This just might be misleading – knowing that the Guardian is no friend of Julian Assange's
I
thought the things about Anonymous is that it is decentralised so
this would mean that this can't represent an 'official position'.
What
are we supposed to do? Wipe our hands of Julian and leave him to his
fate?
Anonymous
distances itself from WikiLeaks
Hacker
collective says whistleblowers website has become the 'Julian Assange
show'
12
October, 2012
The
computer hacker collective Anonymous has distanced itself from
WikiLeaks, claiming the whistleblowers' site has become too focused
on the personal tribulations of its founder, Julian Assange.
A
statement posted on the Anonymous Twitter account, AnonymousIRC,
described WikiLeaks as "the one man Julian Assange show"
after the website began asking users to pay for access to millions of
leaked documents.
"The
idea behind WikiLeaks was to provide the public with information that
would otherwise be kept secret by industries and governments.
Information we strongly believe the public has a right to know,"
said the statement on behalf of Anonymous.
"But
this has been pushed more and more into the background, instead we
only hear about Julian Assange, like he had dinner last night with
Lady Gaga. That's great for him but not much of our interest. We are
more interested in transparent governments and bringing out documents
and information they want to hide from the public."
Anonymous
has long been one of WikiLeaks's most loyal and vocal allies.
Supporters bearing Anonymous posters regularly turned out at
Assange's public announcements, and members of the group have waged
an online campaign against critics of the whistleblowers' site.
WikiLeaks
said it is funded entirely by donations from members of the public.
The site angered some users on Thursday after it made a donation page
automatically appear before it allowed access to leaked documents.
Some users are unable to view WikiLeaks material unless they choose
to donate money to the site. WikiLeaks said on Twitter that the move
was an attempt to counter what it called "high costs in military
courts".
In
the statement, Anonymous told its 285,000 followers that WikiLeaks
was an "awesome idea ruined by egos" and claimed the site
had abandoned the ideals of freedom of expression.
The
group added: "We have been worried about the direction WikiLeaks
is going for a while. In the recent month the focus moved away from
actual leaks and the fight for freedom of information further and
further while it concentrated more and more on Julian Assange. It
goes without saying that we oppose any plans of extraditing Julian to
the USA. He is a content provider and publisher, not a criminal."
The
dispute could starve WikiLeaks of potentially newsworthy leaks in the
future, as some of the site's recent disclosures – including the
cache of Stratfor emails – are alleged to have come from Anonymous.
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