Julian Assange

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Julian Assange
Julian Assange August 2014.jpg
Assange in the Ecuadorian Embassy, London (August 2014)
Born (1971-07-03) 3 July 1971 (age 53)
Townsville, Queensland, Australia
Residence Embassy of Ecuador, London, United Kingdom
Nationality Australian
Alma mater Central Queensland University
University of Melbourne
Occupation Editor-in-Chief of WikiLeaks
Home town Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Julian Paul Assange (born 3 July 1971) is an Australian computer programmer, publisher and journalist. He is known as the editor-in-chief of the website WikiLeaks, which he founded in 2006. He currently resides in Ecuador's London embassy after having been granted political asylum in August 2012.

Early life

Assange was born in Townsville, northern Queensland

Assange was born in the north Queensland city of Townsville,[1][2] to Christine Ann Assange (née Hawkins; b. 1951),[3] a visual artist,[4] and John Shipton, an anti-war activist and builder.[5] The couple had separated before Assange was born.[5]

When he was a year old, his mother married Richard Brett Assange,[6][7][8] an actor, with whom she ran "a small eccentric theatre company."[9] They divorced around 1979, and Assange's mother then became involved with Leif Meynell, also known as Leif Hamilton, a member of the Australian New Age group The Family, with whom she had a son before the couple broke up in 1982.[1][10][11] Assange had a nomadic childhood, and had lived in over thirty[12][13] different Australian towns by the time he reached his mid-teens, when he settled with his mother and half-brother in Melbourne, Victoria.[6][14]

He attended many schools, including Goolmangar Primary School in New South Wales (1979–1983)[9] and Townsville State High School,[15] as well as being schooled at home.[7] He studied programming, mathematics, and physics at Central Queensland University (1994)[16] and the University of Melbourne (2003–2006),[6][17] but did not complete a degree.[18]

Hacking

In 1987, Assange began hacking under the name Mendax (from Horace's splendide mendax: "nobly untruthful").[7][19] He and two others—known as "Trax" and "Prime Suspect"—formed a hacking group they called the International Subversives.[7] During this time he hacked into the Pentagon and other U.S. Department of Defense facilities, MILNET, the U.S. Navy, NASA, and Australia's Overseas Telecommunications Commission; Citibank, Lockheed Martin, Motorola, Panasonic, and Xerox; and the Australian National University, La Trobe University, and Stanford University's SRI International.[20] He is thought to have been involved in the WANK (Worms Against Nuclear Killers) hack at NASA in 1989, but he does not acknowledge this.[21][22]

In September 1991, he was discovered hacking into the Melbourne master terminal of Nortel, a Canadian multinational telecommunications corporation.[7] The Australian Federal Police tapped Assange's phone line (he was using a modem), raided his home at the end of October,[23] and eventually charged him in 1994 with thirty-one counts of hacking and related crimes.[7] In December 1996, he pleaded guilty to twenty-five charges (the other six were dropped), and was ordered to pay reparations of A$2,100 and released on a good behaviour bond,[21][24] avoiding a heavier penalty due to the perceived absence of malicious or mercenary intent and his disrupted childhood.[25][26][27][28] After the trial, Assange lived in Melbourne, where he survived on single-parent income support.[24]

Programming

In 1993, Assange gave technical advice to the Victoria Police Child Exploitation Unit and assisted with prosecutions.[29] In the same year he was involved in starting one of the first public internet service providers in Australia, Suburbia Public Access Network.[6][30] He began programming in 1994, authoring or co-authoring the Transmission Control Protocol port scanner strobe.c (1995);[31][32] patches to the open-source database PostgreSQL (1996);[33][34] the Usenet caching software NNTPCache (1996);[35] the Rubberhose deniable encryption system (1997),[36][37] which reflected his growing interest in cryptography;[38] and Surfraw, a command-line interface for web-based search engines (2000).[39] During this period he also moderated the AUCRYPTO forum;[38] ran Best of Security, a website "giving advice on computer security" that had 5,000 subscribers in 1996;[40] and contributed research to Suelette Dreyfus's Underground (1997), a book about Australian hackers, including the International Subversives.[19][41] In 1998, he co-founded the company Earthmen Technology.[27]

