WikiLeaks Launches Fashion Label

menu News gallery history

Use arrows below or keyboard arrows to navigate through images

Next

Previous

Picture credit: PA Photos

COULD WikiLeaks soon be better known as a fashion label? Whilst challenging Chanel and Prada for brand recognition doesn't appear to be on the cards, the online non-profit organisation - which publishes secrets and leaks that it deems in the public interest - plans to open stores in India as part of a global drive to raise awareness and funds.

"India is one of the countries where awareness about WikiLeaks is the highest and Julian [Assange, WikiLeaks founder] is excited about the proposition," Olafur Vignir Sigurvinsson, an Iceland-based WikiLeaks representative, told the Times of India. He added that the monetisation of the WikiLeaks brand would help raise funds for the company, which - like Wikipedia - currently survives on donations. "We are also looking for partners in India, who can manage the property and translate it into retail and e-retail platforms," Olafur added.

The organisation already retails selected products, including T-shirts bearing the slogans "Designated enemy of the state", "Leaks exposing injustice" and "By becoming continuous, war has ceased to exist". Whether selling T-shirts for up to $100 each will sit well with many who believe passionately in the company's "information free to all" ideology remains to be seen.

This is not Assange's first dalliance with fashion. In June, he was said to be preparing to take to the catwalk for fashion designer Ben Westwood - son of Vivienne and a staunch supporter of Assange - but he had to withdraw due to ill health.

Read the original:
WikiLeaks Launches Fashion Label

Ed Snowden enjoys date with pole dancer girlfriend Linsday Mills

NSA leaker reunited with dancer Linsday Mills, with whom he lived in Hawaii The two are together again in Moscow, where Snowden is claiming asylum A picture shows the two enjoying a trip to a theatre in the Russian capital Vladimir Putin has granted the wanted man permission to stay for 3 years

By Will Stewart for MailOnline

Published: 13:58 EST, 14 October 2014 | Updated: 15:26 EST, 14 October 2014

A picture of U.S. whistleblower Edward Snowden and his American girlfriend at a Moscow theatre has emerged - and the possibility of the pair marrying in Russia has been raised.

The former National Security Agency contractor is 'happy' that Lindsay Mills is with him in Moscow.

The pole dancer was recently shown with America's most wanted man cooking in his flatin a fly on the wall documentary.

'Edward Snowden is happy that his girlfriend Lindsay Mills came to Russia and that she is supporting him,' said lawyer Anatoly Kucherena.

Reunited with America's most wanted man: The former National Security Agency contractor is 'happy' that girlfriend Lindsay Mills is with him in Moscow

'It's hard to predict if they are going to have a wedding in Russia.'

He spoke as the new picture was issued by state-owned news agency RIA Novosti of the couple on a night out at the theatre.

Here is the original post:
Ed Snowden enjoys date with pole dancer girlfriend Linsday Mills

The Best Part Of The Snowden Documentary ‘Citizenfour’

Edward Snowden in Laura Poitras's 'Citizenfour'

Many rave reviews of Laura Poitrass new documentary Citizenfour have already been written. The film tackles the large and difficult subject of government information collection, which can no longer be easily referred to as the sprawling surveillance state because it involves so many different states, often acting in concert. Documentaries on the subject such as PBS Frontlines recent United States of Secrets usually involve a series of interviews with people staring into the camera and telling you what they know. But that is not the Poitras style. She seeks to capture events as they happen rather than interviews, so her film features Congressional testimony, a speech at a hacker conference, arguments before a federal court about warrantless wiretapping, journalist Glenn Greenwald typing away in Brazil surrounded by his famous dogs, and the active construction site for the NSAs famous datacenter in Utah. But as the New Yorkers George Packer notes in his profile of Poitras, the heart of the film is the hotel room in Hong Kong. That would be the hotel room where NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden holed up for a week last year with Poitras, Greenwald, and Guardian journalist Ewen MacAskill and started the leak that launched a global debate about the intelligence communitys information binging in the digital age.

