Julian Assange’s asylum in Ecuadoran embassy in doubt …

BUENOS AIRES The legal saga of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange could be taking a major new turn after Ecuador abruptly announced this week that Mr. Assanges asylum in the countrys London embassy now entering its sixth year is unsustainable given the Australians continued meddling in political affairs.

In an unexpected move that could impact the Russian election-meddling probe in the U.S., Ecuadoran President Lenin Moreno has broken with the policies of predecessor and mentor Rafael Correa and signaled that Mr. Assanges days of refuge in the London embassy are numbered.

Facing legal woes originally linked to sexual assault charges in Sweden that he claims are politically motivated, Mr. Assange may have slowly but surely overstayed his welcome, Mr. Morenos foreign minister said this week, suggesting that international mediation may help get the Australian asylee out of the mission in the posh Knightsbridge neighborhood.

We have an enormous interest in achieving a definitive solution for the Assange case, said Maria Fernanda Espinosa on Wednesday in Quito Ecuadors capital. To make that happen, we are in permanent dialogue with the government of the United Kingdom, and we are exploring various options to find a way out of this situation.

While Mr. Assange has found sanctuary in embassy, WikiLeaks, the organization he founded, has found itself at the center of the probe into whether the Kremlin tried to swing the U.S. election in favor of Donald Trump. The group made public thousands of sensitive internal emails from the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign in the summer of 2016. Mr. Assange has denied he worked with Russian intelligence on the release of the hacked correspondence.

Negotiations led by a third country or a respected statesman, Ms. Espinosa said, could help solve the stalemate in London, insisting that the way to resolve this issue is for Julian Assange to leave the embassy to face justice.

Mr. Assange originally sought refuge in the embassy building in 2012 to evade a European arrest warrant issued for the Swedish prosecution. Though that investigation has since been dropped, he continues to face a separate British warrant for skipping bail.

The 46-year-old activist and his supporters contend that all attempts to take him into custody are ultimately aimed at extraditing Mr. Assange to the United States to face charges over the massive 2010 leaks of classified U.S. diplomatic cables a claim bolstered by Attorney General Jeff Sessions recent comments that getting access to Mr. Assange is considered a priority for U.S. investigators.

Ecuador, meanwhile, had long maintained it agreed to protect Mr. Assange from what is considers politically motivated prosecution. But while its foreign minister voiced concern for Mr. Assanges physical and psychological integrity, analysts noted that her overture marks a clear departure from the longstanding fierce defense of the hacker especially coming from Ms. Espinosa, a political holdover from the leftist Correa administration.

She was one of the promoters of this anti-American [and] anti-OAS rhetoric, said Santiago Basabe of the Latin American Social Sciences Institute in Quito. In this context, Assange served as the calling card of what Correa wanted to do on the international scene.

Correa and Assange

In fact, the former president an unquestioning ally and personal friend of the Venezuelas late anti-U.S. populist leader Hugo Chavez closely linked his own political fate to that of Mr. Assange, whom he had granted asylum within weeks of his showing up at the London embassy.

If you agreed with Correas government and Correa, you had to agree with [his handling of] the Assange case. And if you opposed Correa, you were against Assange, Mr. Basabe said. So the countrys internal polarization fundamentally served Assange, while Correa used it in an intelligent way, in political and electoral terms, by portraying Assange as persecuted, as a victim of the [American] empire.

The link was so tight that some 6,000 miles from Ecuadoran territory, Mr. Assange quite openly backed Mr. Moreno then Mr. Correas handpicked successor in last years presidential election. Opposition challenger Guillermo Lasso, by contrast, promised voters he would expel the WikiLeaks leader within 30 days of taking office.

I cordially invite Mr. Lasso to leave Ecuador within 30 days, Mr. Assange predictably retorted on Twitter after the candidates narrow defeat, earning a first rebuke from Mr. Moreno, who made it clear he preferred for the outspoken non-citizen to stay out of domestic politics.

Nevertheless, the WikiLeaks founders running commentary continued to irk the new Ecuadoran president, especially as Mr. Moreno increasingly distanced himself from Mr. Correa, whose leftist economic vision he sought to replace with closer ties to the countrys European and American trading partners.

Mr. Assange has not exactly been a model guest, finding it hard to stay quiet.

In the wake of Catalonias polarizing bid to secede from Spain late last year, Mr. Assange mused on social media that the breakaway regions fit men represented a force which if rallied vastly eclipses the available capacities of Spains police [and] army. Mr. Moreno assured Madrid that he had made the hacker promise in writing to keep his future thoughts to himself.

