The odd thing about Wikileaks is that their success has been assured, not by what they leaked, though there is some important information there, but by their enemies. The massive and indiscriminant overreaction by both government and powerful corporate actors has ensured this, and includes but is not nearly limited to: Shutting down Wikileaks servers, starting with the Amazon server Stopping domain name server propagation Paypal refusing to send payments VISA and Mastercard refusing to process payments The Swiss Bank PostFinance shutting down Assange’s account Senator Lieberman pressuring firms over Wikileak s The odd behavior of prosecutors in the Assange rape accusations/case Wikileaks and Assange have now been made in to cause celebres. If corporations and governments can destroy someone’s access to the modern economy as they have Wikileaks, without even pretending due process of the law (Paypal, VISA, Mastercard, Amazon, etc… were not ordered by any court to cut Wikileaks) then we simply do not live in a free society of law, let alone a society of justice. Ironically the Wikileaks files reveal that the British fixed their inquiry into the war, and that the US pressured the Spanish government to stop a war crimes court case against ex-members of the Bush administration . Assange and Wikileaks are subject to extreme judicial and extrajudicial sanctions, but people who engaged in aggressive war based on lies, tortured people and are responsible for deaths well into the six figures, walk free. To be just, law must be applied to both the big and the small. Thousands of executives at banks who engaged in systematic fraud were never charged, out and out war criminals are actively protected, and Wikileaks and Assange are hunted like animals? This has enraged, in particular, the Hacktivist community, with Anonymous forming Operation Payback and shutting down both Mastercard servers and the Swiss Bank PostFinance’s website. As they themselves say, what enraged them was multiple companies attempting to shut Wikileaks down, both on the web, and financially. While there is no comparison between what Assange has done and what happened on 9/11 (his actions are those of a free press), the rabid and indiscrimant overreaction of the the US in particular and the West in general is similar. And what it has done is make Assange into a martyr, an icon for freedom of speech and a symbol of politically motivated repression. It has done the same for Wikileaks and made Wikileaks a cause celebre. It has proved that the West is run by authoritarian thugs with completely twisted priorities. Kill hundreds of thousands of people and engage in aggressive war? No big deal. Cause the greatest economic collapse of the post-war period sending millions into poverty? We couldn’t possibly prosecute the people who did that, but we will give them trillions! Reveal our petty secrets and lies, and that we know the war in Afghanistan is lost, have known for years and continue to kill both Afghanis and our own soldiers pointlessly? We WILL destroy you, no matter what we have to do. Which leads us to the rape charges against Assange. Given what we know right now about the case against him, it appears that is going to come down to he said/she said. Unless the Swedish prosecutors have a smoking gun, even if Assange is convicted, most of his supporters will never believe the case wasn’t at the least heavily tainted by political pressure, and at worst, a set up. And if he is extradited from Sweden to the US to face some sort of charges, the howling will reach the high heavens. He will be a martyr for the cause. The more he is persecuted, the more many will rally around both him, and his child, Wikileaks. Because of the massive overreaction to Wikileaks, the case against him is completely tainted. He might be guilty as sin, but justice can no longer be seen to be done, because it is far too evident that too many powerful people, corporations and governments want him taken out. And so he has won. Whether he winds up free, in prison in Sweden or the US, or winds up dead, he has won this round. He will be a martyr and an icon, and his child, Wikileaks, whether it lives or dies, will become a rallying point and a symbol of how corrupt and unjust western society is.