It is incredible that this historic week is captured on film. It is as if the Washington Posts Bob Woodward were accompanied by a cameraman for his meetings with Deep Throat, or Daniel Ellsberg tailed by a reality TV film crew as he made the momentous decision to share the Pentagon Papers with the press. Not only is the week captured, it is captured in minute and humanizing detail. Such close detail that one of my viewing companions suggested Snowden visit the dermatologist as he worried about some of his moles. It gives the TV show Big Brother a serious run for its money. The three participants (plus Laura Poitras, off screen) bond. Snowdens hotel room steadily gets messier. You see the famous Tor and EFF stickers on Snowdens laptop, but also that he has a copy of Cory Doctorows Homeland in the room a meta touch given that the novel is about a protagonist with a thumbdrive of incriminating government documents who is trying to decide how to leak them. Everyone starts making more jokes as they get more comfortable with one another, even as the bags under Snowdens eyes get darker as the stories he unleashed and his identity go viral. Poitras films Snowden at length simply watching the news, as anchors and experts debate the meaning of the government programs revealed such as the mass collection of telephone metadata and Snowdens own motivations. It is riveting.

Edward Snowden and Glenn Greenwald at the Mira in Hong Kong. A historic week, captured on film.

It is also hilarious at times. Snowden was convinced of the danger of his coming forward. I appreciate your concern for my safety, but I already know how this will end for me and I accept the risk. I ask only that you ensure this information makes it home to the American public, he wrote in an email to Poitras before meeting her, when he signed his emails only as Citizenfour. It was a serious enterprise, and Snowden was convinced of dire results for him, but the tension was lifted by moments of levity. At one point, a fire alarm keeps going off, interrupting their discussions of intelligence programs, awakening first paranoia is someone trying to interrupt their session? and then, after a call to the front desk that reveals its maintenance, simple annoyance.

Snowdens paranoia about being watched is at first laughable to the journalists. Snowden dons the famous red hood, covering himself and his computer to enter his passwords so that an observer or camera cant catch it, while Greenwald looks away trying not to smirk at the absurdity, calling the red blanket Snowdens magic mantle of power. We have all heard the story of Snowden originally reaching out by email to Greenwald but then turning to Poitras instead because Greenwald refused to learn how to use encryption. In the film, Snowden continues to dog Greenwald for his poor security practices, looking shocked when he realizes Greenwald has casually left an SD card with classified documents in his computer. Lets remember to change this out every once in a while, he says. Itll be public soon, Greenwald responds. When Snowden hands Greenwalds computer back to him to type in his password, Greenwald quickly dashes it off and hands the computer back. Well, looks like your password is about 4 characters, Snowden says humorously. I type fast, responds Greenwald. It makes you wonder what jokes Woodward and Mark Felt (a.k.a. Deep Throat) exchanged in that parking garage.

The preternatually composed Snowden is so focused on making sure the journalists understand whats in the documents that he sometimes forgets small gestures. As seen in the trailer, MacAskill has to interrupt Snowdens real-life information download to tell him he has no idea who this guy is. When Snowden launches into his resume, MasAskill interrupts him again. I dont even know your name, he says.

It is a movie about the spread of surveillance, that documents not just the power of the governments surveillance in the digital age but our own power when we capture moments that matter: Snowdens capture of documents at the NSA and Poitrass memorializing this meeting between a whistleblower and the journalists who would bring his secrets forward.

Though sometimes the surveillance in the film is not as sprawling as we would like: at the end of the hotel interviews in Hong Kong, Snowden walks out the door with a lawyer bound for the U.N. and then disappears. We dont get to see the rest of his time in Hong Kong or how he got onto a flight to Russia or his multi-week stay at the Moscow airport. He appears again only in two scenes at the end, revealing calm domesticity as we learn that his girlfriend Lindsay Mills has joined him in Russia and joyousness when Greenwald reveals to him that another leaker of government secrets has come forward with information about the U.S. drone strike program being run out of Germany and the 1.2 million people on the terrorist watchlist (though the Intercept, of which Poitras and Greenwald are founders, reported in August it was only 700,000 people).

There are many, especially in the intelligence community, who believe Snowden is an agent of a foreign power, turned against the U.S. by another countrys spy a plot laid out by a former NSA employee (who met Snowden in a kung-fu class years ago) in a blog post entitled How I Believe Things Went Down. The film serves as a rebuttal.

Here is the original post:
The Best Part Of The Snowden Documentary 'Citizenfour'

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange plans clothing range from his embassy refuge

Controversial founder 'working with Indian clothing manufacturer' He is currently living inEcuadorian embassy fighting extradition to Sweden Assange, 43, is 'excited' about the clothing line, says WikiLeaks rep

By Sam Webb for MailOnline

Published: 15:09 EST, 13 October 2014 | Updated: 19:40 EST, 13 October 2014

The infamous founder of WikiLeaks is reportedly launching a fashion label to cash on his notoriety and rebellious image.

