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WikiLeaks Published Rape Victims' Names, Credit Cards, Medical Data (arstechnica.com) 306

Joe Mullin, writing for ArsTechnica: Even as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange sits trapped in the Ecuadorean embassy, the WikiLeaks website continues to publish the secrets of various governments worldwide. But that's not all it's publishing. A report today by the Associated Press highlights citizens who had "sensitive family, financial or identity records" published by the site. "They published everything: my phone, address, name, details," said one Saudi man whose paternity dispute was revealed in documents published by the site. "If the family of my wife saw this... Publishing personal stuff like that could destroy people." One document dump, from Saudi diplomatic cables, held at least 124 medical files. The files named sick children, refugees, and patients with psychiatric conditions. In one case, the cables included the name of a Saudi who was arrested for being gay. In Saudi Arabia, homosexuality is punishable by death. In two other cases, WikiLeaks published the names of teenage rape victims. "This has nothing to do with politics or corruption," said Dr. Nayef al-Fayez, who had a patient with brain cancer whose personal details were published.
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WikiLeaks Published Rape Victims' Names, Credit Cards, Medical Data

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Publish away! All the things!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Publish away! All the things!

      You utter, fucking cockwomble! Peoples private/personal lives and political allegiances are none of your business unless they betray, contradict and therefore hypocritize a public stance. A politician who attacks homosexuals and is homosexual is news. Conversely, a politician who presents no public position on sexuality and is homosexual is not. Wikileaks lost me when they published the names of BNP members and undermined the political agency of private individuals. It matt

  • Criminal (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:23PM (#52758439)

    Wikileaks has devolved into pretty much just Julian and a disciple or two. He doesn't have the bandwidth to do vetting, he's just burning the Earth now.

    • Re:Criminal (Score:4, Insightful)

      by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:40PM (#52758541) Journal

      Mod +1. Assange is now purely in the vengeance game, so far as I can tell, though to be honest, at least as far as burning Clinton's career prospects to the ground, the term "damp squib" comes to mind. If there's one thing the DNC document dump proved, he's sitting on top of a big pile of nothing, and soon enough I think the press will just move on.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Mod +1. Assange is now purely in the vengeance game, so far as I can tell, though to be honest, at least as far as burning Clinton's career prospects to the ground, the term "damp squib" comes to mind. If there's one thing the DNC document dump proved, he's sitting on top of a big pile of nothing, and soon enough I think the press will just move on.

        I think the press HAS moved on. Instead of hearing about new DNC dumps (which were presented on the standard political "Friday afternoon dump*" which already say

    • Re:Criminal (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @09:28PM (#52759759)

      Wikileaks started as a good idea, and promoted itself with open ideals. Since then it's been clear that Assange is the sole dictator of Wikileaks and he has kicked out earlly members who have wanted more security, more transparency, and more structure. Assange was unhappy that Domsheitt-Berg "leaked" details of unhappiness of Wikileaks management. Ever since the Afghan leaks it's been on a rapid decline in quality, relevance, and importance. Nothing in the leaks of private details of ordinary citizens have anything to do with documents of "political, diplomatic, historical or ethical interest", the original Wikileaks mission.

    • Re:Criminal (Score:5, Informative)

      by Dangerous_Minds ( 1869682 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2016 @03:14AM (#52760693)
      Wikileaks has responded to these allegations [twitter.com]:

      "No, WikiLeaks did not disclose "gays" to the Saudi govt. Data is from govt & not leaked by us. Story from 2015. Re-run now due to election."
  • Pile it on.. (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Yet another Wikileaks hit-piece. Are there any legitimate editors on this site or do they just unquestioningly regurgitate the party line?

    • it is ars(e) (Score:2, Interesting)

      by MoFoQ ( 584566 )
      it IS ars(e) after all. and yea, I noticed that about slashdot editors too but luckily, slashdot readers are more diverse & based than the editors. (thxfully)
      • by TroII ( 4484479 )

        Slashdot isn't sending us their best people, folks. We're going to build Heidi Wall and make CmdrTaco pay for it!

    • So Wikileaks didn't leak personal information of rape victims? I'm just trying to sort out what you're objecting to, the truthfulness of the story, or whether you just don't think the press should report negative things about Wikileaks.