We have reminded him that his condition of asylum does not allow him to intervene in Ecuadoran or international politics, the president told the Spanish newspaper ABC. We have asked him not to talk about the topic of Catalonia. If he does, we will know to respond.

Seeking to improve on the sometimes testy relations Mr. Correa had with the U.S., Mr. Moreno likely also wants to avoid similar Assange ripples in relations with Washington Quitos top trading partner by far. And ending the politically costly asylum offered to Mr. Assange could serve as an opening salvo for a more balanced foreign policy in the region, Mr. Basabe said, in particular in moving away from the tilt toward the struggling leftist government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

Even more urgently, though, Mr. Moreno wants Mr. Assange to stop hovering in the background on the domestic front where he is pushing a Feb. 4 referendum that will likely reinstate term limits and if successful would further constrain what is left of the political clout of his estranged predecessor.

This means that Correa, at least in the short and medium terms, would be left out of the electoral arena, Mr. Basabe said. And combined with the internal tensions, it makes for an uncomfortable, unfavorable scene for Mr. Assange.

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Julian Assange's asylum in Ecuadoran embassy in doubt ...

Julian Assange’s stay in London embassy untenable, says …

Ecuadors foreign minister has said Julian Assanges five-and-a-half-year stay in her countrys London embassy is untenable and should be ended through international mediation.

The WikiLeaks founder has been holed up in Knightsbridge since the summer of 2012, when he faced the prospect of extradition to Sweden over claims that he sexually assaulted two women. He denies the accusations.

Swedish prosecutors last year unexpectedly dropped their investigation into the allegations, which included a claim of rape. But Assange still faces arrest for breaching bail conditions if he steps outside the embassy and WikiLeaks has voiced fears that the US will seek his extradition and that there is a sealed indictment ordering his arrest.

WikiLeaks publications have included hundreds of thousands of US army war logs and state department diplomatic cables and more recently emails from the Democratic National Committee during the run-up to the 2016 US presidential election. The US attorney general, Jeff Sessions, said last May that Assanges arrest was now a priority.

Ecuadors foreign minister, Mara Fernanda Espinosa, said her country was now seeking a third country or a personality to mediate a final settlement with the UK to resolve the impasse and said it was considering and exploring the possibility of mediation.

No solution will be achieved without international cooperation and the cooperation of the United Kingdom, which has also shown interest in seeking a way out, she told foreign correspondents in Quito, according to Agence France-Presse.

Assange, who has received numerous visitors to his modest quarters in the embassy, ranging from Nigel Farage to Lady Gaga, has described the period since his initial arrest as a terrible injustice. Not being able to see his children grow up was not something I can forgive, he said.

For several years, Metropolitan police officers maintained a constant watch of the embassy, which is situated behind Harrods in central London, at a cost of at least 11.1m, according to figures released by Scotland Yard in June 2015. Four months later, police lifted the round-the-clock guard on the basis it was no longer proportionate.

A United Nations panel concluded in 2016 that Assange was under arbitrary detention.

On Tuesday evening, a lawyer for Assange appeared to welcome Ecuadors proposal. He said his client had a right to asylum and argued that the risk of him being persecuted in the US had escalated further in recent months under the Trump administrations war on WikiLeaks and that the investigation in Sweden had twice been discontinued.

If the UK wishes to show that it is a nation that respects its human rights obligations and commitments to the United Nations, it is time for Mr Assange to be allowed to enjoy his right to liberty, and fundamental right to protection against persecution in the United States, she said.

A spokesperson for the UK government said: The government of Ecuador knows that the way to resolve this issue is for Julian Assange to leave the embassy to face justice.

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Julian Assange's stay in London embassy untenable, says ...

Julian Assange latest: Wikileaks chief mystery over claims …

Another said: Look for something big on January 4th, 10th, and 20th.

A lot of us now believe Julian isn't at the embassy any more. We believe he's working with Trump.

Another asked: Is Julian on a plane headed to the US?? Im ready for him to let the truth be known!!

Quoting the lyrics to Paper Planes by MIA another user added: I got more records than the KGB. Meaning he's got many more records in his possession.

It comes after the US Navy bizarrely tweeted Julian Assange from its official profile on Christmas Day to complete the series of oddities.

The navys account later tried to clear up any confusion, writing: This morning, an inadvertent keystroke by an authorised user of the US Navy Office of Information's Digitial Media Engagement Team caused the trending term Julian Assange to be tweeted from the Navy's official Twitter account (@USNavy).

