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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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US Judge gives death sentence to Wikileaks By Declan McCullagh, CNET News.com February 20, 2008 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/US-Judge-gives-death-sentence-to-Wikileaks/0,130061733,339286100,00.htm
A federal judge in California has pulled the plug on Wikileaks.org, a Web site that specialises in posting leaked documents, often provided by whistleblowers. US District Judge Jeffrey White on Friday ordered that the domain name be disabled at the behest of a group of Swiss bankers who filed a lawsuit alleging that confidential information appeared on Wikileaks.org. White's order to Dynadot, the registrar with which Wikileaks appears to have been associated, says:
In addition, White granted a restraining order against Wikileaks itself, saying the defendants were "enjoined from displaying, posting, publishing, distributing, linking to and/or otherwise providing any information" that the Bank Julius Baer considers to be confidential. The bank says that it is the "leading dedicated wealth manager in Switzerland". If the first few weeks of this lawsuit are any indication -- it was filed on 6 February -- it could easily spiral out of control. The folks behind Wikileaks have chosen to remain anonymous, and have said in the past that they are developing "uncensorable" countermeasures to defend against legal attacks. One countermeasure was registering the domain anonymously; it's now, however, listed as registered to a "John Shipton" in Nairobi. Another is using anonymous e-mail addresses at hush.com. Yet another was trying to transfer the domain name away from Dynadot, which does not seem to have been done in time. For more, here's an excerpt from a legal brief that the bank filed last week:
The long-standing Internet trick of mirroring is working, at least until Bank Julius Baer escalates the lawsuit by naming a whole slew of potential defendants. The cryptome.org site, run by architect-turned-free-expression-activist John Young, has posted a 3MB Zip file of the Bank Julius Baer documents. They're on BitTorrent, of course, and some Wikileaks supporters are urging others to mirror or use the http://88.80.13.160/wiki/Wikileaks numeric IP address instead. Wikileaks' summary of the leaked documents centres on Rudolf Elmer, the former chief operating officer of Bank Julius Baer in the Cayman Islands. The summary alleges the bank supports "ultra-rich's [sic] offshore tax avoidance, tax evasion, asset hiding and money laundering." The bank has refused to comment. Earlier leaks by the site have included an operations manual for the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and documents on Kenyan government corruption that were cited by the UK's Guardian newspaper. For now, the allegedly incriminating bank documents remain online, barring an escalation of legal activity by the bank's lawyers. In addition, Wikileaks seems to have prepared for this day by registering a slew of domain names (although the number of actual servers being used right now is far smaller), including wikileaks.cx,wikileaks.be and wikileaks.la.
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