In 1999, Assange registered the domain leaks.org, but, as he put it, "I didn't do anything with it."[27][unreliable source?] He did, however, publicise a patent granted to the National Security Agency in August 1999 for voice-data harvesting technology: "This patent should worry people. Everyone's overseas phone calls are or may soon be tapped, transcribed and archived in the bowels of an unaccountable foreign spy agency."[38] This would remain an abiding concern, to which he returned more than a decade later in Cypherpunks (2012), foreseeing a dystopian future in which, "the Internet, our greatest tool for emancipation, has been transformed into the most dangerous facilitator of totalitarianism we have ever seen".[42]

WikiLeaks

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Assange, c. 2006

After his period of study at the University of Melbourne, Assange and others established WikiLeaks in 2006. Assange is a member of the organisation's advisory board[43] and describes himself as the editor-in-chief.[44] From 2007 to 2010, Assange travelled continuously on WikiLeaks business, visiting Africa, Asia, Europe and North America.[7][13][45][46][47]

WikiLeaks published secret information, news leaks,[48] and classified media from anonymous sources.[49] By 2015, WikiLeaks has published more than 10 million documents and associated analyses, and has been described by Assange himself as "a giant library of the world's most persecuted documents".[50] The published material between 2006 and 2009 attracted various degrees of publicity,[51] but it was only after it began publishing documents supplied by Chelsea Manning that Wikileaks became a household name.[52] The Manning material included the Collateral Murder video (April 2010),[53] the Afghanistan war logs (July 2010), the Iraq war logs (October 2010), a quarter of a million diplomatic cables (November 2010), and the Guantánamo files (April 2011).

Opinions of Assange at this time were divided. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard described his activities as "illegal,"[54] but the police announced that he had broken no Australian law.[55] U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and others called him a "terrorist."[56][57][58][59][60] Some called for his assassination or execution.[61][62][63][64] Support came from people including the Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva,[65][66] Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin,[67][68] and activists and celebrities including Tariq Ali,[69] John Perry Barlow,[70] Daniel Ellsberg,[71][72] Mary Kostakidis,[73] John Pilger,[74][75] Vaughan Smith,[76][77] and Oliver Stone.[78]

The year 2010 culminated with the Sam Adams Award, which Assange accepted in October,[79] and a string of distinctions in December—the Le Monde readers' choice award for person of the year,[80][81] the Time readers' choice award for person of the year (he was also a runner-up in Time's overall person of the year award),[82][83] a deal for his autobiography worth at least US$1.3 million,[84][85][86] and selection by the Italian edition of Rolling Stone as "rockstar of the year."[87][88]

The following February he won the Sydney Peace Foundation Gold Medal for Peace with Justice, previously awarded to only three people—Nelson Mandela, the Dalai Lama, and Buddhist spiritual leader Daisaku Ikeda.[89] Two weeks later he filed for the trademark "Julian Assange" in Europe, which was to be used for "Public speaking services; news reporter services; journalism; publication of texts other than publicity texts; education services; entertainment services."[90][91][92] For several years a member of the Australian journalists' union and still an honorary member,[93][94][95] he picked up the Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism in June,[96][97] and the Walkley Award for Most Outstanding Contribution to Journalism in November,[98][99] having earlier won the Amnesty International UK Media Award (New Media) in 2009.[100]

U.S. criminal investigation

After WikiLeaks released the Manning material, U.S. authorities began investigating WikiLeaks and Assange personally with a view to prosecuting them under the Espionage Act of 1917.[101] In November 2010, U.S. Attorney-General Eric Holder said there was "an active, ongoing criminal investigation" into WikiLeaks.[102] It emerged from legal documents leaked over the ensuing months that Assange and others were being investigated by a federal grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia.[103][104][105] An email from an employee of intelligence consultancy Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (Stratfor) leaked in 2012 said, "We have a sealed indictment on Assange."[106] The U.S. government denies the existence of such an indictment.[107][108]

