• The Goldilocks Zone: How #everipedia Will Dominate the Future of #knowledge
    https://hackernoon.com/the-goldilocks-zone-how-everipedia-will-dominate-the-future-of-knowledge

    Goldilocks drinking the bowl of porridge that is “just right”In astronomy, the circumstellar habitable zone is defined as the range of orbits around a star in which a planet has the ability to support liquid water given sufficient atmospheric pressure. This habitable zone of a planet is determined by the distance it is from a star and the amount of radiant energy it receives from said star. The notion states that if a planet is in this zone and can support liquid water, then it has the capacity to support life.The habitable zone for life is better known to many as the “Goldilocks zone”, a metaphor taken from the classic children’s fairy tale Goldilocks and the Three Bears where a little girl chooses three items (such as soup), ignoring the ones that are extreme (too hot, too cold), and (...)

    #everipedia-partnership #wikipedia #content

  • Ola Bini, développeur de protocoles de #cryptographie et proche de #Julian_Assange a été arrêté dans la foulé de l’arrestation de celui-ci. Collaborateur de #WikiLeaks [il] a été inculpé, samedi 13 avril, en Équateur pour attaque de systèmes informatiques. Il est soupçonné par le gouvernement d’avoir participé à des activités de déstabilisation du régime.
    http://www.rfi.fr/ameriques/20190414-equateur-wikileaks-assange-arrestation-cadre-ola-bini-patino-correa

    Bini a été placé en détention préventive et ses comptes bancaires ont été gelés. Lors d’une rencontre avec la presse étrangère jeudi, la ministre de l’Intérieur, Maria Paula Romo, avait dénoncé sans donner de noms la présence d’un activiste de Wikileaks et de deux hackers russes, soupconnés de participer à un plan de « déstabilisation » du président Lenin Moreno.

    Son GitHub : https://github.com/olabini

    Who Is Ola Bini ? Swedish Developer Who Visited Assange Arrested In Ecuador
    https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/who-is-ola-bini-swedish-programmer-who-visited-assange-arrested-i

    On Saturday, prosecutors said they intend to charge Bini for hacking-related crimes and had him ordered detained for up to 90 days while they compile evidence.

    The 36-year-old was arrested Thursday at the airport in the Ecuadorian capital of Quito as he prepared to board a flight to Japan. The arrest came just hours after Assange was evicted from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. Bini was carrying at least 30 electronic storage devices.

    Voir aussi :

    My boyfriend and extremely talented open source programmer, Ola Bini (@olabini ) is retained. He is a humble, amazing and curious person. I have worked with him in several projects. Please, #freeolabini
    https://twitter.com/claucece/status/1117569977563996160

    .@olabini Ola Bini is a software developer with whom I have worked for 4 years~ now. He is excellent in all of his work and it is a person that works creating privacy enhancing tools, even in the development of OTR. He is arrested right now. Please, help him #FreeOlaBini
    https://twitter.com/claucece/status/1116973839265738752

    URGENT UPDATE: 90 days of pre-trial detention of Swedish citizen @olabini. Political persecution of a friend of #Assange. Friendship is not a crime. Knowledge is not a crime. Expertise is not a crime.
    https://twitter.com/avilarenata/status/1116960285749927936

    • Site pour la campagne de soutien à #Ola_Bini : https://freeolabini.org/fr

      Notre collègue et ami, Ola Bini, a été arrêté en tant que prisonnier politique par le gouvernement équatorien et a besoin de votre aide. Montrez votre soutien en promouvant et en participant à ces actions :
      1- Signe la lettre de solidarité de la communauté technologique : https://freeolabini.org/fr/statement
      2- Suit le compte @FreeOlaBini (https://twitter.com/FreeOlaBini), utilise le hashtag #FreeOlaBini et visite le site web, freeolabini.org pour te tenir informé des actualités
      3- Si tu souhaites participer plus activement et soutenir cette campagne avec des actions ou idées plus spécifiques, envoie-nous un email à : support@freeolabini.org
      4- Rejoins notre bulletin d’actualités : https://freeolabini.org/fr/subscribe

    • Lettre de solidarité pour la libération de Ola Bini - Ola Bini est un développeur, pas un criminel : https://freeolabini.org/fr/statement

      En tant que technologues, développeurs de logiciels libres et open source, et en tant que personnes et organisations œuvrant pour la protection de la sécurité sur Internet, nous voulons dénoncer énergiquement la détention de Ola Bini. Ola Bini est un expert en matière de cybersécurité, consultant spécialiste de la protection de la vie privée sur Internet, il contribue au développement et à la défense de l’Open Source et il est défenseur des droits numériques. Nous considérons sa détention préventive comme arbitraire et comme une attaque contre toute notre communauté, et donc contre nous-mêmes.

