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Julian Assange: All That Malware On Wikileaks Isn't a Big Deal (vice.com) 181

WikiLeaks celebrates its 10th anniversary today. At a press conference, its editor Julian Assange hinted that Wikileaks could soon disclose more things about the U.S. election. Making use of the occasion, Motherboard asked Assange about the malware that Wikileaks website contains. To which, Assange responded (via Motherboard): âoeThe [Hillary] Clinton campaign has been going around saying 'don't read Wikileaks, because there's malware,'" Assange said in response to a general question about malware on the site from Motherboard. Talking specifically about malicious files that were included within a recent dump of emails from Turkey, Assange emphasised that there wasn't an issue for users who just visited the site, and that people needed to download the files themselves. "However this same risk exists for most '.exe' or '.doc' files downloaded elsewhere from the internet or received by email. As time goes by we flag documents to alert readers," a print-out given to journalists at the press conference reads. Assange even thought that the presence of malware itself was noteworthy. "There was malware sent to [the ruling Turkish party] AKP, either from criminals or from state attacks on the AKP. That's extremely interesting," he said.
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Julian Assange: All That Malware On Wikileaks Isn't a Big Deal

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  • Hillary's campaign would love it if everyone is too afraid to read Wikileaks.
    • by norweeg ( 4623843 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:29AM (#53010759)
      Misinformation? They leaked emails containing malware targeted at the people they were originally sent to. Rather than adopt any kind of editorial oversight, wikileaks is a firehose of irrelevant (emails to/from targets family), not-newsworthy (SSNs of donors whose names are already public record), privacy invading (names of gay Saudis, where homosexuality is punishable by death), and occasionally malware-laden (because why not target malware at high-profile politicians), leaks with only a few nuggets of anything of interest delivered with transparent animus and bias
      • So you have to shovel a buttload of spam and rubbish to sieve out a valuable gem?

        Sounds like a job for a spamfilter.

        • AKA editorial review. A spamfilter cannot tell what is and is not newsworthy
          • I'm fairly sure the average spamfilter can at least determine what is certainly NOT newsworthy.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by sexconker ( 1179573 )

            "Editorial review" is unethical when it comes to whistle-blowing.
            The whole point is that bad shit is going down and transparency is needed. Picking and choosing what to show only leads to bias and spin.

            Lay it all out under the sun for the world to see and judge.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:09AM (#53010659)

    Don't put words in his mouth. He didn't say 'no big deal'. The gist of what he said was more that, for security researchers and people interested in this sort of thing, having the malware available for analysis within document dumps can prove a fruitful line of enquiry, and people downloading and extracting these dumps are unlikely to be the mouthbreathing 'hurr durr an exe gotta run it see what it does' idiots.

    Doc files, I can see some merit in providing two dumps, one with any autoplay macros neutered. Or at least, putting a massive great warning reminding researchers to take care.

    • Doc files, I can see some merit in providing two dumps, one with any autoplay macros neutered

      Doesn't Microsoft already stop macros from playing without warning in documents downloaded from the internet?

    • For a moment, I thought that we'd need wikileaksleaks to give us the inside dirt on wikileaks
  • Julian Assange is a KGB agent, on a mission to elect Donald Trump.

    This Malware helps the Kremlin conduct surveillance with with the to aid in their efforts to undermine our democracy.

    Vladamir Putin sees Donald Trump as a useful idiot, and an ally in Russias second cold war on the United States.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:14AM (#53010681)
      Dang it, where's my "mod inciteful". All I have is insightful.
    • Assange thinks the Obama administration is out to get him. And, since Hillary was Secretary of State, she is wrapped up in his conspiracy theory. Breaking into the DNC email system unearthed all the backroom politics to get Hillary elected. Breaking into the RNC would only get you all the dirty details on how they tried to STOP Trump, not get him elected. All that is already out in the open, so kind of pointless to release that.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:31AM (#53010771)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      Seems like to me the media is pretty damned desperate. What's the date by the way? Oh November 4th you say? I guess WAPO is right. Oh October 4th....how silly of me.

