Wikileaks is a set of strategically placed wikis around the world.  It’s designed to accept leaked documents, generally from anonymous dissidents around the world, and to get them into circulation.

A Cayman Island bank and its Swiss parent company filed for an emergency restraining order in a California court asking the registrar for wikileaks.org to change its entry in the .org registry so that people can no longer get to the corresponding IP address for Wikileaks.  It worked: trying to visit wikileaks.org results in a page not found, even though the server that is its destination is presumably still up and running.

The details are still coming in, and there’s a very lucid summary by my colleagues at the Citizen Media Law Project. The initial injunction was not even fashioned as a temporary restraining order, which is puzzling since no one from Wikileaks was even there to argue its case. (It also seems to order anyone who reads the order not to leak to any of the documents — I wonder if my telling you that means you already are as good as bound by the court, at least if you’re in California.) An amended injunction has already been filed, and a fuller hearing will be held soon.

In the meantime, the other Wikileaks sites remain up with the documents and with everything else.


7 Responses to “Wikileaks and Points of Control”  

  1. 1 McChris

    You can still access the site via this IP address:
    http://88.80.13.160/wiki/Bank_Julius_Baer

  2. 2 Alejandro

    You can access a list of Wikileaks mirrors on its wikipedia entry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikileaks#External_links
    Most of them still work.

  1. 1 ab@work » The Great Firewall of California
  2. 2 Wikileaks story: a follow up at Alejandro@Oxford
  3. 3 investigativeblog.net » Blog Archive » links for 2008-02-21
  4. 4 Alejandro@World » Wikileaks story: a follow up
  5. 5 ab@home » The Great Firewall of California


Leave a Reply



About

Jonathan Zittrain is Professor of Internet Governance and Regulation and Director of Graduate Studies at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford.

Available for pre-order for an April 2008 release: The Future of the Internet--And How to Stop It