      /.../

      Ola Bini est un expert en cybersécurité, consultant en protection des données personnelles dans le domaine de l’Open Source ainsi qu’un défenseur reconnu des droits numériques. Il est citoyen suédois et réside en Equateur avec un permis valable pour 6 ans. Il vit en Equateur parce que c’est un pays qu’il aime et dans lequel il a construit sa vie. Ola a été développeur toute sa vie, depuis l’âge de 8 ans. Son travail est prolifique : il a collaboré et collabore à une longue liste de projets, parmi lesquels (nous souhaitons souligner par l’importance de ses contributions) OTR version 4 et JRuby. Il est aussi membre du conseil qui mène le projet européen phare DECODE (avec le numéro de subvention 732546) sur la cryptographie avancée et la confidentialité de la vie privée dès la conception (privacy-by-design). La communauté considère sa détention comme un obstacle important et négatif aux projets avec lesquels il collabore.

      /.../

      Défendre le droit à la vie privée n’est pas un crime. Défendre le droit aux logiciels libres et ouverts n’est pas un crime. Ola consacre sa vie à la liberté de tous. Maintenant, c’est à notre tour de lutter pour la liberté d’Ola.
      Nous le voulons en sécurité, nous le voulons de retour parmi nous, nous le voulons libre !
      #FreeOlaBini
      S’il te plaît, ajoute ton organisation ou toi-même à cette déclaration de support en envoyant un courrier électronique à : signatures@freeolabini.org

    • Déclaration d’Ola Bini suite à son arrestation arbitraire depuis la prison de El Inca, en Équateur :
      https://freeolabini.org/fr/statement-from-ola

      Tout d’abord, je tiens à remercier toutes les personnes qui me soutiennent. On m’a parlé de l’attention que cette affaire a suscité dans le monde entier et c’est quelque chose j’apprécie plus que ce que je ne sais exprimer avec mes paroles. À ma famille, mes amis, à tous ceux qui sont proches, je vous envoie tout mon amour. Je vous ai toujours dans mes pensées.

      Je crois fermement au droit à la vie privée. Sans vie privée, il n’y a pas d’agence et sans agence, nous sommes des esclaves. C’est pourquoi j’ai consacré ma vie à cette lutte. La surveillance est une menace pour nous tous. Ça doit s’arrêter.

      Les leaders du monde mènent une guerre contre le savoir. L’affaire contre moi est basée sur les livres que j’ai lus et sur la technologie dont je dispose. C’est un crime seulement depuis une pensée orwellienne. Nous ne pouvons pas laisser cela arriver. Le monde va fermer de plus en plus autour de nous jusqu’à ce qu’il ne nous reste plus rien. Si l’Équateur peut le faire, d’autres le peuvent aussi. Nous devons arrêter cela avant qu’il ne soit trop tard.

      J’ai confiance en qu’il sera évident que cette affaire ne peut pas être justifiée et va donc s’effondrer.

      Je ne peux pas m’empêcher de dire quelque chose sur le système pénal équatorien. Je suis détenu dans les meilleures conditions et pourtant c’est terrible. Une réforme sérieuse est nécessaire. Mes pensées vont à tous les prisonniers en Équateur.

      Ola Bini

      (j’ai l’impression que certains passages sont mal traduits...)

    • apparemment, l’original est en anglais (il n’y a pas actuellement de version suédoise).

      1. First, I want to thank all my supporters out there. I’ve been told about the attention this case is getting from all the world, and I appreciate it more than I can say. To my friends, family and nearest ones: all my love - you’re constantly in my thoughts.

      2. I believe strongly in the right to privacy. Without privacy, we can’t have agency, and without agency we are slaves. That’s why I have dedicated my life to this struggle. Surveillance is a threat to us all, we must stop it.

      3. The leaders of the world are waging a war against knowledge. The case against me is based on the books I’ve read and the technology I have. This is Orwellian - ThoughtCrime. We can’t let this happen. The world will close in closer and closer on us, until we have nothing left. If Ecuador can do this, so can others. We have to stop this idea now, before it’s too late.

      4. I’m confident it will be obvious that there’s no substance to this case, and that it will collapse into nothing.

      5. I can’t avoid saying a word about the Ecuadorian penal system. I’m being held under the best circumstances and it’s still despicable. There needs to be serious reform. My thoughts go out to all fellow inmates in Ecuador.

      Ola Bini

      Oui, il y a un gros problème de traduction sur agency, ici je pense au sens de possibilité d’agir, capacité d’agir.

      Et moins problématique pour le sens, sur le ThoughtCrime, " C’est un crime de pensée (au sens de la Police de la Pensée) orwellien(ne).

