Wikileaks now has an online submission system for the first time since 2010. Accessible only as a Tor hidden service, the new page is available at wlupld3ptjvsgwqw.onion. (The Tor Browser can be downloaded here.) Wikileaks' previous system was brought down when a staffer named Daniel Domscheit-Berg split with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange over security issues. Domscheit-Berg held the encryption keys for all the documents received through the system, and ultimately destroyed thousands of submissions rather than let them be published in a way that might endanger the sources.
The new submission page has a number of fields where visitors can describe the nature of the leaked material, which groups had access to it, and whether the sources are under any threat from the publication. It also gives leakers a chance to control when the material is leaked, either requesting an immediate publication or mark materials as only to be published after a certain date or a certain event has occurred. "If you have any issues talk to WikiLeaks," the organization's Tips for Sources page advises. "We are the global experts in source protection."
Comments
Knowledge is never corrupt. I love what they do; keep doing it!
By lukeemery on 05.01.15 5:04pm
So it’s okay to spread everyone’s secrets, as long as it’s not yours
By chogg on 05.02.15 12:52am
As long revealing my secret will benefit the world for the better are atleast allows for a fact-based disscusion about given topic or related, you can release all my secrets you like. ofc there is another layer to this, aka leaks being harmfull to some, but thats something you can manage and it seems like wikileaks is trying to do so.
By Eleanor1967 on 05.02.15 7:49am
Wikileaks does whatever it can to promote ASSange and damage people he doesn’t like.
By OneManBucket on 05.02.15 1:50pm
I’m not really invested in the topic, so do you got something to back up your claims ? (not tryin to saying you are wrong, I really don’t know). Atleast the options presented in the articel to protect yourself and the others sound good to me.
By Eleanor1967 on 05.02.15 9:28pm
so you don’t draw the distinction between an individuals right to privacy and governments responsibility to be open?
Because they are not the same thing.
By Cheesus_C on 05.04.15 2:15am
it’s a conspiracy!
By kuznetsov on 05.01.15 6:20pm
4 4 Half-Life 4 confirmed.
Wait…
By Entegy on 05.01.15 10:35pm