In December 2011, prosecutors in the Chelsea Manning case revealed the existence of chat logs between Manning and an alleged WikiLeaks interlocutor they claimed to be Assange.[109][110] He denies this,[111][112] dismissing the alleged connection as "absolute nonsense."[113] The logs were presented as evidence during Manning's court-martial in June–July 2013. The prosecution argued that they show WikiLeaks helping Manning reverse-engineer a password.[114][115] The evidence that the interlocutor was Assange is circumstantial, however, and Manning insists she acted alone.[105][115]

Assange was being examined separately by "several government agencies" in addition to the grand jury, most notably the FBI.[116] Court documents published in May 2014 suggest that Assange was still under "active and ongoing" investigation at that time.[117]

Moreover, some Snowden documents published in 2014 show that the United States government put Assange on the "2010 Manhunting Timeline",[118] and in the same period they urged their allies to open criminal investigations into the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.[119] In the same documents there was a proposal by the NSA to designate WikiLeaks as a "malicious foreign actor", thus increasing the surveillance against it.

On 26 January 2015, WikiLeaks revealed that three members of the organisation received notice that "Google had handed over all their emails and metadata to the United States government".[120] In the notifications, there was the list of possible charges that originated the warrant to Google and that the secret grand jury intends to use against WikiLeaks and likely Assange too. They were espionage, conspiracy to commit espionage, theft or conversion of property belonging to the United States government, violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and general conspiracy. They carry up to a minimum of 45 years in prison, if they amount to one charge per these five types; otherwise, even more years could be added.

Swedish sexual assault allegations

Demonstration in support of Assange in front of Sydney Town Hall, 10 December 2010

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Until August 2015, Assange was wanted for questioning over two counts of sexual molestation and one count of unlawful coercion, alleged to have been committed against two women during a visit to Sweden in August 2010. On 19 May 2017, Sweden dropped the investigation over rape allegations [121] where he was wanted for questioning over one count of "lesser-degree rape" (mindre grov våldtäkt) alleged to have been committed against one of the women.[122][123][124][125] Assange denies the allegations.[126][127]

On 12 August 2015, Swedish prosecutors announced that, as the statute of limitations for two of less serious allegations has run out, and they had not succeeded in interviewing Assange, they would end part of their preliminary investigation. After 18 August 2015, Assange can no longer be charged for all three of the less serious allegations. However, the preliminary investigation into the allegation of rape still continues, as the statute of limitations there will only expire in 2020.[128]

Political asylum and life at the Ecuadorian embassy

Julian Assange on a balcony in the Ecuadorian embassy in London

On 19 June 2012, Ecuadorian Foreign Minister Ricardo Patiño announced that Assange had applied for political asylum, that his government was considering the request, and that Assange was at the Ecuadorian embassy in London.[129][130][131][132]

Ecuadoran Foreign Minister Ricardo Patiño met with Julian Assange in the Ecuadorian Embassy on 16 June 2013

On 16 August 2012, Foreign Minister Patiño announced that Ecuador was granting Assange political asylum because of the threat represented by the US secret investigation against him and several calls for assassination from many American politicians.[133][134][135][136] In its formal statement, Ecuador reasoned that "as a consequence of [Assange's] determined defense to freedom of expression and freedom of press… in any given moment, a situation may come where his life, safety or personal integrity will be in danger".[137] Latin American states expressed support for Ecuador.[138][139][140][141] Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa confirmed on 18 August that Assange could stay at the embassy indefinitely,[142][143][144] and the following day Assange gave his first speech from the balcony.[145][146][147][148] Swedish lawyer Claes Borgström called Ecuador's decision "completely absurd" and "an abuse of the asylum instrument",[149] a view echoed by others.[150][151][152] Assange's supporters forfeited £293,500 in bail[153] and sureties.[153][154]