Continue reading …Well, would you look at what showed up on our frigid doorstep this morning? That’s right, we are now the proud owners of Google’s first Chrome OS laptop — the Cr-48 . Obviously, we ripped open the box and got right to handling the 12.1-inch, Atom-powered laptop. So, what does the thing feel like? How’s that keyboard? And more importantly, how’s Chrome OS looking? Stand by for our impressions, which we’ll be adding in depth over the day. First impression: this thing is different. Here are some quick bullet points, one of our favorite formats for presenting data in a list: Hardware The entire body is made of a soft, beautiful matte black. It feels very Droid-like, just a little less rubberized. Overall, it looks a lot like a black MacBook, including a magnetic latch with a split spot for getting your finger in and lifting the lid, a very similar keyboard, and a similar hinge design. There’s on of those large Envy-style clickpads. It has great multitouch scroll, and great general mousing feel (better than most Windows laptops), but it also has some of that Envy trouble of disliking a finger floating on the lower part of the pad. Basically, you have to click or mouse, you can’t be doing both at once. The matte screen overwhelms us with gratitude. Thank you, Google. Thank you . There’s ultra-wide ctrl and alt buttons on the left side, thanks to the lack of a Windows Key. Software It starts up instantly, and it’s actually really hard to tell if we’ve put it into standby or not because there are no drive noises, and we haven’t hit upon any fan noise yet either. We’re having trouble installing Photoshop. Our apps haven’t synced over from our desktop’s copy of Chrome, which must be a still-forthcoming feature. You need an internet connection for the very first setup and login, but you can login to an existing user while the device is offline, and access anything that’s cached or HTML5-stored on the device — like some of those new Chrome Web Apps. While wake from standby takes less than a second, a cold boot takes around 15 seconds to get to the login screen, and another 6 or 7 seconds to login after you’ve entered your password. The remainder of our impressions will be about Poppit! . The most important thing to remember is that this product is in no way designed for the mass market, and it’s up to Samsung, Acer, and other forthcoming third parties to actually build the hardware we’ll end up buying in the long run. Still, there seems to be a lot here that laptop manufacturers of all sorts could take note of, and generic-ified or not, the Cr-48 is pretty striking. Developing… Gallery: Google Cr-48 Chrome laptop preview Google Cr-48 Chrome laptop preview originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 11:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Arab local council members in towns where Jews and Arab live side by side refuse to remain silent over ‘racist letter’ signed by dozens of municipal rabbis, demand criminal inquiry. ‘Rabbis receive salary from state’ they said and called for apology or dismissal
Continue reading …Co-stars Ben Barnes and Georgie Henley talk about the drama of shooting ‘The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader’ on and under water. (Dec.9)
Continue reading …As fleshy meatbags, we tend to give off a lot of excess heat as we futilely live our lives. Fujitsu wants to help capture every last particle motion, and all the other warmth we generate through the myriad of other inane activities like driving cars, firing rockets , and trying to not freeze to death. But, it’s not just happy with that, developing a new “hybrid energy harvesting device” that does double-duty by also capturing light from the sun. It’s a process shown after the break but, with no hard numbers to go with that pretty picture, we’re not sure just how efficient it is at doing either. Still, there are some 6.7 billion people worldwide. How efficient does it really need to be? Continue reading Fujitsu hybrid energy harvester makes power from light or heat, gets us closer to human batteries Fujitsu hybrid energy harvester makes power from light or heat, gets us closer to human batteries originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 11:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Violent clashes erupted in the shadow of Parliament today as thousands of protesters laid siege to the seat of power. Thousands of demonstrators flooded Westminster as legislators gathered inside the House of Commons to debate plans to treble university fees. They were met by hundreds of police dressed in protective equipment and arranged in lines up to four deep behind reinforced metal fencing. Officers were pelted with bottles, placards and paint as a flare was thrown and roadwork barriers uprooted. One group of protesters wore distinctive green hard hats and used foam placards shaped like books to jostle with police and protect themselves. Hundreds more police, including officers on…
Continue reading …“The Smurfs’ Village,” a game for the iPhone and other Apple gadgets, quickly became the highest-grossing application in the iTunes store. So where does the money come from? (Dec. 9)
Continue reading …Singer Aretha Franklin who has been ailing tells a Detroit radio station that she’s waiting for more test results but wants to tour again next year.
Continue reading …Angry student protesters marched through central London towards Parliament on Thursday as lawmakers began debating a controversial plan to triple university tuition fees in Britain. (Dec. 9)
Continue reading …Director Michael Apted discusses making the third installment in the children’s fantasy franchise, “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.” (Dec. 9)
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