Wikileaks: Congressional Research Service says publishing Afghan war diaries not criminal
September 29, 2010 by donal brown
Filed under 1st Amendment News, Freedom of Speech / Press, National Security, News & Opinion, News Gathering
Although Wikileaks’ foreign editors might be prosecuted under U.S. law for obtaining classified military records, it was not unlawful to publish the information, concluded a report from the Congressional Research Service. -db Secrecy News Analysis September 27, 2010 By Steven Aftergood When Wikileaks published tens of thousands of classified U.S. military records concerning the war [...]
Wikileaks criticized for ‘clumsy disclosure’
August 17, 2010 by donal brown
Filed under 1st Amendment News, Access to Records, FAC's Mobile Website, National Security, News & Opinion, News Gathering
Steven Aftergood of Secrecy News argues that WikiLeaks disclosure of the Afghan War Diary has had the unfortunate consequence of increasing public support for the present system of document classification. -db Secrecy News Commentary August 16, 2010 By Steven Aftergood Unauthorized disclosures of classified information (“leaks”) often play an important role in the proper functioning [...]
WikiLeaks makes serious rent in government secrecy
August 17, 2010 by donal brown
Filed under 1st Amendment News, Federal FOIA, National Security, News & Opinion, News Gathering
With release of the Afghan War Diary, WikiLeaks has established new ground in the struggle between the public’s right-to-know and the government’s desire for secrecy, but it is hugely ironic that WikiLeaks itself operates in secrecy, refusing to release details on its modus operandi. -db New Scientist Editorial August 16, 2010 By David Cohen “QUICK, [...]









