If Assange hadn't published it, it wouldn't even be up for discussion. — Wayfarer
Look, the CIA and NSA and the various US spook agencies, get up to a lot of nefarious activities, but I don't see how simply destroying their confidentiality contributes to overall world order. I don't think the world is a safer or better place for the such activities. It would be a different matter if Wikileaks were publishing evidence of genuine malfeasance, like that well-known case of the gunship assassination of the journalists, but I don't see it here. — Wayfarer
but sometimes it's nevertheless the right thing to do. — Sapientia
These secrets haven't been revealed for no reason. — Sapientia
I don't know why you're mischaracterising this again as simply destroying confidentiality, as if what was done was done for no reason. These secrets haven't been revealed for no reason. It isn't that simple, so you should stop trying to simplify it. You might not agree with the reason, but there is a reason. — Sapientia
One reason has already been suggested, which is that the authority in question can't be trusted to be responsible. — Sapientia
So the reason is that the CIA is irresponsible. I would say that the leak itself proves a degree of irresponsibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sometimes, but I don't think this is the time. Even the internal critics of the US secret services, say this is dangerous disclosure. — Wayfarer
Assange is not a red herring, any more than the iceberg that sank the Titanic. — Wayfarer
I notice nobody here has speculated on why the Russians and Chinese secret services are immune to disclosure on Wikileaks. You think it's because they're basically ethical and upright? Try blowing the whistle on Russian government corruption and you'll end up with concrete shoes. — Wayfarer
I think they've been revealed, because they're supposed to be highly secret. I can't see any other reason in this case. — Wayfarer
Convenient, isn't it. — Wayfarer
I trust them a damn sight more than the current White House. — Wayfarer
The analogy with the iceberg isn't very accurate. It's more like a situation where, unbeknownst to the passengers, but known to the higher ups, the Titanic is sailing through dangerous waters, and there's a whistleblower who blows the whistle. You then concentrate on criticising the whistleblower for doing what he did, even though you admit that the higher ups cannot be trusted with the task of ensuring that the ship gets to its destination with all the responsibilities that that implies. — Sapientia
You haven't considered the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" which is being reported, just like the fireman who lights fires to give himself work. If the problem here is that the information has been leaked, then the guilty party is the one which takes the information. Dealing in stolen goods is just as much a crime as stealing, because of complicity. Your approach is like trying to pin the blame for a robbery on the victim, saying that the victim's goods weren't properly secured.
So you need to consider the possibility that the whistle blower has created the "dangerous waters" with the intent of reporting it, either to make oneself look good by foreseeing a problem, or to make the other look bad, for sailing in dangerous water. — Metaphysician Undercover
In the analogy, the dangerous waters are the cyber warfare arsenal under the control of the CIA referred to in the opening post. Dangerous waters are a problem regardless of whether or not the passengers are aware, so if reporting it is a problem, it is an additional problem. — Sapientia
But how is it a problem? It is a problem for the CIA, but some would question whether they should have done what they did in the first place, and will think that it is a good thing that we have found out. It's a bit like letting a friend know that their partner has been cheating on them. It wasn't the whistleblower that did the cheating. The partner shouldn't have cheated in the first place. — Sapientia
Even if Assange himself created the cyber warfare arsenal, the CIA took ownership of it for potential use. They are complicit, and they maintain ownership and control. That's what many people see as a problem. Assange does not have ownership or control over this arsenal, as far as I'm aware, and I doubt that his intention was to do something which would lead to himself being implicated. — Sapientia
Well I don't think you can prevent governments from having a "warfare arsenal". That's just a matter of fact that we must live with, and they claim that the arsenal is justified as defence. There are weapons all over the world. I believe that the special problem here is that releasing the information, is itself the danger, because it puts the arsenal in the hands of others. The information is the weapon. So releasing this information is analogous to releasing the information of how to make a nuclear bomb, along with the necessary elements to do such. — Metaphysician Undercover
How can you say that it wasn't the whistle blower who did the cheating, in this case? If the whistle blower paid for the leaked information, then the whistle blower caused the leak. — Metaphysician Undercover
The CIA amassed the arsenal, where they got the individual parts, I don't know. But we can look at it as part of the government's warfare arsenal. The CIA is a federal government agency. You might argue that it is a crime for the government to own weapons, but what good would this argument do? You might argue that the CIA is incompetent and should have weapons, but what good would that do? — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly if they got these weapons they're not completely incompetent. Where they've demonstrated incompetence is in keeping these weapons. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the crime is to steal those weapons and pass them around. We cannot really argue that having the weapons is a crime, unless you're prepared to argue that it's a crime for governments to have weapons. — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps, you're prepared to argue that this particular type of weapon should not be possessed, as they do with WMD. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA? — Sapientia
"An historic act of devastating incompetence!" — tom
It was never a secret. — tom
It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA? That's a game changer. — Sapientia
Passivity just normalises what they're doing, and sends them the signal that what they're doing is okay, so perhaps they'll test the waters again, and go even further next time. Where do we draw the line? Or should we just not bother? — Sapientia
The cheating is having this secret arsenal. — Sapientia
Talk about crime becomes relatively meaningless if the authorities can legitimise the kind of thing that we're talking about or if they can keep it under wraps. — Sapientia
I'm certainly willing to consider that argument as opposed to passive acceptance or apologetics. And this is just what we know about, thanks to Wikileaks. Imagine what else they could be up to. Imagination is all we'd have to rely on if it weren't for organisations such as Wikileaks. — Sapientia
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