    • by jandrese ( 485 )
      I thought he released that email where Hillary said roughly "Assange is a pain in the ass, What could we do to stop him? Maybe a drone LOL? Ok, how about some real ideas people!" And he's freaking out that drone comment and assuming that everybody else in the world will be shocked that anybody might even jokingly talk about hurting his precious body.
    • by Maritz ( 1829006 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @11:06AM (#53010983)
      Did they ever release the Bank of America stuff? Pretty sure they said they were going to release that. Amounted to fuck all. Zero credibility. An organisation that purports to be what Wikileaks purports to be should not have psychopathic narcissists like Assange smearing their noxious 'personality' over everything.
      • Anyone in Wikileaks who actually wanted the organization to carry on its mission is long gone. Assange didn't want an organization, he wanted a cult, and he's got one.

        • by Maritz ( 1829006 )
          It's too bad a legit version of Wikileaks hasn't showed up. An organisation like that run responsibly would be excellent for transparency, reform, etc. Another example of how we can't have nice things, I guess.
      • Did they ever release the Bank of America stuff?

        Release stuff that upsets the American government?

        Check.

        Release stuff that upsets a bank?

        WTF?

        The claim that he was going to release documents concerning a huge scandal at BofA and then having nothing makes me realize WikiLeaks is just a sideshow. I no longer care about what they promise to deliver. They suck. Julian Assange sucks

  • The Internet (Score:2, Insightful)

    by cloud.pt ( 3412475 )

    So I shouldn't hang around the web, because I might stumble across a site with malware in some ad, flash code or whatever. I shouldn't connect my "things" to the web because they might become part of a botnet, quite easily apparently [slashdot.org].

    Can we get some sense in here and agree that Assange is in his right to tell you to disregard obvious attempts to discredit wikileaks before an important leak??

    • Can we get some sense in here and agree that Assange is in his right to tell you to disregard obvious attempts to discredit wikileaks before an important leak??

      You mean the leak of when the leak will be leaked?

      In other news can we get some sense in here and agree that "look at all our stuff right now that we know contains a lot of malware cause eventually we'll let you know where the bad files are and, oh btw [conspiracy theory]" is a pretty bullshit response? How bout "the raw stuff is dangerous but we've verified all the stuff on XYZ part of our site has been cleared of malware"

      • Could we let him leak before we decide about its quality? Personally, I'm waiting. Not holding my breath, but if he delivers, let's judge it. If he doesn't, well, meh.

        • We sure could "let him leak" as you put it, but if he says "ZOMG BIG NEWS TUESDAY" where the big news turns out to be "big news coming soon for real this time but for now buy my book!" we justifiably get to place him in the probably full of shit category. In the meantime we get to debate the merits of hype men in the internet age.

    • Re:The Internet (Score:5, Informative)

      by Kierthos ( 225954 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:32AM (#53010777) Homepage

      But if he's got an important leak, why didn't he make it? Instead, they were hawking books. He's turning into an infomercial.

      Don't get me wrong, I think if he's got an important leak to make that would affect the election, I think we should know about it. The problem is, Trump is hiding a bunch of shit as well, and that information could affect the election, and Assange is basically giving him a free pass. (For the record, I consider both major party candidates to be terrible. But Trump is getting away with all kinds of things that would sink any other candidate because the media is in love with ratings.)

      And hell, I honestly consider Trump to be the more dangerous candidate when it comes to a free and open press. Hell, he's said he wants to make it easier to sue publications if they publish something he doesn't like.

      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        And hell, I honestly consider Trump to be the more dangerous candidate when it comes to a free and open press. Hell, he's said he wants to make it easier to sue publications if they publish something he doesn't like.

        You mean easier to sue publications that publish things that are a lie. Like the a-typical clickbait, full of lies type of garbage that most of the media is publishing these days? Or the "we're gonna scour social media, ruin someones life, and when they get bullied/lose their job/commit suicide over it" that the media is running wild with these days. Oh I can see how people would be upset over that, especially people who work for companies like Gawker, Buzzfeed, or Huffington Post.