  • D’abord, ils sont venus pour Assange…
    https://lundi.am/D-abord-ils-sont-venus-pour-Assange-par-LeakyWeek

    En conclusion, et comme l’ont déjà affirmé Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald, Reporters Sans Frontières, The Guardian et bon nombre d’autres institutions [5] pourtant plus souvent complaisantes qu’adverses à l’égard des puissants, l’arrestation d’#Assange est un coup porté à la #liberté d’#information dans son ensemble. Sa capture est voulue à tout prix pour l’exemple au mépris du droit international et des promesses faites dans le passé par un gouvernement Équatorien manifestement acheté par les US (l’Équateur a opportunément reçu un prêt de 10 milliards par le FMI [6]...). Jeter Assange en prison vise à décourager quiconque de suivre son inspiration pour publier sans compromis ce qui expose les crimes et #mensonges des puissants. Ne nous y trompons pas, et au-delà des désaccords avec certains des propos d’Assange, il est urgent de reconnaître la portée de l’héritage de #WikiLeaks : de ce qu’il inspire pour le présent et pour le futur d’une presse libre et d’une information qui permettrait de collectivement et durablement rétablir les rapports de force, d’inquiéter les dominants et d’espérer un jour les faire payer pour leurs crimes et mensonges.

    • A tous ceux qui nous ont abandonné : nous n’oublierons pas. A tous les autres : nous nous battrons jusqu’au bout pour empêcher l’extradition et la mise au ban de celui qui fut, il y a deux ans, reconnu par l’ONU comme le seul détenu politique du continent.

      Les cinq ans de prison auxquels fait face théoriquement Julian Assange sont d’évidence une façon pour les Etats-Unis d’obtenir son extradition – en prétendant à une peine légère – afin d’ensuite dévoiler l’ensemble des autres poursuites qui pourraient le mener à la prison à vie.

      Il n’y a aucun doute sur le fait que cette procédure, enclenchée dès le départ dans un seul but, détruire Wikileaks et cet individu, est politique et ne s’achèvera que lorsqu’il sera complètement écrasé.

      C’est à nous de l’éviter.

      Juan Branco

  • Here Are The US Government Damage Reports Made In The #WikiLeaks Aftermath Obtained Through Freedom Of Information Laws
    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/jasonleopold/here-are-the-never-before-seen-us-government-damage-reports

    The Department of Defense authorized several damage assessment reports after WikiLeaks released its massive cache of classified documents, and BuzzFeed News can reveal some of their contents for the first time.

    The heavily redacted reports cover a roughly three-year time span. BuzzFeed News obtained more than 300 pages in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

    [...]

    Several damage assessment reports say that the records released by WikiLeaks contained details about previously undisclosed civilian casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan, which “could be used by the press or our adversaries to negatively impact support for current operations in the region .”

    Regarding the hundreds of thousands of Iraq-related military documents and State Department cables, the report assessed “with high confidence that disclosure of the Iraq data set will have no direct personal impact on current and former U.S. leadership in Iraq .”

    One heavily redacted damage assessment report determined that a different set of documents published the same year, relating to the US war in Afghanistan, would not result in “significant impact” to US operations .

    It did, however, have the potential to cause “serious damage” to “intelligence sources, informants and the Afghan population,” and US and NATO intelligence collection efforts. The most significant impact of the leaks, the report concluded, would likely be on the lives of “cooperative Afghans, Iraqis, and other foreign interlocutors.”

    #etats-unis #propagande #punition

  • Dans son éditorial Le Monde aurait du se limiter à ces deux passages, le reste n’est que blabla inutile et circonvolution des anges.

    La trajectoire ambivalente de Julian Assange
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2019/04/13/la-trajectoire-ambivalente-de-julian-assange_5449804_3232.html

    M. Assange est revenu sur sa parole et a publié les documents, sans filtre, dans leur intégralité. Le Monde a dénoncé ce procédé ; d’autres médias, en revanche, ont continué à le soutenir. La réalité est qu’il a, ce jour-là, quitté le monde des défenseurs des droits humains pour rejoindre celui des absolutistes de la transparence, faisant, au passage, un cadeau aux pires services de sécurité de la planète.

    Ce qu’il s’est passé ensuite avec Julian Assange est complexe, mais il en ressort une ligne directrice : le militant antiaméricain s’attaque aux secrets des pays démocratiques, et rarement à ceux de pays totalitaires. Il a travaillé pour Russia Today, la télévision pro-Poutine financée par le Kremlin. Et il a utilisé WikiLeaks, durant la campagne présidentielle américaine de 2016, comme diffuseur de documents subtilisés par les services secrets russes au Parti démocrate et à sa candidate, Hillary Clinton, dans le but de la discréditer. Il a, ce faisant, comme Moscou, aidé Donald Trump à remporter l’élection.