    • Re:Pile it on.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Falconnan ( 4073277 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:44PM (#52758579)

      Well, let's look at this without passion for a moment. If it's true that they released this information on people who were not involved in any variation of corruption, and did so (even without malice) without checking the data for such information, this comes up to gross negligence. Whether we like it or not, some data should remain private. I support the idea that all government activity not directly tied to national security should be publicly accessible, but crime or persecution victims need to be protected.

      When we allow "all of the data" to be public, it creates a chilling effect on dissent and discourse. People become afraid to report crimes against their persons. Victimization thrives on access to personal details of private citizens. Let's just call this what it is: A bad idea either way. Real lives can be shattered by this type of thing. Innocent lives. I generally support the stated goals of Wikileaks, but complete lack of discretion helps no cause.

      • Oh how i long for the MOD points i burned this morning.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        it creates a chilling effect on dissent and discourse

        What creates chilling effect on dissent and discourse is tyranny and political correctness. When Dissent is chanted down by the Mob crying "racism" or "Bigotry" or "sexist" or any number of other terms that are designed for ONE thing, to quell the voices of those opposed to the march towards tyranny. ONLY Approved voices need to speak, all others will be punished mercilessly.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

          When Dissent is chanted down by the Mob crying "racism" or "Bigotry" or "sexist"

          Have you considered the possibility that racism, bigotry, and sexism are not really "dissent"?

          • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @07:02PM (#52759107) Journal

            While you are correct, that those things exist, so does the wolf the boy cried over in that parable.

            I realize that it works, which is why it is such a popular technique. Mentioning Saggy pants and how stupid they are, gets me labeled "racist". To which I usually respond ... "I didn't know saggy pants was genetic". If Saggy pants was genetic, I would assume it would apply more to the flat assed white people (and some Asians), but they seem to be able to keep their pants on.

            But I understand why you wouldn't want to admit the Boy Who Cried Wolf applies here.

            • Re:Pile it on.. (Score:5, Interesting)

              by quenda ( 644621 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @09:36PM (#52759801)

              Mentioning Saggy pants and how stupid they are, gets me labeled "racist".

              Come to Australia, where it is much more socially acceptable to mock saggy pants, or made-up baby names, because most of the offenders are white.
              You might be just as much an arse/ass for mocking lower-class people, but the class-ism is more acceptable when not associated with race.

          • by sinij ( 911942 )

            When Dissent is chanted down by the Mob crying "racism" or "Bigotry" or "sexist"

            Have you considered the possibility that racism, bigotry, and sexism are not really "dissent"?

            Humanity is absolutely lousy at knowing the difference, often intentionally. If you start censoring one, you will end up censoring the other.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by rahvin112 ( 446269 )

          Being called a dick for saying dickish things does not chill discourse. Your speech has social consequences and if you believe that those social consequences are a problem than you are frankly not in tune with reality. There is no belief in free speech that includes a right not to be offended and there is also no right to not be criticized.

          People like you will in one breath disclaim the right to be offended and attempt to defend the right to say offending things without the social consequences those stateme

          • And the big boys that scream 'racist' to everything they don't like can deal with the consequences of their words...nobody pays any attention to them.

        • it creates a chilling effect on dissent and discourse

          What creates chilling effect on dissent and discourse is tyranny and political correctness. When Dissent is chanted down by the Mob crying "racism" or "Bigotry" or "sexist" or any number of other terms that are designed for ONE thing, to quell the voices of those opposed to the march towards tyranny. ONLY Approved voices need to speak, all others will be punished mercilessly.

          Agreed. However, posting PII/PHI of private citizens should be illegal. Just as shouting "Fire" in a crowded theater is illegal. Because the social and personal cost is greater than any conceivable benefit.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        There's a word for having no inclination to respect the rights of others. It's called sociopathy. Psychologists coined that term because they needed something that sounds more scientific than "evil".

      • by tomhath ( 637240 )

        I generally support the stated goals of Wikileaks, but complete lack of discretion helps no cause

        Discretion? Okay, but who gets to decide what should be kept private and what should be made public? Julian Assange? You give him that power?

