By: Merinews | 2010-12-01 | Business Bank of America Corp's shares declined 3 percent on Tuesday amid investor fears the largest U.S. bank by assets may be at the center of WikiLeaks next document release. read more
By: Adam J. Fisher | 2011-01-20 | Computer Wikileaks has been in the news for quite some time now as it has rocked many nations, embroiling itself in controversy over the fact that it has been releasing classified documents which have been termed as potentially harmful for national security as well as international diplomacy. read more
By: K.R.SURENDRAN | 2010-11-30 | Journalism The not to taken aback Julian Assange was determined, still determined and even now a tip of the ice-berg is seen others swept under carpet. read more
By: Fcm Corp | 2012-03-02 | Business Wikileaks has issued a warning yesterday to an unlikely target of their #occupy campaign: UNESCO, a United Nations’ agency focused in promoting human rights. read more
By: Mary Rose | 2010-12-10 | News and society The WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was arrested by British police on Tuesday and taken to City of Westminster Magistrates' Court after two women in Sweden accused him of sexually attacking them when he visited the country in August, 2010 but Assange denied the claims. His lawyer, Mark Stephens, said that Assange can vindicate himself to keep his good fame. Over the last week, WikiLeaks has published an unprecedented 400,000 classified U.S. documents on the Iraq war, posted 77,000 secret U.S. files on the Afghan conflict in July and hundreds of sensitively diplomatic sites. The national security adviser of British Prime Minister David Cameron ordered all government departments to provide assurance about IT security’s quality. read more
By: Wendell W Solomons | 2010-12-09 | Forums Wikileaks applies a honey trap in that it clams to protect "Your Right to Choose." Wikileaks calculates to overload Net domains and force people back into the hands of TV moguls led today by men such as Rupert Murdoch. Media moguls represent - in the final account - cold pawnbrokers who are ready to squeal on the US government, hoping that it can be conditioned into a better tool. read more
By: Eddie Byatt | 2010-12-15 | Law Whistle-blowing is one thing, until recently, everyone didn't hear significantly about. It is because whistleblowers usually lose their jobs as their behavior may actually cost the organization money. This might be in fees or compensation or maybe the trustworthiness of the company is greatly harmed causing a loss of business. Simply to be crystal clear a whistleblower is understood to be somebody who unveils to the public or authorities the wrongdoing in a business or government of... read more
By: rudsontren | 2010-12-06 | Business Non-profit media group WikiLeaks promises to bring the banking industry to interesting times next year. The organization said it would release confidential documents that could shed light to banks' unethical practices. read more
By: Barbara Mori | 2011-09-15 | Customer Service Just because you don't deal in diplomatic communiqués about trade and wars doesn't mean you're immune to a WikiLeaks-style data security breach. You only need one disgruntled employee like Bradley Manning of the US Defence Force. read more
By: Wendell W Solomons | 2010-12-04 | Journalism The latest 250,000 document drop reflects an attempt to cause information overload on the Net. General work overload was already a worry of industrial sociologists. On the burgeoning Net, the type of documents being leaked undermines the attention sought by public-affairs whistle-blowers. As such it leaves the status quo of our unipolar world, in Empire hands. Here's a lawyers' saying: "Possession is 9/10ths of the law." read more
By: Jeannette Kavanagh | 2010-12-20 | Article Marketing To examine whether WikiLeaks is about the dissemination of dangerous information or merely embarrassing exposures of the truth, let's look at one recent incident where leaked documents revealed what high ranking officials in the United States (US) state department really thought of the then Australian Prime Minister (PM), Kevin Rudd. read more
By: Mary Rose | 2010-12-06 | Politics Confidential files of the website WikiLeaks has been stored into a nuclear bunker in Stockholm, Sweden early this week. In particular, WikiLeaks servers are moved to the “Pionen” White Mountains data center, 30 meters below the ground after being dumped by Amazon. According to the Norwegian news site VG Nett, the “Pionen” White Mountains data center is owned by Bahnhof- a Swedish broadband provider. This is the home for WikiLeaks' sever and confidential national data called "James Bond" styled bunker, or Cold-War-era nuclear bunker. Let's take a tour around and inside nuclear bunker of WikiLeaks in the “Pionen” White Mountains data center in Stockholm, Sweden. read more
By: Merinews | 2010-12-04 | Business The outage comes two days after Amazon Web Services (AWS) decided to end its hosting agreements with WikiLeaks, resulting in the website going offline for several hours until it was moved back to its previous Swedish host Bahnhof. read more