Archive for the tag 'military'

admin

What is Wikileaks?

When Wikileaks unencrypted and published exclusive US military footage of American soldiers in an Apache helicopter gunning down 12 people in Baghdad – including two Reuters journalists – the organisation gained new viewers and international attention.

Sree Sreenivasan, a digital media professor at Columbia Journalism School, told The Independent:

“This might be the story that makes Wikileaks blow up. It’s not some huge document with lots of fine print – you can just watch it and you get what it’s about immediately. It’s a whole new world of how stories get out.”

Wikileaks is a loosely connected group of tech-savvy editors, cryptologists and activists. It doesn’t have a headquarters or office.

But it manages to break major stories the mainstream press was unable to report. Reuters had been working for two years to access the Baghdad video through the Freedom of Information Act.

In less than a week, the 18-minute version of the black-and-white footage – to which Wikileaks added narrative text and subtitles – was watched 4.6 million times on YouTube.

A 40-minute, unedited version was viewed half a million times.

Those counts don’t include copies and versions shown by broadcasters like CNN.

What is Wikileaks?
Wikileaks has been receiving and publishing leaked memos, reports, databases and briefings since 2006. It publishes explanatory press releases alongside the documents it receives from whistleblowers around the world.

Much of the information published by Wikileaks has resulted in front-page stories that lead to political or regulatory changes. These kinds of changes are the primary motivation of the site.

Wikileaks says it has published more than a million documents without revealing an anonymous source.

A few major Wikileaks scoops:

A report from the commodities company Trafigura about toxic waste dumping in Ivory Coast. Wikileaks published the information after Trafigura successfully filed a “super-injunction” against The Guardian. This was lifted after Wikileaks published the documents.image

The site published a membership list of the secretive British National Party. Policeman and other professionals are not allowed to join the far-right political group; a few of the members Wikileaks exposed were fired from their jobs as teachers, policemen and clergymen.

Operating manuals for the US prison facilities at Guantanamo Bay. These described prisoner intimidation tactics involving dogs and described hiding prisoners from the International Red Cross.

A list of websites blacklisted by the Australian Communications and Media Authority.
image
A recording of a top state official in Peru talking with a lobbyist about payments to help Discover Petroleum of Norway firm win contracts. Peru’s energy and mines minister resigned as a result of the story.

Internal documents from Kaupthing Bank, an Icelandic bank taken over by that government in 2009. The documents exposed large loans the bank made to its shareholders in the weeks prior to the financial crisis in Iceland.

Kaupthing Bank’s lawyers fought to keep the story off of RUV, the national public broadcaster in Iceland. They filed a successful injunction against RUV, but the news anchors mentioned the story on air – as well as the injunction – and referred viewers to Wikileaks for more information.

National outrage over the injunction sparked a movement called the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI). It is an ongoing attempt to craft media laws that would attract media businesses – particularly those with an investigative bent – to set up shop in Iceland.

Wikileaks has been recognised with awards like the 2008 Economist New Media Award and a 2009 Amnesty International New Media Award.

The “wiki” prefix rather reflects the concept guiding Wikileaks: For anyone to be able to upload and post sensitive documents – like the encrypted US Army video – without editorial interference.

There is no relationship between Wikipedia and Wikileaks.

Who is Wikileaks?
Journalists at Wired UK, Mother Jones and Al-Jazeera have written stories profiling the shadowy and small organisation.

All reach the same conclusion: There are more questions than answers about Wikileaks.

Two things about the people involved in creating and propagating the site are certainly true:

  • They’d rather journalists didn’t bother profiling them. Rather, Wikileaks organisers seem to prefer that journalists focus their attention on materials leaked through their website.


  • They’d rather not give out any information about themselves. This ethos evokes images of spies and so-called “hacktivists.” And of course, they refuse to give any information about their sources.

An Australian man named Julian Assange is the public face of Wikileaks. Little is known about Assange’s background, place of residency or daily whereabouts. His behaviour during one-on-one interviews with journalists has been described as erratic and slightly paranoid.

He has left comments on articles about Wikileaks in which he says the articles contain inaccurate or unfair information about the Wikileaks. But he does not typically respond to the resulting offers to provide more detailed information about his Wikileaks colleagues.

Assange did research for the 1997 book, Underground: Tales of hacking, madness and obsession on the electronic frontier.

The book profiles the lives of early Internet hackers. Some bloggers have speculated that Assange is himself one of the pseudonymous hackers profiled.
image
A podcast related to the book is available here.

Verifiable information about other Wikileaks contributors is difficult to find.

Conspiracy theories
Wikileaks is the kind of organisation about which it is easy to spin conspiracy theories:

  • It regularly publishes sensitive information governments and big companies don’t want the public to see.

  • Little is known about where its servers are – some reports say Sweden, others Iceland – although its main domain name is registered in California. It also has, though, mirror sites and country-specific domain names.

  • While it is customary in Western journalism that whistleblowers remain anonymous, information is usually available about the journalists or media outlets who gather and publish scoops.

Some people have wondered if Wikileaks is a front for the CIA.

One of the sources cited by conspiracy theorists is John Young, an American who runs the website Cryptome. It has a mission identical to that of Wikileaks; it has posted around 54,000 documents

There is a connection between Young and Assange – the two corresponded at length in a series of e-mails Young posted on Cryptome – but the tone of their current relationship is not clear.

Young responded on his website to recent questions about his opinion regarding Wikileak’s potential CIA ties:

“Copying the behavior of spy agencies is exactly what they want in order to legitimate their criminal chicanery. Until Wikileaks becomes a fully open and accountable operation it is the same as the spy agencies and indeed helps legitimate their manipulation of public opinion on behalf of their self-promotion “in the public interest.”