The controversial figures account, @JulianAssange, mysteriously disappeared between 12-1am on Christmas morning.

Mr Assanges last tweet was on December 22, leaving no hint as to why the account may have been removed.

People trying to access Assanges Twitter account were directed to an 'error message' page before it reappeared later in the day.

It was then on New Years Day that Mr Assange appeared to return to Twitter, sparking fears he had died and the code was a dead mans switch.

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Julian Assange latest: Wikileaks chief mystery over claims ...

Christmas Mystery: Did Julian Assange Delete … – thewrap.com

In a Christmas Day mystery, the official Twitter account of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was deleted.

And while the internet was rife with conspiracy theories about Twitter disabling the account, it initially appeared that the account was disabled externally between midnight and 1 a.m. GMT, according to Gizmodo.

According to an archived version of his @Julian Assange Twitter account, his most recent tweet was posted on December 22: A knowledgeable public, is an empowered public, is a free public.

Also Read: Wikileaks Asked Donald Trump Jr. to Tell Dad to Contest 2016 Election Results

Assange, who has been holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012 to avoid extradition to avoid a rape accusation from Swedish prosecutors, has long used the social media site to communicate WikiLeaks plans.

The WikiLeaks Twitter handle as well as one associated with his cat, @EmbassyCat, are still functional on the site.

Twitter has not responded to TheWraps request for comment.

Still, the internet being the internet, many speculated darkly about Assanges disappearance from one of his favorite online media.

Over the years, Republicans particularly Donald Trump supporters have done a 180 (or a full 360) in their remarks about WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. When he leaked on Hillary Clintons campaign in 2016, some Republicans said he was doing America a great service. But now the Trump administration is poised to attempt to convict Assange and WikiLeaks for their leaking activities. Here are fivetimes Trump and his supporters have flipped on the matter.

In 2010, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said this about Assange: He is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands. His past posting of classified documents revealed the identity of more than 100 Afghan sources to the Taliban. Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders?

In 2016, though, Palin changed her tune. She posted an apology to Assange on Facebook. I apologize for condemning Assange when he published my infamous (and proven noncontroversial, relatively boring) emails years ago, she wrote.

Way back when, Fox News host Sean Hannity said what Assange was doing was waging his war on America and called for his arrest. He also said WikiLeaks stealing and publishing classified documents put lives at risk, as Media Matters reported.

When Assange started leaking emails from the Clinton campaign, though, Hannity became very friendly. He even brought the WikiLeaks founder onto his show for an interview, saying America owes you a debt of gratitude.

Back in 2010, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich said Assange was a terrorist. Information warfare is warfare. Julian Assange is engaged in warfare. Information terrorism, which leads to people getting killed is terrorism. And Julian Assange is engaged in terrorism.

Once WikiLeaks turned its attention to Clinton, though, Huckabee was ready to discuss Hillary Clintons criminal enterprise, as he called it, on Hannity. He didnt, however, have anything to say about where the leaks came from or whether the leakers should be brought up on treason charges.

Trump had strong words for Wikileaks in 2010. As CNN reported, in an interview with radio host Brian Kilmeade, Trump said of Wikileaks, I think it's disgraceful, I think there should be like death penalty or something.

During the campaign, though, Trumps support for WikiLeaks was hard to miss. He tweeted over and over again about things WikiLeaks documents about the Clinton campaign, and said at one campaign rally in October, WikiLeaks has provided things that are unbelievable.

While Trump repeatedly tweeted about documents released by WikiLeaks aimed at damaging Clinton, he also tweeted it was the dishonest media that claimed he was in agreement with WikiLeaks.

Republicans were fans of WikiLeaks during the election, but now the U.S. is looking to charge members of the organization

Over the years, Republicans particularly Donald Trump supporters have done a 180 (or a full 360) in their remarks about WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. When he leaked on Hillary Clintons campaign in 2016, some Republicans said he was doing America a great service. But now the Trump administration is poised to attempt to convict Assange and WikiLeaks for their leaking activities. Here are fivetimes Trump and his supporters have flipped on the matter.

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Christmas Mystery: Did Julian Assange Delete ... - thewrap.com

Navy explains ‘inadvertent’ tweet about Julian Assange | TheHill

The Navy on Monday sought to explain why it tweeted WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's name, attributing it to an "inadvertent keystroke."