    #assange #wikileaks #russie #russiatoday

    • lien propre:

      Glen Greenwald, Micah Lee - 20190412

      https://theintercept.com/2019/04/11/the-u-s-governments-indictment-of-julian-assange-poses-grave-threats-t

      In April, 2017, Pompeo, while still CIA chief, delivered a deranged speech proclaiming that “we have to recognize that we can no longer allow Assange and his colleagues the latitude to use free speech values against us.” He punctuated his speech with this threat: “To give them the space to crush us with misappropriated secrets is a perversion of what our great Constitution stands for. It ends now.”

      From the start, the Trump DOJ has made no secret of its desire to criminalize journalism generally. Early in the Trump administration, Sessions explicitly discussed the possibility of prosecuting journalists for publishing classified information. Trump and his key aides were open about how eager they were to build on, and escalate, the Obama administration’s progress in enabling journalism in the U.S. to be criminalized.

      Today’s arrest of Assange is clearly the culmination of a two-year effort by the U.S. government to coerce Ecuador — under its new and submissive president, Lenín Moreno — to withdraw the asylum protection it extended to Assange in 2012. Rescinding Assange’s asylum would enable the U.K. to arrest Assange on minor bail-jumping charges pending in London and, far more significantly, to rely on an extradition request from the U.S. government to send him to a country to which he has no connection (the U.S.) to stand trial relating to leaked documents.

      Indeed, the Trump administration’s motive here is clear. With Ecuador withdrawing its asylum protection and subserviently allowing the U.K. to enter its own embassy to arrest Assange, Assange faced no charges other than a minor bail-jumping charge in the U.K. (Sweden closed its sexual assault investigation not because they concluded Assange was innocent, but because they spent years unsuccessfully trying to extradite him). By indicting Assange and demanding his extradition, it ensures that Assange — once he serves his time in a London jail for bail-jumping — will be kept in a British prison for the full year or longer that it takes for the U.S. extradition request, which Assange will certainly contest, to wind its way through the British courts.

      The indictment tries to cast itself as charging Assange not with journalistic activities but with criminal hacking. But it is a thinly disguised pretext for prosecuting Assange for publishing the U.S. government’s secret documents while pretending to make it about something else.

      Whatever else is true about the indictment, substantial parts of the document explicitly characterize as criminal exactly the actions that journalists routinely engage in with their sources and thus, constitutes a dangerous attempt to criminalize investigative journalism.

      The indictment, for instance, places great emphasis on Assange’s alleged encouragement that Manning — after she already turned over hundreds of thousands of classified documents — try to get more documents for WikiLeaks to publish. The indictment claims that “discussions also reflect Assange actively encouraging Manning to provide more information. During an exchange, Manning told Assange that ‘after this upload, that’s all I really have got left.’ To which Assange replied, ‘curious eyes never run dry in my experience.’”

      But encouraging sources to obtain more information is something journalists do routinely. Indeed, it would be a breach of one’s journalistic duties not to ask vital sources with access to classified information if they could provide even more information so as to allow more complete reporting. If a source comes to a journalist with information, it is entirely common and expected that the journalist would reply: Can you also get me X, Y, and Z to complete the story or to make it better? As Edward Snowden said this morning, “Bob Woodward stated publicly he would have advised me to remain in place and act as a mole.”

      Investigative journalism in many, if not most, cases, entails a constant back and forth between journalist and source in which the journalist tries to induce the source to provide more classified information, even if doing so is illegal. To include such “encouragement” as part of a criminal indictment — as the Trump DOJ did today — is to criminalize the crux of investigative journalism itself, even if the indictment includes other activities you believe fall outside the scope of journalism.

      As Northwestern journalism professor Dan Kennedy explained in The Guardian in 2010 when denouncing as a press freedom threat the Obama DOJ’s attempts to indict Assange based on the theory that he did more than passively receive and publish documents — i.e., that he actively “colluded” with Manning:


      The problem is that there is no meaningful distinction to be made. How did the Guardian, equally, not “collude” with WikiLeaks in obtaining the cables? How did the New York Times not “collude” with the Guardian when the Guardian gave the Times a copy following Assange’s decision to cut the Times out of the latest document dump?

      For that matter, I don’t see how any news organisation can be said not to have colluded with a source when it receives leaked documents. Didn’t the Times collude with Daniel Ellsberg when it received the Pentagon Papers from him? Yes, there are differences. Ellsberg had finished making copies long before he began working with the Times, whereas Assange may have goaded Manning. But does that really matter?

      Most of the reports about the Assange indictment today have falsely suggested that the Trump DOJ discovered some sort of new evidence that proved Assange tried to help Manning hack through a password in order to use a different username to download documents. Aside from the fact that those attempts failed, none of this is new: As the last five paragraphs of this 2011 Politico story demonstrate, that Assange talked to Manning about ways to use a different username so as to avoid detection was part of Manning’s trial and was long known to the Obama DOJ when they decided not to prosecute.