Julian Assange, an Australian, is working on a range of clothes for Indian customers in partnership with local company Franchisee India.

'India is one of the countries where awareness about WikiLeaks is the highest and Julian is excited about the proposition,' Olafur Vignir Sigurvinsson, an Iceland-based WikiLeaks representative, told the Times of India.

Scroll down for video

Fashion revolutionary? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is reportedly launching a fashion line in India

Assange has been living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012, when the UK decided to extradite him to Sweden where he is wanted on charges of sexual assault

It is believed the line will feature a stylised image of Assange's face, similar to clothing featuring the face of South American revolutionary Che Guevara.

See the original post:
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange plans clothing range from his embassy refuge

Wikileaks plans high-end goods collection… yes, Wikileaks

Today in stories I never thought I'd read: Julian Assange plans on putting the Wikileaks-approved stamp on apparel and other stuff and selling it at malls in India.

Apparently Wikileaks wants to open up physical stores in India, and sell stuff online, and apparently that stuff will be high-end. You can buy Wikileaks merch online already, but it's, ya know, T-shirts and hoodies and things like that. The Washington Post story linked above notes that they already have designers in France, etc., who want to co-brand with them.

I am... confused? But maybe not really? I sort of feel like maybe we're all getting trolled. But then again, we live in a world where anyone who's ever been on any kind of screen has their own perfume, so of course Wikileaks would look to start a luxury brand? I mean, sure.

I hope this means Assange plans to start his own GOOP- and Preserve-esque lifestyle site, and starts recommending things you can make with fancy organic kale using your expensive Wikileaks porcelain mixing bowls.

Go here to read the rest:
Wikileaks plans high-end goods collection... yes, Wikileaks

WikiLeaks Is Getting Into the Fashion Game

Photo: John Stillwell/AFP/Getty Images

Appearing in a T magazine photo spread, getting his own Vivienne Westwooddesigned T-shirt, modeling in a London Fashion Week show: We should have known Julian Assange's next move would be a fashion line. Racked reports that the WikiLeaks chief wants to open stores in India as well as an e-commerce site for his planned collection of "high-end fashion apparel, accessories, household goods, paper goods, that kind of stuff." India, where Assange reportedly has a slew of fans, was a natural choice for brick-and-mortar expansion. In the meantime, get in on the ground floor of this trend with WikiLeaks' current limited stock of merchandise, including a "Designated Enemy of the State" T-shirt or "Courage Is Contagious" knit cap. (Not to mention plenty of American Apparellogo fleece hoodies, a.k.a. the "hacker uniform.")

Read more:
WikiLeaks Is Getting Into the Fashion Game

Edward Snowden Offers Online Privacy Tips: Drop Dropbox, Facebook And Google

Edward Snowden has some advice for maintaining online privacy in an age of widespread NSA surveillance. Snowden called Google and Facebook dangerous while praising Apples encryption efforts.

"We're talking about encryption. We're talking about dropping programs that are hostile to privacy, Snowden said inan interview published Saturday by theNew Yorker.For example, Dropbox? Get rid of Dropbox; it doesn't support encryption, it doesn't protect your private files. And use competitors like SpiderOak that do the same exact service, but they protect the content of what you're sharing."

Snowden, the former NSA analyst who revealed the extent of U.S. government surveillance in 2013, did so from a hotel in Hong Kong before leaving for Russia. Having ditched his Hawaii apartment and $122,000 annual salary earlier that summer, he said in the interview he intended only a brief stay in Russia before leaving for Latin America, only to face visa issues that prevented him from leaving. Snowden is now actively sought by the U.S. to face espionage charges.

Dropbox defended itself in a June blog post after Snowden bashed the services security. All of the files its users send and receive are encrypted while traveling between you and our servers and when they are at rest on Dropboxs servers. SpiderOak encrypts data locally on a users computer as well, as opposed to only when it is in transit or in the cloud.

Snowden said Facebook and Google have improved their methods of protecting user privacy but were still dangerous services that should largely be avoided. Ironically, the interview was conducted remotely over Google Hangouts and streamed live on the tech giants YouTube.

Consumers should also be wary of standard text-messaging services from wireless providers, Snowden said. Silent Circle for iPhone and Android and RedPhone, which is currently Android-only, were better replacements because they encrypt texts -- but require that both users install the app to communicate.

View post:
Edward Snowden Offers Online Privacy Tips: Drop Dropbox, Facebook And Google