"This morning, an inadvertent keystroke by an authorized user of the U.S. Navy Office of Information's Digitial Media Engagement Team caused the trending term 'Julian Assange' to be tweeted from the Navy's official Twitter account," the Navy tweeted.

"The inadvertent tweet was briefly posted for a few second before it was quickly deleted by the same authorized user. The inadvertent tweet was sent during routine monitoring of trending topics."

This morning, an inadvertent keystroke by an authorized user of the U.S. Navy Office of Information's Digitial Media Engagement Team caused the trending term "Julian Assange" to be tweeted from the Navy's official Twitter account (@USNavy). (1/2)

The inadvertent tweet was briefly posted for a few second before it was quickly deleted by the same authorized user. The inadvertent tweet was sent during routine monitoring of trending topics. (2/2)

WikiLeaks responded to the Navy's statement, posting a screenshot of the original tweet.

Here a screenshot of the deleted @USNavy Christmas tweet about @JulianAssange. Note the use of quotation marks.https://t.co/Asfw6cH6C7 pic.twitter.com/7Gg6mVOoCx

The incident came after Assange's account briefly disappearedfrom the social media platform before returning Monday morning. It is unclear why the account briefly disappeared.

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Navy explains 'inadvertent' tweet about Julian Assange | TheHill

Assange confirms WikiLeaks was approached by Trump-linked …

The editor of Wikileaks confirmed the group was approached by a data firm working for Donald Trump's presidential campaign during the 2016 election.

Julian Assange says on Twitter that Cambridge Analytica reached out to his group prior to last November, but WikiLeaks rejected the company's "approach." Assange didn't specify the content of that approach.

He issued the tweet after news website The Daily Beast reported that Cambridge Analytica CEO Alexander Nix reached out to Assange during the presidential campaign about the possible release of 33,000 of Hillary Clinton's missing emails. Those emails have never been publicly released.

Cambridge Analytica, which uses data mining to microtarget ads based on personality, claimed after the election that it had played a key role in Mr. Trump's victory. The company was hired by Mr. Trump's digital director Brad Parscale, although he told "60 Minutes" last month that he doesn't believe their methods were so essential. According to Open Secrets, the Trump campaign paid Cambridge Analytica $5.9 million during the campaign.

Michael S. Glassner, executive director of the Trump campaign, issued a statement Wednesday that did not directly reference Assange or The Daily Beast report but said that the campaign had partnered with the Republican National Committee for voter data.

"Any claims that voter data from any other source played a key role in the victory are false," the statement said.

The House Intelligence Committee interviewed Parscale on Tuesday.

The Trump campaign has long denied any connection with WikiLeaks, although Mr. Trump praised the entity during the campaign and even said he "loved" WikiLeaks.

Robert Mercer, a billionaire Trump supporter, is a backer of Cambridge Analytica. Former White House strategist Steve Bannon served as a vice president at the company before joining the administration.

2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Assange confirms WikiLeaks was approached by Trump-linked ...

10 Things You Should Know About Julian Assange | Alternet

Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks, is more loved, and more hated, than ever. And just who is doing the loving and the hating is more complicated than ever.

In his rise from libertarian hacker to global publisher, Assange pioneered a new kind of power,the power to disrupt the secrecy of the national security state. With the help of Chelsea Manning, the silver-haired Australian published the "Collateral Murder" video, which showed the world the reality of the war in Iraq, and the State Department cables, which showed the realities of American diplomacy. So a lot of people admired him.

Last weeks disclosure that Assange collaboratedwith Donald Trump Jr. during the 2016 presidential campaign has generated another blizzard of headlinesand a lot of confusionabout the world-famous transparency advocate.

Heres what you need to know about Assange.

1. Hes sitting on a pile of Bitcoin.

The Daily Beast reports that Wikileaks has received a total of 4,025 BTC through its public wallet addressroughly $29 million by current exchange rates.

2. Assange was Twitter buddies with Donald Trump Jr. during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Wikileaks contacted Trump Jr. for the first time in September 2016 and continued reaching out in Twitter messages until at least July 2017, theAtlantic reportedlast week.

After receiving a private message from @Wikileaks, an account presumably controlled by Assange, Trump Jr. then emailed other senior officials from the Trump campaign such as Steve Bannon and Kellyanne Conway, as well as President Trumps son-in-law Jared Kushner to notify them Wikileaks had reached out.

On Oct. 12, 2016, the Wikileaks account again messaged Trump Jr.

Hey Donald, great to see you and your dad talking about our publications." (At a rally on October 10, Donald Trump hadproclaimed, I love Wikileaks!)

