4773
I am Julian Assange, publisher of Wikileaks. Ask me anything.
I am Julian Assange, founder, philosopher, original coder, organizer, publisher and editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks, AMA.
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/479617421083701249
Edit: I would love to carry on answering but I have a press conference with the Foreign Minister of Ecuador.
Thank you.
_JulianAssange3846 karma
When we are aware of the world and the scale of its inhumanity and stupidity we feel small. It very hard to "think globally" and "act locally", because by thinking globally we become overwhelmed with the scale of the problems to be solved. However the Internet permits many people to act globally in a way they couldn't before. WikiLeaks is a realisation of this tension. By releasing materials on many parts of the world, we empower others to think and act.
What can ordinary people do? Support and promote projects that are acting at scale. WikiLeaks is my realisation of this tension, but there are a flood of others starting. The clash between diversity and global uniformity which has been created by wiring the world to itself is now in play. You are the troops.
_JulianAssange3698 karma
Edward Snowden performed an intelligent and heroic act. I and others had been calling for exactly this act for years (you can read about that here: http://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war). I am a trustee for his legal defense and co-ordinated his asylum. Our Sarah Harrison kept him secure in his path out of Hong Kong and spent 40 days making sure he was OK in Moscow's airport. Just last week I co-launched a new international organisation, the Courage Foundation in Berlin. Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, Nobel Peace Prize winner Mairead Maguire and many other great people are involved. Please support it and Mr. Snowden's asylum renewal campaign. See https://couragefound.org/. Snowden's most recent comments on WikiLeaks are here: https://t.co/27YfsDxstQ
AFellowOfLimitedJest780 karma
I think the more interesting question would be the other way around - what Snowden honestly thinks of Assange, since Snowden has done so much to leak responsibly and intelligently, whereas much of Wikileak's work can easily be called reckless.
I still hope Julian answers this one honestly, though - they seem to have different views on secrecy in general, and it'd be interesting to see what he feels about Snowden's lack of complete transparency.
SpiffierGoose62425 karma
what would you say was the most important piece of information you have leaked?
_JulianAssange2739 karma
Our ongoing PLUSD series, which contains more than two million cables, has had by far the most impact and continues to be used in court cases and elections every week. You can search it here: https://wikileaks.org/plusd
Closest to my heart, perhaps unsurprisingly, is Collateral Murder http://collateralmurder.org/ and the military histories of nearly every death and incident in Iraq + Afghanistan https://wardiary.wikileaks.org/
bayfyre933 karma
Elections I understand, but how are wikileaks documents admissible in a US court of law?
_JulianAssange1535 karma
There are many precedents now to say they are admissible. See http://www.brickcourt.co.uk/news/detail/court-of-appeal-finds-wikileaks-cables-admissible-but-dismisses-chagos-islanders-mpa-challenge
iKidA1802 karma
What are your views on Narendra Modi, India's new Right-leaning Prime Minister?
_JulianAssange2224 karma
The election of Modi is a very interesting development in Indian democracy. We have released many interesting documents on Modi's ascension to power, you can see them here: (just search for 'Modi') https://wikileaks.org/plusd and https://search.wikileaks.org. From these materials it's clear Modi can be most accurately described as a "business authoritarian". Whether Indian needs a stronger centre to compete with China is an open question. Inevitably strong leaders make mistakes and eventually lose their faculties. Other than his extensive big business alliances, I think it is an open question as to whether Modi will bring more good than bad to India.
UnholyDemigod1588 karma
Hi Julian, I have 2 questions.
First, what do you do to stop yourself going mental with boredom? From my understanding, you cannot leave the embassy or you'll be arrested, so you've basically placed yourself under house arrest. What are you day to day activities?
Second, (and I don't mean this to sound inflammatory), why did you start a website to leak classified information? Surely you can understand that many things kept confidential are for the reasons of national security, and releasing secret documents puts lives and international relations at risk?
_JulianAssange3464 karma
1) I only wish there was a risk of boredom in my present situation. Besides being the centre of a pitched, prolonged diplomatic standoff, along with a police encirclement of the building I am in and the attendant surveillance and government investigations against myself and my staff, I am in one of the most populous cities in Europe, and everyone knows my exact location. People visit me nearly every day. I also continue to direct a small multinational organisation, WikiLeaks, which is a serious logistical and occupational endeavour. I barely have time to sleep, let alone become bored.
2) Confidential government documents we have published disclose evidence of war crimes, criminal back-room dealings and sundry abuses. That alone legitimates our publications, and that principally motivates our work. Secrecy was never intended to enable criminality in the highest offices of state. Secrecy is, yes, sometimes necessary, but healthy democracies understand that secrecy is the exception, not the rule. "National security" pretexts for secrecy are routinely used by powerful officials, but seldom justified. If we accept these terms of propaganda, strong national security journalism becomes impossible. Our publications have never jeopardized the "national security" of any nation. When secrecy is a cover-all for endemic official criminality, I suggest to you, it bespeaks a strange set of priorities to ask journalists to justify their own existence.
IKingJeremy1223 karma
In regards to President Obama you were recently quoted as saying,
“You must surely, now, start to reflect on what your legacy will be."
How do you think history will remember you, and how do you feel about that?
_JulianAssange1669 karma
For presidents it is important, but for the rest of us it is more important to get things done and see your legacy in the world. We're doing well in the more academic or comprehensive histories and outside the worst aspects of the English speaking mainstream press. Smears don't have much staying power on their own because they deviate from the foundations of reality (what actually happened). They require constant energy from our opponents to keep going. The truth has a habit of reasserting itself.