Business models
In early 2009 Wikileaks suspended operations to focus on fundraising.

It took all its material offline – although distributed copies remain scattered around the Internet – and said it was focusing on meeting a fundraising goal of $600,000 with a minimum of $200,000.

Wikileaks quickly met its $200,000 goal.

The site says it accepts no government or corporate funding. It relies on private donations and pro-bono support from lawyers.

The staff who manage daily operations – which Assange has said is himself and four others – is not paid on a regular basis. As for keeping fed, Assange has said he “made money on the Internet.”

In 2008, Wikileaks experimented with auctioning exclusivity rights to thousands of e-mails between Hugo Chavez and his speechwriter (himself a former ambassador to Argentina).

The auction was logistically difficult to arrange and was the subject of more media coverage than the content of the e-mails. Wikileaks has not since attempted duplicate such a large-scale auction.

The Israel Defence Forces, which started its own YouTube channel on 29 December, is the most recent armed force to storm YouTube. But it isn’t the only military group representing itself on the ubiquitous video platform.

With its stab at social media, the IDF follows in the footsteps of British, Dutch and American militaries. These legions each reach thousands of YouTube subscribers, thus allowing military groups to present themselves to the public without a reporter filtering the information.

That seems to be just fine with journalists, who say these videos are no more valuable to them than other everyday source material, including individual blogs.

Joel Greenberg, Middle East correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, says he has used the IDF YouTube channel as one of numerous information sources.

“I’m speaking about the aerial photos of bombing in Gaza,” he e-mails from Israel, referencing videos like the one titled Israeli Air Force Strikes Rockets in Transit 28 Dec., 2008, which depict actual bombing.

“They illustrate some assertions the army is making, particularly their claims of secondary explosions that they say prove that there were weapons inside a mosque or other building they hit. But it is only one source among many that I am using, and I am not referring to it regularly.”

The IDF channel does have regular viewers, though. It has been the most subscribed to station on YouTube for two straight weeks. It has 12,794 subscribers and 896,873 channel views as of 6 January.

Military VJs

When it comes to militaries doing their own video journalism, the British are at the fore: The Royal Air Force established its own YouTube channel in 2006. So did the US Navy. The US Marines joined up in 2007, as did the British Army and the Dutch Marines. The US Air Force started its channel in 2008.

Coalition military forces have joined the online video game: The Multi-National Force – Iraq started a YouTube station in 2007.

But YouTube isn’t the only way to do video on the web: at www.natochannel.tv, NATO posts videos about training exercises, its work in Afghanistan and Kosovo, press statements, roundtables and archives dating back to the inception of NATO in 1949.

The  26-country coalition has had a TV and Radio Unit, which operates a television studio and 10 radio studios at NATO headquarters in Brussels, for 25 years. But it started natochannel.tv just six months ago. This online channel presently operates out of Denmark. But it will move to Brussels in June, 2009, said Jean-Marc Lorgnier of the TV and Radio Unit.

“It will be the future support for information to deliver a message to the young people,” Lorgnier says.

Good for reporters?

Indeed, online videos do facilitate the widespread dissemination of branded messages – just like press releases.

That’s how some reporters and editors see these video channels.

“You don’t know if it’s propaganda or who is directing it,” says Titia Ketelaar, deputy editor for nrc•next, a Dutch morning paper. “So we treat it as such, with the same sceptical outlook we use for any press release we get.”

Ketelaar says NRC, which also publishes an evening paper, has its own correspondent based in Israel.

“He knows the situation and gets his own information, has his own contacts,” she says. “Like every reporter here, myself included, we’ve got our own blogs you check every morning to see what they’re doing. You look at YouTube and see if there’s something new. … But our reporters do their own interviews and rely on that information.”

Victor Kasparov, a producer for the international planning desk at the 24-hour English language television station Russia Today, says his correspondents operate in the same way. Russia Today also bases its Middle East correspondent, Paula Slier, in Israel.

“We have a reporter in Israel and we don’t really need to monitor lots of blogs,” he says. “Paula takes care of that. … She’s a reporter and she’s local. It’s much easier for her to get information.

But it is useful when we make coverage of events in countries where we don’t have a reporter.”

Questions

Kasparov’s comment raises important questions: In times when reporters are not allowed into an area, will branded YouTube channels be accepted by society as legitimate news portals? It is necessary to point out that YouTube makes clear it has the right to delete any content hosted on its site. To what extent should YouTube channel subscribers take this rule into account?

Furthermore, the IDF is not allowing foreign reporters into the Gaza Strip. So will news stations without on-the-ground access instead air footage provided by military channels? And if so, how can the news stations balance their coverage?

Kasparov said his station, which distributes its videos online via a YouTube channel in addition to its own website, also has Arabic language partners with studios in Gaza. So there is little need for footage from say, the IDF YouTube channel.

He does find the footage interesting, he says.

“One thing though, the quality is not really cool. I don’t think we could use it on air.”

Back in the Netherlands, Ketelaar adds that NRC is including in its coverage of the invasion of Gaza quotes from and links to individual bloggers’ pages. That way, she says, the paper can show multiple perspectives.

For that reason, of course, blogs have been a particularly popular information source for newsgathering outlets trying to cover Israel’s attacks on the Gaza Strip.

Good reads

For a particularly good overview of bloggers writing from the area, visit Global Voices’ section on the Middle East and North Africa. Every day Global Voices editors monitor and translate blogs written in various languages from various points of view, making the site one of the best places to explore when searching for authentic blog sites.

On 2 January the section featured this article about a blog jointly written by one Israeli and one Palestinian man.


Flickr image from users b., Weinaiko and Stompy