Nine days later, the voice of Wikileaks made an offer.

Hey Don. We have an unusual idea, Wikileaks wrote. Leak us one or more of your fathers tax returns.

TheNew York Timeshad alreadypublisheda fragment of Trumps tax returns on October 1.

If we publish them it will dramatically improve the perception of our impartiality, Assanges account continued. That means that the vast amount of stuff that we are publishing on Clinton will have much higher impact, because it wont be perceived as coming from a pro-Trump pro-Russia source.

Trump did not give his tax returns to Assange.

3. Jared Kushners newspaper loved him.

TheNew YorkObserver, a weekly newspaper owned by the presidents son-in-law, published a long-running series of laudatory articlesabout Assange in 2015 and 2016, replete with exclusive details.

Duly appreciative, Wikileakstweetedsome of theObservers coverage, including stories expressing doubt about the farfetched idea that the Russians might have meddled in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

4. Sarah Palin is an Assange fan.

President Trump is not the only Wikileaks lover on the right.

Earlier this year, Sarah Palin, the one-time conservative darling marginalized by her dopey sound bites, herpunch-drunk familyand her bald-faced lies, fell hard for Assange. In a heartfelt Facebook post, Palin praised Assange's anti-Clinton stance at Wikileaks and apologized for once criticizing him.

5. The investigation of Assange for alleged sexual misconduct has been discontinued.

Assange has not been charged with rape, as has often been reported. Two women in Sweden alleged that Assange had molested and coercedthem in sexual encounters.

One charge was dropped because the statute of limitations ran out. Last May, Swedish authorities discontinued their investigation of the other charge, citing the difficulty in obtaining Assanges testimony while he is holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.

6. Once admired on the left, Assange has alienated many former allies.

For a long time, the Intercept and Glenn Greenwald took the lead in defending Assange from his critics. No more. In a recent piece, Robert Mackey wrote "We Knew Julian Assange Hated Clinton. We Didnt Know He Was Secretly Advising Trump."

In the piece, investigative reporter Barrett Brown blasted Assange. Heexplainedhe had defended Wikileaks for releasing emails hacked from the Democratic National Committee, because it was an appropriate thing for a transparency org to do.

But in the messages with Trump Jr., he noted, Assange was complaining about slander of being pro-Trump IN THE ACTUAL COURSE OF COLLABORATING WITH TRUMP.

This latest revelation about the 2016 election has disappointed some people, wroteTruthDig, which is an understatement. Time will tell if Assange and Wikileaks can regain the publics trust and be regarded as impartial publishers."

7.Assange helped promote the bogus Seth Rich conspiracy theory.

In August 2016, Assange suggested during a television interviewthat his source for the DNC email might have been DNC staffer Seth Rich, who was murdered in Washington 12 days before Wikileaks began publishing.

We have to understand how high the stakes are in the United States, and that our sources face serious risks, he said.

Assange offered a cash reward for information leading to a conviction in the murdera gesture that sent alt-right sleuths, convinced that Clinton had masterminded the killing, into a foolish frenzy. There was nothing to the story, except that it caused a lot of unnecessary pain for Rich's grieving family.

Even Fox News retracted its conspiratorial allegations about Seth Rich. Assange did not.

8. Assange promised to turn himself in if Chelsea Manning was freedthen reneged.

But when President Obama commuted the remainder of Manning's sentence, Assange back-pedaled.He said he had only promised to surrender if Manning was pardoned immediately and several months had passed. Obama, he added, was just trying to "make life hard for him."

9. Filmmaker Laura Poitras made two versions of 'Risk,' her documentary about Assange. The first version was admiring, the second disenchanted.

What specifically bred Poitras distrust of Assange? asked Slate. The sex charges; the Russia connection; his blooming paranoia; the sense, gleaned from several in Assanges entourage (we see it on the faces of his lawyers and advisers, as they try to debrief him on his legal and PR troubles) that hes a narcissistic asshole. All of the above?

10. Kate McKinnon plays him on Saturday Night Live.

In her latest skit, the comedian spoofs Assange as a boy playing spy games he barely understands. The chain-smoking Assange meets with Donald Trump Jr. (Mikey Day) and brother Eric Trump (Alex Moffat) in a darkened parking lot underneath the Ecuadorian Embassy. He wants to be a mastermind, but the Trumps are not impressed.

You look like Draco Malfoy, says Eric Trump.

Im not some dumb blonde you can take advantage of," says Assange.