        That's the problem with sites like Wikileaks and Gawker. Whether the information they publish is about a government or an individual, they can't be trusted to use any discretion.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:25PM (#52758453)
    I trust Wikileaks a whole lot more than the average Associated Press news story full of random bullshit attributed to "sources speaking anonymously because they were not authorized." We're not dumb, we don't want a filter and "think of the children" is how dictators often climb to power.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:30PM (#52758475)

      You're a fool. A criminal with an agenda is no different than a capitalist with an agenda. Assange is no more or less evil than Fox news or any other media organization.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:48PM (#52758615)

      Publishing someone's medical records without their consent is against the law in practically every country in the world. Leaking medical records of ordinary citizens has nothing to do with transparency. It's against the law, period.

      • I keep wondering when Assange will finally cross the line enough that Ecuador finally tells its embassy staff to evict him.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @06:02PM (#52758727) Homepage Journal

      Years of attacks from various security services and law enforcement agencies has made it hard for wikileaks to process these leaks. Attacks on sources of funding, payment processing, communications, anyone who with for/with them...

      So now they have to pick between not releasing and dumping everything unedited. There is no good option.

    • "We're not dumb..."

      No, arguably, a lot of folks here aren't dumb, but a lot of folks in general are dumb. This is due to their lack of attention and/or connecting the dots. Connecting dots is very important. Those that run the news agencies know and depend on this fact, yet most of the people seem to incapable of caring less. It's actually become more fun to make fun of the situation that we're all in than it is to do something about it, and that's the real tragedy.

    • Maybe. But just because something is in a diplomatic cable doesn't mean it is in the public interest or that someone's privacy has no value.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Oh, the wonderful conclusions the false dichotomy fallacy can take you. You can't trust the AP, therefore you CAN trust Wikileaks.

    • I trust Wikileaks a whole lot more than the average Associated Press news story full of random bullshit attributed to "sources speaking anonymously because they were not authorized." We're not dumb, we don't want a filter and "think of the children" is how dictators often climb to power.

      In situations like this (what looks like a mindless data dump), trust in WikiLeaks is meaningless, and expression of such trust reveals a certain level of, potentially willful, ignorance. It's not trust in WikiLeaks you need here; it's trust in every person that now has access to the personal, potentially private information of otherwise innocent individuals.

    • I trust Wikileaks a whole lot more than the average Associated Press news story full of random bullshit attributed to "sources speaking anonymously because they were not authorized." We're not dumb, we don't want a filter and "think of the children" is how dictators often climb to power.

      I fail to see how this justifies releasing the name of someone accused of being gay in a country where homosexuality is punishable by death.

      It is very easy to be a fucking asshole that spouts dogmatic slogans (and putting inocent people at risk) when they have nothing to lose. That's not love of freedom or speech or transparency. That's just good old fucking moral hazard.

  • Think it through. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:34PM (#52758495)

    In one case, the cables included the name of a Saudi who was arrested for being gay. In Saudi Arabia, homosexuality is punishable by death.

    As the person was already arrested, I assume the govt already knows their name and their punishment is already lined up. Making this info widely public is probably the only way anyone else will ever know what happened to this person.

    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      Yeah, this really seems like they're stretching for something to criticize Wikileaks over. Or, maybe more accurately: they're looking for something to criticize Wikileaks' methods over. This stuff feels like they're trying to promote the position that having secrets is good, rather than trying to discredit Wikileaks specifically.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Obfuscant ( 592200 )

        Yeah, this really seems like they're stretching for something to criticize Wikileaks over.

        The only "stretching" going on here is the vast stretch trying to remove the label "evil" from Wikileaks.

        It's ok to release the information about a gay Saudi because the government has already arrested him. It doesn't matter if the government might have shown some leniency, but now cannot do so because the info is public, or that this guy's neighbors might beat him to a pulp were the government to let him go. No, Wikileaks is right to publish this information.

        And it's ok to publish the names of rape vict

        • by guises ( 2423402 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @11:52PM (#52760211)
          Okay, I usually don't respond to the posts that are flagrantly insulting, but I'm going to make an effort here to respond in kind. Bear with me.

          You idiot, they didn't "release information about a gay Saudi", they published more than half a million Saudi diplomatic cables which contained, among many many other things, the fact that this one guy had been arrested for homosexuality. Wikileaks is not a revenge site, where people like you go to post the private information of a girlfriend who dumped you when she found you had skidmarks larger than your dick. Wikileaks is a place where whistle blowers go to publish some of the secrets that very large organizations, mainly governments, hide from those people whom these secrets effect.