His home since then has been an office converted into a studio apartment, equipped with a bed, telephone, sun lamp, computer, shower, treadmill, and kitchenette.[155][156][157] Before the asylum was officially granted, the UK government threatened and even tried to raid the Embassy to seize Assange, thus violating the Vienna Convention on immunity of diplomatic premises. Only after international pressures the plan was abandoned.[158][159] Officers of the Metropolitan Police Service were stationed outside the building from June 2012 to arrest him should he try to leave even if the Swedish case was dropped. The police guard was withdrawn on grounds of cost in October 2015, but the police said they would still deploy "a number of overt and covert tactics to arrest him". The cost of the policing was reported to have been £12.6m.[160]

On 18 August 2014, Assange announced that he would be leaving the Ecuadorian embassy "soon."[161][162] While acknowledging that his health had "deteriorated," he emphasised that the announcement was prompted by "a range of important legal developments in the United Kingdom."[163]

Assange announced that he would run for the Australian Senate in March 2012 under the newly created WikiLeaks Party,[164][165] had his own talk show on Russia Today in April–July and Cypherpunks[42] was published in November. In the same year, he analysed the Kissinger cables held at the U.S. National Archives and released them in searchable form.[166][167] On 15 September 2014, he appeared via remote video link on Kim Dotcom's Moment of Truth town hall meeting held in Auckland.[168]

In April 2015, during a video conference to promote the documentary Terminal F about Edward Snowden, Bolivia's ambassador to Russia, María Luisa Ramos Urzagaste, accused Assange of putting the life of Bolivian president Evo Morales at risk by—as Assange reveals in the documentary—intentionally providing the United States with false rumours that Snowden was on the president's plane when it was forced to land in Vienna in July 2013. "It is possible that in this wide-ranging game that you began my president did not play a crucial role, but what you did was not important to my president, but it was to me and the citizens of our country. And I have faith that when you planned this game you took into consideration the consequences," the ambassador told Assange. Assange stated that the plan "was not completely honest, but we did consider that the final result would have justified our actions. We weren't expecting this outcome. The result was caused by the United States' intervention. We can only regret what happened."[169] Later, in an interview[170] with Democracy Now, Assange explained in details the whole story of the grounding of Morales' plane, saying that after the US cancelled Snowden's passport, WikiLeaks thought about other strategies to take him to Latin America, and they considered private presidential jets of those countries which offered support. The appointed jet was Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro's one, but Assange stated that "our code language that we used deliberately swapped the presidential jet that we were considering for the Bolivian jet [...] and in some of our communications, we deliberately spoke about that on open lines to lawyers in the United States. And we didn’t think much more of it. [...] We didn’t think this was anything more than just distracting." Eventually, this plan was not pursued and, under Assange's advice, Snowden sought asylum in Russia.

Paris newspaper Le Monde in its 3 July 2015 edition published an open letter from Assange to French President François Hollande where Assange urges the French government to grant him refugee status.[171] Assange wrote that “only France now has the ability to offer me the necessary protection against, and exclusively against, the political persecution that I am currently the object of.”[172] In his 3 July letter Assange says, “By welcoming me, France would fulfill a humanitarian but also probably symbolic gesture, sending an encouragement to all journalists and whistleblowers... Only France is now able to offer me the necessary protection...France can, if it wishes, act.”[172][173]

In a statement issued by the Élysée Palace on 3 July 2015 in response to this letter, the French President said: “France cannot act on his request. The situation of Mr Assange does not present an immediate danger.”[174]

On 4 July 2015, in response to the denial of asylum by France, a spokesman for Assange denied that Assange had actually "filed" a request for asylum in France. Speaking on behalf of Assange, Baltasar Garzón, head of his legal team, said that Assange had sent the open letter to French president Francois Hollande; but Assange had only expressed his willingness “to be hosted in France if and only if an initiative was taken by the competent authorities.”[172]

Writings

Assange is an advocate of information transparency and market libertarianism.[175] He has written a few short pieces, including "State and terrorist conspiracies" (2006),[176] "Conspiracy as governance" (2006),[177] "The hidden curse of Thomas Paine" (2008),[178] "What’s new about WikiLeaks?" (2011),[179] and the foreword to Cypherpunks (2012).[42] He also contributed research to Suelette Dreyfus's Underground (1997),[19] and received a co-writer credit for the Calle 13 song "Multi_Viral" (2013).

