Nice place for a leak
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Psst! Want to blab a secret? And I don't mean any old secret like the affair you had with the girl in accounts, your secret tryst with the milkman or that time you nicked a tube of Smarties from the corner shop.
No, we're talking about seriously classified government info - like the classified footage of the 'friendly fire' incident that killed a British soldeir in Iraq.
Well a new website called Wikileaks claims to provide a service where whistle blowers can safely upload secret documents without fear of being traced. By March, the site claims it will have more than a million leaked documents from governments and corporations in Asia, the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa and the former Soviet bloc available for download.
Wikileaks promotes itself as "an uncensorable version of Wikipedia for untraceable mass document leaking and analysis." The site currently provides a sample document to download - a memo on civil war policy issued in November 2005 by the Somali Islamic court system's office of the chief of the Imams. Not that I've ploughed through it.
There is scepticism about its likely impact, however. The authenticity of the information provided on Wikis is often suspect, not least because anyone can post or edit them.
There are already rumours that the Wikileaks project is a front for the CIA. And if you do get your hands on a juicy scoop why upload it online for nothing when you could sell it for a bundle to the media?
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