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Government Cyber Attacks Shut Down WikiLeaks Domain Name; Information Wars; Twitter to the Rescue

Courtesy of Mish

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 23: Wikileaks founder Julian Assange (C) arrives to hold a press conference at Park Plaza Hotel on October 23, 2010 in London, England. A series of new leaks of American military documents, nearly 400,000 in total, have been released by the whistleblowing website, Wikileaks. The files detail how the torture and the abuse of detainees by Iraqi police, was ignored by US forces. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

WikiLeaks has moved its site twice already and now its domain name has been shut down because of massive cyber attacks.

In my opinion these coordinated attacks come from government agencies around the world who do not want to be embarrassed by WikiLeaks data. If it’s not government agencies, then who is it?

Moreover, and by extension, governments (or whoever is doing this) could shut down any site via these same kind of massive coordinated cyber attacks. If I am correct, data gathered about the success or failure of these suppression efforts will feed into every military contingency plan in the world.

The first casualty of war is the truth, and what better way to shut off the truth than killing internet sites not to one’s liking.

With that backdrop, please consider Cyber attack forces Wikileaks to change web address

Whistle-blowing website Wikileaks has been forced to change its web address after the company providing its domain name cut off service.

EveryDNS.net said it had terminated services because Wikileaks.org had come under massive cyber attacks. But Wikileaks has already reappeared using a Swiss web address.

The more of these sites there are, the more difficult it will be to shut Wikileaks down, security analyst Paul Mutton told the BBC.

In France, Industry Minister Eric Besson has called for a ban of Wikileaks on French servers.

In a statement on its website, EveryDNS.net said it had issued a 24-hour termination notice to Wikileaks which ended at 0300 GMT on 2 December.

It said the domain wikileaks.org had become the target of "multiple distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks".

"These attacks have, and future attacks would, threaten the stability of the EveryDNS.net infrastructure, which enables access to almost 500,000 other websites," it said.

A site as controversial and savvy as Wikileaks has plenty up its sleeve, like the mysterious encrypted file labelled ‘insurance’, which is believed to have been posted on Bit Torrent and is rumoured to contain all the leaks.

Stephen Sackur will be hosting a special programme debating the effect of the leaks – Wikileaks: Open Secret at 1630GMT on BBC World News & 1930GMT on the BBC World Service

Does anyone seriously think this is not a case of too, little, to late? Moreover, the more governments try to prevent access, the more curious people will become about what is out there. Thus government suppression of data and the news stir that causes, may very well cause interest in WikiLeaks to soar.

I suspect the vast majority of the world’s population had no interest in WikiLeaks before, but they might now.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock

Originally published at Mish’s Global Economic Trend AnalysisGovernment Cyber Attacks Shut Down WikiLeaks Domain Name; Information Wars; Twitter to the Rescue.

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