      There are only two new events that explain today’s indictment of Assange: 1) The Trump administration from the start included authoritarian extremists such as Sessions and Pompeo who do not care in the slightest about press freedom and were determined to criminalize journalism against the U.S., and 2) With Ecuador about to withdraw its asylum protection, the U.S. government needed an excuse to prevent Assange from walking free.

      A technical analysis of the indictment’s claims similarly proves the charge against Assange to be a serious threat to First Amendment press liberties, primarily because it seeks to criminalize what is actually a journalist’s core duty: helping one’s source avoid detection. The indictment deceitfully seeks to cast Assange’s efforts to help Manning maintain her anonymity as some sort of sinister hacking attack.

      The Defense Department computer that Manning used to download the documents which she then furnished to WikiLeaks was likely running the Windows operating system. It had multiple user accounts on it, including an account to which Manning had legitimate access. Each account is protected by a password, and Windows computers store a file that contains a list of usernames and password “hashes,” or scrambled versions of the passwords. Only accounts designated as “administrator,” a designation Manning’s account lacked, have permission to access this file.

      The indictment suggests that Manning, in order to access this password file, powered off her computer and then powered it back on, this time booting to a CD running the Linux operating system. From within Linux, she allegedly accessed this file full of password hashes. The indictment alleges that Assange agreed to try to crack one of these password hashes, which, if successful, would recover the original password. With the original password, Manning would be able to log directly into that other user’s account, which — as the indictment puts it — “would have made it more difficult for investigators to identify Manning as the source of disclosures of classified information.”

      Assange appears to have been unsuccessful in cracking the password. The indictment alleges that “Assange indicated that he had been trying to crack the password by stating that he had ‘no luck so far.’”

      Thus, even if one accepts all of the indictment’s claims as true, Assange was not trying to hack into new document files to which Manning had no access, but rather trying to help Manning avoid detection as a source. For that reason, the precedent that this case would set would be a devastating blow to investigative journalists and press freedom everywhere.

      Journalists have an ethical obligation to take steps to protect their sources from retaliation, which sometimes includes granting them anonymity and employing technical measures to help ensure that their identity is not discovered. When journalists take source protection seriously, they strip metadata and redact information from documents before publishing them if that information could have been used to identify their source; they host cloud-based systems such as SecureDrop, now employed by dozens of major newsrooms around the world, that make it easier and safer for whistleblowers, who may be under surveillance, to send messages and classified documents to journalists without their employers knowing; and they use secure communication tools like Signal and set them to automatically delete messages.

      But today’s indictment of Assange seeks to criminalize exactly these types of source-protection efforts, as it states that “it was part of the conspiracy that Assange and Manning used a special folder on a cloud drop box of WikiLeaks to transmit classified records containing information related to the national defense of the United States.”

      The indictment, in numerous other passages, plainly conflates standard newsroom best practices with a criminal conspiracy. It states, for instance, that “it was part of the conspiracy that Assange and Manning used the ‘Jabber’ online chat service to collaborate on the acquisition and dissemination of the classified records, and to enter into the agreement to crack the password […].” There is no question that using Jabber, or any other encrypted messaging system, to communicate with sources and acquire documents with the intent to publish them, is a completely lawful and standard part of modern investigative journalism. Newsrooms across the world now use similar technologies to communicate securely with their sources and to help their sources avoid detection by the government.

      The indictment similarly alleges that “it was part of the conspiracy that Assange and Manning took measures to conceal Manning as the source of the disclosure of classified records to WikiLeaks, including by removing usernames from the disclosed information and deleting chat logs between Assange and Manning.”

  • Double standards in Assange’s arrest (http://www.globaltimes.cn/con...
    https://diasp.eu/p/8869968

    Double standards in Assange’s arrest

    #China #politics #international ......

    “The US accusations of violating #press #freedom and cracking down on #dissenters are always against #non-Western countries. If #WikiLeaks targeted countries like #China, #Russia and #Iran, the US and its major #allies will cheer in chorus and label #Assange a #hero who opposes #autocracy”.

    [...]

  • #Chomsky: Arrest of #Assange Is “Scandalous” and Highlights Shocking Extraterritorial Reach of U.S. | Democracy Now!
    https://www.democracynow.org/2019/4/12/chomsky_arrest_of_assange_is_scandalous

    NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, the Assange arrest is scandalous in several respects. One of them is just the effort of governments—and it’s not just the U.S. government. The British are cooperating. Ecuador, of course, is now cooperating. Sweden, before, had cooperated. The efforts to silence a journalist who was producing materials that people in power didn’t want the rascal multitude to know about—OK?—that’s basically what happened. #WikiLeaks was producing things that people ought to know about those in power. People in power don’t like that, so therefore we have to silence it. OK? This is the kind of thing, the kind of scandal, that takes place, unfortunately, over and over.