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10 Things You Should Know About Julian Assange | Alternet

Saturday Night Live Spies on a Meeting Between Donald Trump …

November 18, 2017 9:00PM PT

It was a sketch months in the making but potentially the start of a new recurring property.

Saturday Night Live opened its Nov. 18 episode with a cold open sketch entitled The Mueller Files, inspired by Robert Muellers investigation into Julian Assange and Wikileaks back in May of this year, an action once again made topical by Mueller more recentlysubpoenaing the Trump campaign for Russia-related documents.

SNL enacted a secret, Deep Throat-style meeting between Donald Trump Jr. (played by Mikey Day) and Julian Assange (played by Kate McKinnon) in London. As secure as sliding into my DMs is, I thought this would be safer, Days Trump Jr. said.

Alex Moffat later turned the nefarious duo into a mismatched threesome when he came in as Eric Trump, which prompted a comparison between McKinnons Assange and Draco Malfoy, though they noted that was a low blow and that making fun of appearances is dads thing.

McKinnons Assange was there to hand over Hillary Clintons emails but said he was not some dumb blond you can take advantage of. What he wanted in return was to be cleared of espionage charges. Days Trump Jr. said their family takes care of their allies, to which Moffats Eric asked about Chris Christie, Rudy Giuliani and mom.

Watch the Nov. 18 SNL cold open below:

Saturday Night Live airs live coast-to-coast Saturdays at 11:30 p.m. ET/8:30 p.m. PT on NBC.

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Julian Assange Tries to Save Net Neutrality With Rambling …

Julian Assangewhose organization Wikileaks sad, thirsty Twitter DMs to Donald Trump Jr. recently leaked, revealing he sought to coordinate with Donald Trumps presidential campaignappears to have had a moment of buyers regret on Tuesday evening.

Upon hearing the Republican-controlled FCC had finally scheduled a vote to scrap Barack Obama-era net neutrality rules, potentially enriching massive digital conglomerates at the expense of the open web, some brief glimmer of the old Assange seemed to spark back to life. But not really very brightly, as he was only able to express his opposition to the White House-backed change in the form of convoluted pretzel logic posited as a Machiavellian 4-dimensional chess move.

Dear @realDonaldTrump, Assange wrote. Net neutrality of some form is important. Your opponents control most internet companies. Without neutrality they can make your tweets load slowly, CNN load fast and infest everyones phones with their ads. Careful.

As Assange has continued to hole up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for years while attempting to avoid extradition, Wikileaks has largely fallen apart and his originally stated mission of radical transparency has increasingly given way to bizarre pro-Trump ramblings, suspiciously biased editorial decisions, and Twitter braggadocio.

To Assanges credit, while appealing to the presidents manically paranoid psychology is not actually how public policy decisions should be made, that is one of the few approaches capable of grabbing his attention. Anti-trust advocates may have won a similar victory recently when Trumps Department of Justice sued to block a (very bad for the public interest) merger between AT&T and Time Warner, possibly because Trump hates Time Warner subsidiary CNN with an unholy passion.

Alas, Assange is still probably barking up the wrong tree. Pais agency is ostensibly independent, and Pai is very committed to repealing the neutrality rules, so even the unlikely event of a last-minute pivot from the White House might not be enough to blunt his momentum. Its yet even less likely that Republicans in Congress, who are broadly anti-net neutrality, would be willing to override the FCC to bring back an Obama-era directive.

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Julian Assange Tries to Save Net Neutrality With Rambling ...

WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange claims he made 50,000% return on …

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange claims his organization has made a 50,000 percent return on bitcoin after investing in the cryptocurrency in 2010 and it's all thanks to the U.S. government.

In a tweet over the weekend, Assange posted a screenshot of bitcoin prices on July 18, 2010 and October 14, 2017 on industry website CoinDesk. In this period, the price of bitcoin went from $0.06 to around $5,814. This represents a 9,689,900 percent increase.

Assange, however, said that he has made a 50,000 percent return, presumably investing in bitcoin over the six-year period.

And the WikiLeaks founder said this was because the U.S. government forced payment companies like Visa and MasterCard to carry out "an illegal banking blockade" against his organization.

In 2010, MasterCard blocked its products being used to pay WikiLeaks. Paypal also restricted the account used by WikiLeaks after it said the group has violated its policy.

Assange said that this is the reason WikiLeaks invested in bitcoin. The cryptocurrency allows anonymous payments and can be moved around the world easily. It is, however, very volatile.

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WikiLeaks' Julian Assange claims he made 50,000% return on ...