CRIME: Julian Assange goes to High Court to try to block extradition to Sweden: arrival – Video


CRIME: Julian Assange goes to High Court to try to block extradition to Sweden: arrival
ENGLAND: London: High Court: EXT Various shots of Julian Assange (Wikileaks Founder) along through scrum of press photographers and into High Court / SECOND CAMERA showing Assange arrival...

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CRIME: Julian Assange goes to High Court to try to block extradition to Sweden: arrival - Video

Assange likely to remain in embassy pending U.S. Wikileaks …

By Mark Hosenball

WASHINGTON Thu Mar 19, 2015 4:04pm EDT

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange gestures during a news conference at the Ecuadorian embassy in central London August 18, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/John Stillwell/pool

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is likely to remain at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London where he has taken refuge as long as U.S. authorities pursue a criminal investigation of his anti-secrecy group, one of his lawyers said.

Speculation rose that he might leave the embassy after Swedish authorities last week offered to question him there over allegations of sexual misconduct, dropping their insistence that he go to Stockholm for questioning about a 2010 incident.

He refused to return to Sweden, arguing that the Swedes would send him on to the United States to face possible trial. Assange, 43, denies the allegations, which are not related to WikiLeaks' publication of U.S. military and diplomatic documents five years ago.

Michael Ratner, a U.S. lawyer who represents Assange and WikiLeaks, said if Assange left the embassy, where he has been holed up for just over 1,000 days, he was likely to be arrested by British authorities and risked being extradited to America.

"Even were the Swedish case to be disposed of, the U.K. would arrest Assange upon leaving the embassy for claimed violations of bail conditions or something similar," Ratner told Reuters. Washington would almost certainly seek his extradition, he said.

Ratner said a recent federal court ruling disclosed that the FBI and U.S. Justice Department were conducting a "multi-subject investigation" of WikiLeaks and he said it had been going on for "at least five years."

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Assange likely to remain in embassy pending U.S. Wikileaks ...

Edward Snowden’s message to Guardian readers | The Edward Snowden story – Video


Edward Snowden #39;s message to Guardian readers | The Edward Snowden story
Guardian defence and intelligence correspondent Ewen MacAskill reads out a message to Guardian readers at a members screening of Citizenfour in London. Subscribe here ...

By: Guardian Membership

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Edward Snowden's message to Guardian readers | The Edward Snowden story - Video

Edward Snowden leaks did the marketing for GCHQ in its spy recruitment drive – Video


Edward Snowden leaks did the marketing for GCHQ in its spy recruitment drive
The final of the UK Cyber Security Challenge which took place on the HMS Belfast in central London on 12 March, 2015. The Challenge is organised by GCHQ in partnership with experts from the...

By: IBTimes UK

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Edward Snowden leaks did the marketing for GCHQ in its spy recruitment drive - Video

Encrypted smartphone, voice calls and text with 128 bit encryption chip – Video


Encrypted smartphone, voice calls and text with 128 bit encryption chip
Make encrypted calls between these types of phones. Integrated chip does 128bit voice and text encryption, creating private secure communication between these types of encrypted phones. All...

By: T50Japan

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Encrypted smartphone, voice calls and text with 128 bit encryption chip - Video

Did VMware Flout Open Source License Terms?

By Jack M. Germain 03/20/15 12:21 PM PT

The Software Freedom Conservancy earlier this month announced that it was funding a lawsuit filed by Linux kernel developer Christoph Hellwig against VMware in the district court of Hamburg in Germany.

The conservancy entered a grant agreement with Hellwig for the legal action. Its funding of the legal action is part of the program activity of its GPL Compliance Project for Linux Developers.

The suit alleges that VMware failed to comply with terms of the GNU General Public License version 2, or GPLv2 -- the license of Linux and other free and open source software incorporated in VMware's ESXi products.

The case stretches back to 2007, but it became more contentious in 201, when the conservancy discovered that VMware had failed to provide or offer any source code for the version of BusyBox included in VMware's ESXi products, as required by BusyBox's GPLv2 license.

"We were involved in this fight long before Christoff got involved," noted Software Freedom Conservancy President Bradley M. Kuhn.

"There were times when we thought VMware was going to comply. They were working towards getting better. That is why we let it go for so long -- we felt we were making progress," he told LinuxInsider.

VMware has insisted that its hypervisor operating system, ESXi, does not violate GPLv2.

ESXi is an operating system that manages the hardware and software resources of the physical server. At the core of the ESXi operating system is a kernel called "vmkernel," which provides control over those resources.

As with many other operating systems, ESXi's vmkernel has a stable, general-purpose API, called "VMK API," that enables device drivers and other loadable modules to perform specialized functions.

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Did VMware Flout Open Source License Terms?