Cypherpunks is primarily a transcript of the The World Tomorrow episode eight two-part interview between Assange, Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn, and Jérémie Zimmermann.

Assange's book When Google Met WikiLeaks was published by OR Books on 18 September 2014.[180] The book recounts when Google CEO Eric Schmidt requested a meeting with Assange, while he was under house arrest in rural Norfolk, UK. Schmidt was accompanied by Jared Cohen, director of Google Ideas; Lisa Shields, vice president of the Council on Foreign Relations; and Scott Malcomson, the communications director for the International Crisis Group. Excerpts were published on the Newsweek website, while Assange participated in a Q&A event that was facilitated by the Reddit website and agreed to an interview with Vogue magazine.[181][182][183]

Personal life

While still in his teens, Assange married a woman known only as Teresa, and in 1989 they had a son, Daniel Assange, now a software designer.[6][18][184] The couple separated and fought over custody of the child until they worked out a custody agreement in 1999.[7] Assange was Daniel's primary caregiver for much of his childhood.[185] In an open letter to French President François Hollande, Assange stated his youngest child lives in France with his/her mother. He also stated that his family has faced death threats and harassment due to his work, thus forcing them to change identities and reduce contact with him.[186]

Honours and awards

Works about Assange

Books

Essays

Films

Work

Bibliography

Filmography

Producer
As himself

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Glenda Kwek "Magnet for trouble: how Assange went from simple island life to high-tech public enemy number one," The Sydney Morning Herald, 8 December 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  2. "Wikileaks founder Julian Assange a born and bred Queenslander," The Courier-Mail, 29 July 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  3. "Family notices," The Sydney Morning Herald, 10 March 1951. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
  4. David Leigh and Luke Harding, WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy (London: Guardian Books, 2011; rev. edn. Guardian Books / Faber and Faber, 2013), p. 34.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Richard Guilliatt, "For John Shipton, the Wikileaks Party isn't just a political cause," The Australian, 15 June 2013. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Robert Manne, "The cypherpunk revolutionary: Julian Assange," The Monthly, March 2011. Retrieved 16 March 2014. "By the time he was addressing audiences worldwide, his 'father'—which Assange informed me is an amalgam of Brett Assange and John Shipton, created to protect their identities".
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 Raffi Khatchadourian, "No secrets: Julian Assange's mission for total transparency," The New Yorker, 7 June 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
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  9. 9.0 9.1 Dominic Feain, "WikiLeaks founder's Lismore roots," Northern Star, 29 July 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
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  11. Leigh and Harding, WikiLeaks, pp. 37–38.
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  13. 13.0 13.1 Hans Ulrich Obrist, "In conversation with Julian Assange, Part I," e-flux, May 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2014.
  14. Andrew O'Hagan, "Ghosting: Julian Assange," London Review of Books, vol. 36, no. 5 (6 March 2014), pp. 5–26. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
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  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 Suelette Dreyfus, Underground: Tales of Hacking, Madness and Obsession on the Electronic Frontier, with research by Julian Assange (Sydney: Random House, 1997).
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  38. 38.0 38.1 38.2 Suelette Dreyfus, "Network: This is just between us (and the spies)," The Independent, 15 November 1999.
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  42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 Julian Assange, Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn, and Jérémie Zimmermann, Cypherpunks: Freedom and the Future of the Internet (New York and London: OR Books, 2012).
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  50. Der Spiegel - Interview with Julian Assange: 'We Are Drowning in Material', 20 July 2015
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  57. Tom Curry, "McConnell optimistic on deals with Obama," NBC News, 5 December 2010. Retrieved 17 March 2014. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
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  84. Paul Sonne, "Assange memoir sold in U.S., U.K.," The Wall Street Journal, 27 December 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
  85. Ravi Somaiya, "WikiLeaks founder signs book deal," The New York Times, 27 December 2010. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
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External links

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