    To take another example, right next door to Ecuador, in Brazil, where the developments that have gone on are extremely important. This is the most important country in Latin America, one of the most important in the world. Under the Lula government early in this millennium, Brazil was the most—maybe the most respected country in the world. It was the voice for the Global South under the leadership of Lula da Silva. Notice what happened. There was a coup, soft coup, to eliminate the nefarious effects of the labor party, the Workers’ Party. These are described by the World Bank—not me, the World Bank—as the “golden decade” in Brazil’s history, with radical reduction of poverty, a massive extension of inclusion of marginalized populations, large parts of the population—Afro-Brazilian, indigenous—who were brought into the society, a sense of dignity and hope for the population. That couldn’t be tolerated.

    After Lula’s—after he left office, a kind of a “soft coup” take place—I won’t go through the details, but the last move, last September, was to take Lula da Silva, the leading, the most popular figure in Brazil, who was almost certain to win the forthcoming election, put him in jail, solitary confinement, essentially a death sentence, 25 years in jail, banned from reading press or books, and, crucially, barred from making a public statement—unlike mass murderers on death row.
    This, in order to silence the person who was likely to win the election. He’s the most important political prisoner in the world. Do you hear anything about it?

    Well, Assange is a similar case: We’ve got to silence this voice. You go back to history. Some of you may recall when Mussolini’s fascist government put Antonio Gramsci in jail. The prosecutor said, “We have to silence this voice for 20 years. Can’t let it speak.” That’s Assange. That’s Lula. There are other cases. That’s one scandal.

    The other scandal is just the extraterritorial reach of the United States, which is shocking. I mean, why should the United States—why should any—no other state could possibly do it. But why should the United States have the power to control what others are doing elsewhere in the world? I mean, it’s an outlandish situation. It goes on all the time. We never even notice it. At least there’s no comment on it .

    #extraterritorialité #états-unis

  • Daniel Ellsberg On #Assange Arrest: The Beginning of the End For Press Freedom
    https://therealnews.com/stories/daniel-ellsberg-on-assange-arrest-the-beginning-of-the-end-for-press-fr

    This is the first indictment of a journalist and editor or publisher, Julian Assange. And if it’s successful it will not be the last. This is clearly is a part of President Trump’s war on the press, what he calls the enemy of the state. And if he succeeds in putting Julian Assange in prison, where I think he’ll be for life, if he goes there at all, probably the first charge against him is only a few years. But that’s probably just the first of many.

  • Will Julian Assange Be Extradited? An Interview with Criminal Defense Attorney Vinoo Varghese
    https://hackernoon.com/will-julian-assange-be-extradited-an-interview-with-criminal-defense-att

    A #news breaking special episode of the Hacker Noon Podcast: An interview with criminal defense attorney Vinoo Varghese.https://medium.com/media/5e054cf70aa662d55ba5b4a915259c18/href“Your question of is Julian Assange going to be extradited to the US? The answer is going to be yes.” Vinoo Varghese, Criminal Defense AttorneyThis is a special episode of the Hacker Noon Podcast. We just wrapped up an interview with criminal defense attorney Vinoo Varghese where we spent about 10-minutes discussing the arrest of #wikileaks founder Julian Assange. Due to the timeliness of this story, we decided to release this clip from the episode.The full episode will be released in several weeks, and discusses a range of other topics.Will Julian Assange Be Extradited? An Interview with Criminal Defense (...)

    #technews #julian-assange #politics

  • L’Equateur retire l’asile à Julian Assange, la police britannique l’arrête dans l’ambassade (VIDEO) — RT en français
    https://francais.rt.com/international/60877-equateur-retire-asile-julian-assange-police-britannique-arrete-am
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Z00wtysST4

    Le lanceur d’alerte Julian Assange, réfugié depuis près de sept ans dans l’ambassade d’Equateur à Londres, a été arrêté ce 11 avril par la police britannique après que Quito a révoqué son asile.

    #WikiLeaks

    • Des fois qu’y est un rapport...
      https://www.lapresse.ca/international/amerique-latine/201902/20/01-5215529-lequateur-obtient-102-milliards-de-dollars-du-fmi-et-de-la-banqu

      L’Équateur a obtenu 10,2 milliards de dollars de crédits de la part d’organismes internationaux, principalement le Fonds monétaire international (FMI) et la Banque mondiale, avec lesquels le gouvernement précédent avait rompu, a annoncé mercredi le président Lenin Moreno.

    • Sinon, j’adore la langue de bois :

      Un accord avec le FMI améliorera le cadre de restructuration économique et permettra l’accès aux autres organisations multilatérales comme la Banque mondiale (BM), la Banque interaméricaine de développement (BID) et la Corporation andine de développement (CAF). C’est pourquoi à la fin du mois de janvier 2019 s’est tenue une réunion avec le président de la République de l’Équateur, Lenín Moreno, son ministre des Finances Richard Martínez, et la directrice générale du FMI, Christine Lagarde.

