WikiLeaks
posts 400 gigabytes of encrypted ‘insurance’ data online
RT,
16
August, 2013
WikiLeaks
has released a trove of encrypted “insurance” data on Twitter and
Facebook. The data can’t be read without an encryption key, but the
movement’s supporters say that could be published later in case
anything happens to leading WikiLeaks figures.
The
whistleblowing organization published links for a massive 400
gigabytes worth of encrypted data it described as “insurance
documents” on its Twitter and Facebook accounts. It is possible to
download the files but advanced encoding prevents them from being
opened.
The
group described encryption as a necessary measure in light of
previous attempts to block its leaking of classified information.
The
practice of encoding data and then later releasing the key is not
uncommon for WikiLeaks, but the sheer size of the files has attracted
considerable attention. WikiLeaks followers on Facebook and Twitter
speculated on what the documents might contain, and also that the key
would be released if anything should happen to WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange or NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
“They're
files that will not have the passwords released unless something
happens to specific individuals associated with WikiLeaks. Like the
insurance file for Assange, which is more from the cables and info
Manning leaked out,” Facebook user Tom-Eric Halvorsen wrote on
WikiLeaks’ profile page.
The
organization aided Snowden in his negotiations on temporary asylum in
Russia following the leaking of classified US government data that
revealed the NSA’s global surveillance programs. WikiLeaks has
indicated that the data disclosed so far is only the tip of the
iceberg, and that more revelations will follow.
However,
there could be problems ahead for Snowden if more leaks are released,
as the Russian government says that as a part of the temporary asylum
agreement, Snowden should refrain from releasing data that “damages”
the US. The whistleblower applied for asylum in Russia after the US
voided his passport, leaving him stranded in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo
Airport for over a month.
Washington
has branded the former NSA contractor a fugitive and issued an
extradition order against him on charges of espionage.
In
the wake of the revelations about the US government’s global spying
programs, the Obama administration has sought to justify mass
surveillance as a necessary evil to protect national security. Even
so, President Barack Obama has announced a number of reforms to the
NSA to increase its transparency and regulate the information
collected by the government.
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