgraced UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter. It isn't simply, as O'Hagan suggests, that the Australian's character is a cardboard construction, erected to fill a void, and that it wasn't up to the task of fame. It is that in some ways the rest of us needed someone willing to be exactly as two-dimensional as Assange wasthat we benefited from what broke him.

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Julian Assange: A Ghost Even to Himself?