      Cette rencontre promet des bénéfices, mais aussi des conditions à remplir par l’Équateur. Parmi les mesures du FMI figurent l’augmentation de la TVA, la subvention pour l’essence, la restructuration de la dette actuelle, le calcul de l’âge de la retraite, les réformes des contributions de sécurité sociale et la flexibilité du travail .

      Cette alliance aurait de ce fait pour résultat une consolidation budgétaire et un bon positionnement dans le marché mondial. En outre, cela comporterait la reprise des relations avec le FMI après avoir rompu tout lien avec lui au cours du gouvernement de l’ancien président, Rafael Correa. Une équipe du FMI se trouve déjà à Quito pour envisager l’amélioration du cadre de politique économique, ce qui peut comporter des avantages pour les citoyens équatoriens, essentiellement les plus pauvres et les plus vulnérables . De même, il y aurait une amélioration en ce qui concerne la compétitivité, la génération d’emplois, le renforcement des bases institutionnelles de la dollarisation et la lutte contre la corruption, d’après le porte-parole du FMI, Gerry Rice.

      http://www.espaces-latinos.org/archives/75085
      Le gros foutage de gueule!

    • Cependant, le Venezuela est loin d’être le seul pays d’Amérique latine à être visé par ces armes financières déguisées en institutions financières “indépendantes”. Par exemple, l’Equateur – dont l’actuel président a cherché à ramener le pays dans les bonnes grâces de Washington – est allé jusqu’à effectuer un “audit” de son asile de journaliste et éditeur de WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, afin de gagner un sauvetage de 10 milliards de dollars du FMI. L’Équateur a accordé l’asile à Assange en 2012 et les États-Unis ont demandé avec ferveur son extradition pour des charges encore scellées depuis lors.

      De plus, en juillet dernier, les États-Unis ont menacé l’Équateur de “mesures commerciales punitives” s’ils introduisaient à l’ONU une mesure visant à soutenir l’allaitement maternel plutôt que les préparations pour nourrissons, ce qui a stupéfié la communauté internationale mais a mis à nu la volonté du gouvernement américain d’utiliser des “armes économiques” contre les nations latino-américaines.

      http://unpeudairfrais.org/wikileaks-revele-que-les-etats-unis-ont-utilise-le-fmi-et-la-banque-

    • Il s’agit, a affirmé l’ex-chef d’Etat, de la révélation par le site Wikileaks « au niveau mondial » de l’existence d’« un compte secret au Panama, à la Balboa Bank », au nom de la famille Moreno. La semaine dernière, WikiLeaks déjà avait établi un lien entre le risque d’expulsion d’Assange et la publication d’informations privées compromettantes pour Lenin Moreno. « Des rumeurs injurieuses ! », avait réagi Quito. Selon Rafael Correa, ces accusations de corruption ont été « l’élément détonateur » qui a poussé Lenin Moreno à se « venger » en permettant à la police britannique d’entrer dans l’ambassade de Londres pour arrêter Assange.

      « Quelque chose d’incroyable, vraiment sans précédent », a-t-il dénoncé, rappelant que le fondateur australien de WikiLeaks, âgé de 47 ans, avait acquis en 2017 la nationalité équatorienne. Dans un tweet en fin de matinée, Rafael Correa avait déjà fustigé son ancien allié, ex vice-président sous sa mandature, le qualifiant de « plus grand traître de l’histoire latino-américaine ». Moreno a défendu le retrait de l’asile accordé à Assange, une décision présentée comme « souveraine ».

      http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/assange-une-vengeance-personnelle-du-president-equatorien-20190411

      On sent que le FMI n’a pas dû beaucoup insister, vu que le nouveau président équatorien est un gros corrompu !

    • L’arrestation de Julian Assange à Londres est « très choquante », estime Dick Marty. « Assange n’a fait que dire la vérité. Il a révélé des actions criminelles et réveillé la conscience internationale », déclare l’ancien rapporteur sur les prisons secrètes de la CIA pour le Conseil de l’Europe.

      L’ancien procureur général tessinois dénonce les pressions de « l’empire » américain sur les Etats impliqués dans cette affaire et les méthodes de la justice américaine.

      « Moi-même, j’évite pour l’instant de voyager aux Etats-Unis, révèle-t-il. Ils pourraient m’interroger sur les sources de mes rapports et me retenir, car je ne pourrais évidemment pas les dévoiler. »

      « Il faut être réaliste, ce n’est pas un système dans lequel, si vous êtes un cas de sécurité nationale, vous pouvez espérez de la justice », estimait lui-même Julian Assange en parlant des Etats-Unis dans un entretien à la RTS en 2015.

      https://www.rts.ch/info/monde/10359555--je-suis-choque-assange-n-a-fait-que-dire-la-verite-clame-dick-marty.ht
      https://www.rts.ch/play/tv/popupvideoplayer?id=10359748&startTime=9.486

    • A tous ceux qui nous ont abandonné : nous n’oublierons pas. A tous les autres : nous nous battrons jusqu’au bout pour empêcher l’extradition et la mise au ban de celui qui fut, il y a deux ans, reconnu par l’ONU comme le seul détenu politique du continent.