          It is true that smarter people than you have criticized this approach to journalism, and those people may have a point: huge amounts of documents like this can not be censored for potentially harmful or embarrassing personal information prior to their release. Even if they could be, Wikileaks might not be willing to do so - they have built their reputation on total transparency, with the understanding that only when you receive a whole document, without redaction, can you be certain of its contents. Much as Hillary Clinton has received a lot of criticism for self-censoring emails from her server, so does Wikileaks avoid that criticism by censoring nothing.

          (Now would be a good time to pause for a moment and make sure that your drool is not getting on your keyboard while you read this. Consider a bib.)

          But, as I said, there are people who are not idiots who have pointed out problems with this approach. Most of those criticisms have taken the form of the TFA: when the US diplomatic cables were released there was much hand-wringing about all the lives that they would cost when sources were revealed. That didn't happen [bbc.com], but it was the same argument then as now: such a huge number of documents are bound to include a few embarrassing or possibly even dangerous tidbits about individuals. Some of those people went on to make the same implied argument as in TFA, "If we don't keep secrets, someone might get hurt." though previously they were less stupid about it than trying to suggest that if someone found out that a man had been arrested for homosexuality he might be... arrested for homosexuality. I don't know about Saudi Arabia specifically, but in most places arrest records are public information. (Was this written by someone you know? They seem to be writing at your level.)

          Regarding my opinion about all of this: I'm uncertain about what's best for the public good, but if Wikileaks maintains an unflinching absolutism it's bound to get them in trouble eventually. I don't think that the TFA's method of cherry-picking a tiny tidbit out of a huge stack of information and shouting, "Look how much damage Wikileaks is doing!" is acting in the public's favor though. In fact, I think that sort of misinformation is very much against the best interests of the public.

          I might further make a distinction between private information, personal records, and secrets, but any kind of subtlety like that would be lost on you, I'm sure. So I'm going to stop there.
          • much hand-wringing about all the lives that they would cost when sources were revealed. That didn't happen [bbc.com]

            My credit card info was released during the Target hack; since none of it was used, that makes it okay and I should congratulate the ones responsible? In the name of what exactly?

            huge amounts of documents like this can not be censored for potentially harmful or embarrassing personal information prior to their release

            This is patently false. Snowden seemed to do a pretty good job of it.

  • Fluffy hit piece (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Feels to me like a hit piece put out there to discredit the massive drops Wikileaks has be releasing lately. Rumor is they're sitting on the really good stuff until we're closer to the election.

    This article is little more than fluff

    • Rumor? Yea, call me back in November. They have zero credibility and I doubt they have anything truly earth shaking that's provable.

      Not that being true is a prerequisite to do political damage to somebody...I'm sure they will drop something, but it's likely to just be some useless junk they try to spin into the news cycle at the appropriate time. It won't turn out to be anything.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I had no idea Wikileaks supported ****TEEN RAPE****. Well that settles it,who cares what information is released in the coming months pertaining to immoral and illegal actions committed at the highest levels of government. How can one ever believe an outlet that is associated with****TEEN RAPE****.

  • by Jester998 ( 156179 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:44PM (#52758573) Homepage

    Maybe we should be angry that this type of sensitive information is in diplomatic cables. Why are medical records, credit card info and other stuff being stored and transmitted by government agents in the first place?

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:56PM (#52758675)

      Maybe we should be angry that this type of sensitive information is in diplomatic cables. Why are medical records, credit card info and other stuff being stored and transmitted by government agents in the first place?

      Most likely they are assisting people who became sick way from their home country. Are you bothered by the government helping people?

    • by Quantus347 ( 1220456 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:59PM (#52758695)
      Why wouldn't they? If, for example, I was mugged (say, both robbed and say beaten with a stick) in a foreign country, I could fully expect the police report to end up in a diplomatic transmission, which would include the stolen identity/credit card information as well as the medical records that described my injuries. Crimes against foreign nationals would often go though the State Department and whatever equivalent the other nation had.

      I dont know the circumstances of all the cases described in these cases, but there are plenty of reasonable and legal reasons for a government body to have that information that does not involve Big Brother spying.
      • In many foreign countries your best bet is just dust yourself off and go on with your life.