      • Most likely he just doesn't have any stuff on Trump. What should he do, step in front of cameras and declare boldly that he doesn't have jack shit about Trump?

        Assange is a sales man. He knows how to sell what he has. But even he knows he can't sell what he doesn't.

      • For the record, I consider both major party candidates to be terrible. But Trump is getting away with all kinds of things that would sink any other candidate

        Both candidates do. That's why they are still in the race. A crucial skill in a world where negative ads are so common.

        • I feel I didn't make myself clear.

          You have the Republican candidate attacking veterans for being captured, attacking the families of fallen veterans, and attacking veterans who suffer from PTSD, just to name a few things Trump has done.

          If this were any other candidate who ran for the nomination this year, not only would they never have said these attacks, they would have torpedoed their candidacy by doing so.

          He's single-handedly destroying any attempt at outreach to the Latino communities that the Republica

          • You have the Republican candidate attacking veterans for being captured, attacking the families of fallen veterans, and attacking veterans who suffer from PTSD, just to name a few things Trump has done. If this were any other candidate who ran for the nomination this year, not only would they never have said these attacks, they would have torpedoed their candidacy by doing so.

            My point was, that knowing how to handle these sorts of problems without it torpedoing your campaign is a crucial skill for modern presidential candidates. The Clintons maybe mastered it first (and watching them is like watching a great artist at work), but Trump is good at it, too.

  • I blame Obama for everything good, or bad.
  • This is smearing (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dagmar d'Surreal ( 5939 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:28AM (#53010747) Journal
    We don't like click-baity, misleading, and misrepresentative headlines here. They're disingenuous and you should be ashamed for having snuck this one past the editors. It should come as a surprise to no one that the mail spools of gov't officials would contain malware, because they're just bound to be targets for spearphishers. To people who can manage to examine files without uncontrollably clicking on them until they execute, this malware poses *zero* threat. ...and yet here this headline and article is, trying to make it sound like WikiLeaks has been in some way *infected* with malware that is a danger to visitors of the site, and that Assange is improperly and unprofessionally downplaying that threat. Whatever Clinton is paying you, it's not worth it. Your integrity is worth more than money.
    • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @10:45AM (#53010863) Homepage Journal
      Uh, what is misrepresentative here? The website hosts files that contain malware. Just because you expected it did, doesn't make it not a threat. Do you think journalists who are downloading the files are viewing them in a VM sandbox? Most likely they are now infected with malware. If you visit Wikileaks then you are likely going there to get these files. Most people who read those files are going to get infected because most people aren't going to take precautions.
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      We don't like click-baity, misleading, and misrepresentative headlines here. They're disingenuous and you should be ashamed for having snuck this one past the editors

      Have you been in a coma since 1998? Click-baity, misleading, and misrepresentative headlines are almost all Slashdot does these days. At least the new management has damped down the sexism/racism-related clickbait articles - I'll give him that much - but it's still mostly clickbait.

  • One of these days, Ecuador is going to have a press conference:

    You know what? Yes, the US and UK are obviously Imperialist a-holes, even to the point of lying the world into a war that has massive consequences including so many people fleeing the West-caused destruction, that is threatening the future of the EU itself...

    but Julian Assange is just as big an a-hole; you can find him rolled up in a carpet in our alley.

  • credibility = zero (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sebastopol ( 189276 ) on Tuesday October 04, 2016 @03:54PM (#53013133) Homepage

    Assange lost all credibility when he played his partisan hand this session. He is no longer democratizing information, he is selectively choosing information to further his "side" because he has a grudge. He blew it. Someone else needs to take the helm.

    • In other words, you support Hillary Clinton. You sound just like the Bush supporters when Assange revealed their secrets. I bet you didn't call him partisan back then.

    • It's not Wikileaks' fault that Hillary is way more corrupt and way more incompetent with technology than Trump.
      • I know, I heard all about how good Trump and his son Baron are at cyber. Very smart, his son. Very smart at cybers.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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