      Les cinq ans de prison auxquels fait face théoriquement Julian Assange sont d’évidence une façon pour les Etats-Unis d’obtenir son extradition – en prétendant à une peine légère – afin d’ensuite dévoiler l’ensemble des autres poursuites qui pourraient le mener à la prison à vie.

      Il n’y a aucun doute sur le fait que cette procédure, enclenchée dès le départ dans un seul but, détruire Wikileaks et cet individu, est politique et ne s’achèvera que lorsqu’il sera complètement écrasé.

      C’est à nous de l’éviter.

      Juan Branco

    • Contrary to Reports, the U.S. Gov. Can Add Charges After Assange Extradition
      http://accuracy.org/release/contrary-to-reports-the-u-s-gov-can-add-charges-after-assange-extradition

      He said today: “The New York Times report is wrong and understates the dangers to Assange. What it states is normally the case in extradition treaties, but it’s not the case in the relevant U.S.-British extradition treaty.

      “Once the U.S. government has Assange over here, they can concoct whatever charges they want to against him for anything and then ask the British to waive what’s called the Rule of Specialty. That could add up to much more than the current five years Assange is facing. The British government will almost certainly consent, unless Jeremy Corbyn becomes prime minister.

    • Assange refuse d’être extradé vers les Etats-Unis
      https://information.tv5monde.com/info/assange-refuse-d-etre-extrade-vers-les-etats-unis-298090

      Le représentant de la justice américaine, Ben Brandon, a confirmé jeudi qu’il risquait une peine maximale de cinq ans de prison.

      Mais les soutiens de Julian Assange craignent que les charges ne soient alourdies, la justice britannique n’ayant pas encore reçu tous les documents concernant la demande américaine.

  • Wikipedia Isn’t Officially a Social Network. But the Harassment Can Get Ugly. - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/08/us/wikipedia-harassment-wikimedia-foundation.html

    Unlike social networks such as Facebook and Twitter, Wikipedia relies largely on unpaid volunteers to handle reports of harassment.

    In response to complaints about pervasive harassment, the Wikimedia Foundation, the San Francisco-based nonprofit that operates Wikipedia and supports its community of volunteers, has promised new strategies to curb abuse. In recent months, the foundation has rolled out a more sophisticated blocking tool that it hopes can better control the harassment plaguing some users.

    Sydney Poore, a community health strategist with the foundation, said that when the free encyclopedia was established in 2001, it initially attracted lots of editors who were “tech-oriented” men. That led to a culture that was not always accepting of outside opinions, said Ms. Poore, who has edited Wikipedia for 13 years.

    “We’re making strong efforts to reverse that,” she said, “but it doesn’t happen overnight.”

    A few informed clicks on any Wikipedia article can reveal the lengthy discussions that shape a published narrative. According to interviews with Wikipedians around the world, those digital back rooms are where harassment often begins. A spirited debate over a detail in an article can spiral into one user spewing personal attacks against another.

    “If you out yourself as a feminist or L.G.B.T., you will tend to be more targeted,” said Natacha Rault, a Wikipedia editor who lives in Geneva and founded a project that aims to reduce the gender gap on the website.

    On French-language Wikipedia, where Ms. Rault does much of her editing, discussions about gender can often lead to vitriol. Ms. Rault said there were six months of heated debate about whether to label the article on Britain’s leader, Theresa May, with the feminine version of “prime minister” (première ministre), rather than the masculine one (premier ministre).

    Wikipedians also began to discuss the “content gender gap,” which includes an imbalance in the gender distribution of biographies on the site. The latest analysis, released this month, said about 18 percent of 1.6 million biographies on the English-language Wikipedia were of women. That is up from about 15 percent in 2014, partially because of activists trying to move the needle.

    “The idea is to provide volunteer administrators with a more targeted, more nuanced ability to respond to conflicts,” Ms. Lo said.

    Partial blocks are active on five Wikipedias, including those in Italian and Arabic, and foundation staff members expect it to be introduced to English-language Wikipedia this year. The foundation is also in the early stages of a private reporting system where users could report harassment, Ms. Lo said.

    But there are limits to how effective institutional change can be in curbing harassment on Wikipedia. In the case of Mx. Gethen, their harasser kept posting from different IP addresses, making it difficult for a blocking tool to be effective.

    Although the abuser no longer haunts their internet presence, Mx. Gethen said the sometimes hostile culture on Wikipedia had reduced their editing on the site.

    “I’m not getting paid for this,” they said. “Why should I volunteer my time to be abused?”

    #Wikipédia