_JulianAssange1557 karma
Again - definitely; we only live once and every day spent living your principles is a day at liberty. It is clear that history is on our side. Most of our difficult decisions are constrained by resource limits, not ideas. But I was ignorant about the extent of Sweden's geopolitical reliance on the United States and to some extent the structure of UK society. You can read about that here: http://wikileaks.org/IMG/html/Affidavit_of_Julian_Assange.html#3
Horaenaut455 karma
You are implying that Sweden's extradition request for you was at the behest of the U.S. Given the U.S. and UK "special relationship" why do you think the U.S. would not make a direct extradition request to London?
_JulianAssange565 karma
It may well do so. See http://justice4assange.com/extraditing-assange.html#UKEASIER
bebopundrocksteady851 karma
By your estimation, which modern government has the most transparency?
_JulianAssange714 karma
For a small government, Iceland. But it is hard to compare small governments with large ones. In small societies the path length between individuals is also small, so it is easier to know what is going on in government. Transparency is enforced by proximity and cultural norms as well as bureaucratic standards. See https://immi.is/
The Associated Press has quantified this in some great 2011 research; basically, the "old" democracies are in a state of decay and the "new" democracies eclipse them in their striving to be something:
— Newer democracies were in general more responsive than some developed ones. Guatemala confirmed the AP request in 72 hours, and sent all documents in 10 days. Turkey sent spreadsheets and data within seven days. Mexico posted responses on the Web. By comparison, Canada asked for a 200-day extension. The FBI in the United States responded six months late with a single sheet with four dates, two words and a large section blanked. Austria never responded at all. — More than half the countries did not release anything, and three out of 10 did not even acknowledge the request. African governments led the world for ignoring requests, with no response whatsoever from 11 out of 15 countries. — Dozens of countries adopted their laws at least in part because of financial incentives, and so are more likely to ignore them or limit their impact. China changed its access-to-information rules as a condition to joining the World Trade Organization in 2001, to boost the economy by as much as 10 percent. Beijing has since expanded the rules beyond trade matters. Pakistan adopted its 2002 ordinance in return for $1.4 billion in aid from the International Monetary Fund. Neither country responded to the AP's test. "Having a law that's not being obeyed is almost worse than not having a law at all," says Daniel Metcalf, the leading U.S. Freedom of Information authority at the Justice Department for the past 25 years, now a law professor at American University. "The entire credibility of a government is at stake."
http://www.apnewsarchive.com/87c10183e1794b738b5876e130337638
_JulianAssange379 karma
Here is a conversation from 2011 where I tell Google's chairman, Eric Schmidt about Bitcoin. Fortunately he didn't listen, or else he'd own the planet by now. http://wikileaks.org/Transcript-Meeting-Assange-Schmidt.html#688
Ooer176 karma
Hi Julian,
Like Edward Snowden, do you feel the media made an effort to focus on you rather than what you were doing? How would the choice to remain anonymous have impacted Wikileaks?
_JulianAssange159 karma
It is hard to stay anonymous and run a big ship. In a conflict at this level, once your opponent knows who you are, then you need the protection of a public profile. This consideration fed into both my and Edward Snowden's decision making.
lazimpat116 karma
As a Nepalese, we saw our Royal Family massacred and the blame was on Prince Dipendra (son of the then King) who also happen to die the next day and the Younger brother of the then king Gyanendra takes the thrown of Late king Birendra, who also gets dethroned and gradually the nation falls under the reign of the Maoist rebels and the entire nation is now on havoc with no constitution as of yet and more violence and crime unaddressed. As a Nepalese neither I nor anyone believes what was feed to us, I still feel the real truth is somewhere and thats what we all Nepalese would want to know is there any Truth missing from what was told to us? Please share your thoughts.
_JulianAssange81 karma
I am not personally aware of the situation, but I do recall it is discussed in our materials. See https://search.wikileaks.org/
Faithless327110 karma
Hi Julian! I'm a former SNL writer who penned some jokes that parodied your predicament -- including one you've re-tweeted as a meme. Now, you're probably going to have a large number of serious questions. I'm here to ask: What are your favorite pieces of fiction? And if you got a day out to have a good time, where would you go and what would you do?
_JulianAssange108 karma
We all got a chuckle from that. Less so when Amnesty (which is part funded by the UK government) did this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=icF8UFcUotE but still refuses to call Chelsea Manning (or me) a political prisoner. See also http://roqayah.co/2012/05/27/amnesty-international-nato-keep-the-progress-going/
Favourite fiction: Cancer Ward.
_JulianAssange67 karma
The Penny report. The UK argued to us that it was a "serious nuclear proliferation risk", but on further research, they were full of hot air.
http://wikileaks.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_atomic_weapons_program:_The_full_Penney_Report_(1947)
Barcopa96 karma
Lebanon is one of the most politically corrupt nations in the world. For its size, it has a massive and complicated web of economic, political, military influence coming from neighboring countries which, many will argue, polarizes the already divided demographic.
What is your take on how Lebanon continues to somehow function and what direction might we expect it to take politically, socially, and economically, as the current state of affairs persist?
_JulianAssange82 karma
I love Lebanon and have many friends there, but your description as to why Lebanon is the way it is, is exactly right. It also makes Lebanon, for its size, the most politically interesting country on earth, because if you understand Lebanon you understand the powerflows across the region. Some of that is documented here: https://wikileaks.org/plusd
As for the future of Lebanon, I would not presume to understand more than Lebanese do. But pulling back from the dynamics of the moment, I believe the hope for Lebanon is in the web of business, social and political alliances created by the Lebanese diaspora. While the diaspora is often rightfully seen within Lebanon as a corrupting influence, it is also external support for the continued existence of the country in the same way that the jewish diaspora is for Israel.
madazzahatter3365 karma
What advice would you give to ordinary citizens in regards to how they can have an impact?
Many of us feel helpless, overwhelmed and small.
We are screaming for change, but what steps can we take?
View HistoryShare Link