WikiLeaks – The New York Times

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The websites founder is letting his anti-democratic ideology undermine the goals of his most famous project.

By JOCHEN BITTNER

A U.N. panel's decision is just the latest turn in a convoluted case that needs to wind down.

The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said she was seeking legal advice after a United Nations panel found that Mr. Assange, an Australian, has been detained in violation of international law.

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, claimed a significant victory after a United Nations panel ruled that he had been detained arbitrarily and should be compensated.

By NATALIA V. OSIPOVA

Mr. Assange promised to leave the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been seeking refuge since 2012, if a United Nations arbitration panel ruled against him on Friday.

By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and MADELEINE KRUHLY

The finding is a symbolic victory for the Wikileaks founder, but may have little if any practical significance.

By SEWELL CHAN and LIAM STACK

An American embassy cable issued about a decade ago also described him as crude, abrasive, arrogant and thin-skinned.

By ERNESTO LONDOO

A trove of messages made public by the State Department also touches on technology difficulties and a concussion.

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

The WikiLeaks founder has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012, avoiding extradition to Sweden on a rape accusation.

Swedish officials said that three of the four claims against Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, may never be investigated, but one, of rape, could continue for a further five years.

By STEPHEN CASTLE

Saudi Arabias alarm over the nuclear deal comes after a trove of documents revealed its efforts in recent years to undermine its primary adversary: Shiite Iran.

By BEN HUBBARD and MAYY EL SHEIKH

The numbers for top aides to Chancellor Angela Merkel and her predecessors are on lists released by WikiLeaks, renewing questions about the United States spying on allies.

In a letter, the WikiLeaks co-founder said that he sensed an openness to being granted asylum and that he had a child whose mother is French.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Surging in the polls, Icelands Pirate Party scores its first legislative victory, the decriminalization of blasphemy.

Communications between the German chancellor and her aides, purportedly intercepted by spies, were released Wednesday by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks.

Mr. Affleck had asked the host of a PBS genealogy program to omit the discovery of a slave-owning ancestor. The plea was exposed by the Sony hacking and WikiLeaks.

By JOHN KOBLIN

The network wants staffing changes on the program after an investigation showed that the actor Ben Affleck pressured producers into leaving out details about an ancestor of his who owned slaves.

By JOHN KOBLIN

Stphane Le Foll, the French government spokesman, spoke on Wednesday about documents released by WikiLeaks that alleged that the National Security Agency spied on French presidents and officials.

The Associated Press

The documents, which have not been confirmed as authentic, say the agency eavesdropped on the last three French presidents.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The revelations appear in a trove of documents said to have come from inside the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs and released by the group WikiLeaks.

By BEN HUBBARD

The websites founder is letting his anti-democratic ideology undermine the goals of his most famous project.

By JOCHEN BITTNER

A U.N. panel's decision is just the latest turn in a convoluted case that needs to wind down.

The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said she was seeking legal advice after a United Nations panel found that Mr. Assange, an Australian, has been detained in violation of international law.

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, claimed a significant victory after a United Nations panel ruled that he had been detained arbitrarily and should be compensated.

By NATALIA V. OSIPOVA

Mr. Assange promised to leave the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been seeking refuge since 2012, if a United Nations arbitration panel ruled against him on Friday.

By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and MADELEINE KRUHLY

The finding is a symbolic victory for the Wikileaks founder, but may have little if any practical significance.

By SEWELL CHAN and LIAM STACK

An American embassy cable issued about a decade ago also described him as crude, abrasive, arrogant and thin-skinned.

By ERNESTO LONDOO

A trove of messages made public by the State Department also touches on technology difficulties and a concussion.

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

The WikiLeaks founder has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012, avoiding extradition to Sweden on a rape accusation.

Swedish officials said that three of the four claims against Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, may never be investigated, but one, of rape, could continue for a further five years.

By STEPHEN CASTLE

Saudi Arabias alarm over the nuclear deal comes after a trove of documents revealed its efforts in recent years to undermine its primary adversary: Shiite Iran.

By BEN HUBBARD and MAYY EL SHEIKH

The numbers for top aides to Chancellor Angela Merkel and her predecessors are on lists released by WikiLeaks, renewing questions about the United States spying on allies.

In a letter, the WikiLeaks co-founder said that he sensed an openness to being granted asylum and that he had a child whose mother is French.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Surging in the polls, Icelands Pirate Party scores its first legislative victory, the decriminalization of blasphemy.

Communications between the German chancellor and her aides, purportedly intercepted by spies, were released Wednesday by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks.

Mr. Affleck had asked the host of a PBS genealogy program to omit the discovery of a slave-owning ancestor. The plea was exposed by the Sony hacking and WikiLeaks.

By JOHN KOBLIN

The network wants staffing changes on the program after an investigation showed that the actor Ben Affleck pressured producers into leaving out details about an ancestor of his who owned slaves.

By JOHN KOBLIN

Stphane Le Foll, the French government spokesman, spoke on Wednesday about documents released by WikiLeaks that alleged that the National Security Agency spied on French presidents and officials.

The Associated Press

The documents, which have not been confirmed as authentic, say the agency eavesdropped on the last three French presidents.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The revelations appear in a trove of documents said to have come from inside the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs and released by the group WikiLeaks.

By BEN HUBBARD

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WikiLeaks - The New York Times

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