        The shit with the swimmers in Brazil is par. First you get robbed, then you have to pay off the cops to not charge you with inconveniencing the robbers (off duty cops). Best just to avoid the second bunch of thieves (cops) entirely.

  • Trapped? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by multi io ( 640409 ) <olaf.klischat@googlemail.com> on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:45PM (#52758585)
    He doesn't "sit trapped in the Ecuadorean embassy" any more than a prissy teenage girl who is mad at her parents and doesn't wanna come down for dinner sits trapped in her room. He can just walk out of there whenever he pleases. The only risk he'd face would be major embarrassment after NOT being deported to the US.
    • Re:Trapped? (Score:4, Informative)

      by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @07:54PM (#52759357)

      This again? You haven't been paying attention. Sweden did illegally rendition two Egyptians [newsjunkiepost.com] to the United States. Also, the Swedish government admitted as much that its previous government had authorized a US black plane to pick up Julian Assange once he'd get extradited back to Sweden.

      • Yes, we renditioned the Egyptians, and there was a huge stink, with a clear change in policy afterwards. Much more would have been made of it, but as the foreign secretary was murdered shortly after, and the prime minister stepped down due to losing the election for other reasons, there wasn't the political pressure. Even though we were asked to rendition more, not a single one was. To think that you could do the same to Julian Assange with no-one batting an eyelid is naive in the extreme.

        And there has bee

  • There's also that matter of cooperating with a foreign power committing espionage in an effort to influence an election in the U.S. We're supposed to trust that the Russians haven't altered any of those emails? When the source is a foreign intelligence service, that makes Wikileaks a tool.
  • Public Relations (Score:3, Interesting)

    by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @05:59PM (#52758703)

    Hillary Clinton's PR firm must be in overdrive trying to discredit Wikileaks.

    Time to get out the popcorn, this should get interesting.

    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @06:18PM (#52758843)

      Hillary Clinton's PR firm must be in overdrive trying to discredit Wikileaks

      Looks to me like Wikileaks is doing a fine job of discrediting itself without any help.

    • by bug1 ( 96678 )

      Certainly looks like its Clinton backers behind it.
      They are trying to highlight the "bad" information on wikileaks, they want people to stop looking at wikileaks, and at least "complicate" the value of transparency.

      • Certainly looks like its Clinton backers behind it.

        Yes, it is certainly clear that Clinton backers published the secret information about rape victims and medical records and stuff. Oh, that's not what you meant?

        They are trying to highlight the "bad" information on wikileaks, they want people to stop looking at wikileaks,

        It's called the Streisand Effect, and no, it doesn't stop people from looking, it only encourages them to see what kind of other juicy private information they might be able to find if they look.

  • I am not convinced it was not a setup. Under the circumstances, you cannot count on governments acting legally and justly.

  • I know a couple of ground level employees whose information was in that hack. Medical information, social security numbers. To what end?

  • ...considering the way the establishment is suddenly working overtime to discredit them.

  • Sure, blast them, blast the content they leaked, whatever, blast their "good" name, I don't particularly care if wikileaks burns.

    But. What I'm seeing seeing is far too gasp-and-shock, far too cracked monocle, for shit that is OUT. It's out. Found. Busted. Whatever. Point is, it's going to get leaked somewhere. It's not like BAN WIKILEAKS! or whatever we're after here would do anything about that, before or after.

    Don't we already have elegant ways to make this frequent incongruity plain? "Shutting down
  • by anyaristow ( 1448609 ) on Tuesday August 23, 2016 @10:29PM (#52760001)

    Here [ap.org] is a story AP published that turned out to be fiction. It originated with Jon Ralston and was quickly picked up by AP and then other major media outlets. No corroboration ever materialized for the story, despite there being 3000 cameras in the room, and those that streamed live told a different story. The only media outlet to retract the story was NPR, and PBS fired Ralston [counterpunch.org].

    Note also that this is the story that the DNC leadership instructed its members to pass around "without attribution" [wikileaks.org], i.e. covertly smear Sanders with it. It's also the email that Assange has singled out as the most damming.

    And also remember that much of the brouhaha over the leaked DNC emails was over collusion with the media.

    In short, if you aren't yet skeptical of mainstream media this year, you need to start paying closer attention.

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