The DNC's Lawsuit Against WikiLeaks Is an Attack on the Freedom of the Press
It's a large world, filled with felonies big and misdemeanors small. And so I prefer to write long columns. But sometimes a short, sharp word is necessary. The Democratic Party is suing WikiLeaks and they shouldn't. As Glenn Greenwald wrote last week in The Intercept:
The Democratic National Committee filed a lawsuit this afternoon in a Manhattan federal court against the Russian government, the Trump campaign, and various individuals it alleges participated in the plot to hack its email servers and disseminate the contents as part of the 2016 election. The DNC also sued WikiLeaks for its role in publishing the hacked materials, though it does not allege that WikiLeaks participated in the hacking or even knew in advance about it; its sole role, according to the DNC's lawsuit, was publishing the hacked emails.
As Greenwald points out, the Dems' claim that "WikiLeaks is liable for damages it caused when it 'willfully and intentionally disclosed' the DNC's communications ... would mean that any media outlet that publishes misappropriated documents or emails (exactly what media outlets quite often do) could be sued by the entity or person about which they are reporting."
After the Manning releases in 2010, the Obama Justice Department wanted to sue WikiLeaks. However, they couldn't prove that anyone from WikiLeaks had actually stolen documents. They knew that suing WikiLeaks would have infringed on press freedom. Sue WikiLeaks, and you have to sue the Washington Post as well.
The DNC has no such qualms now.
Also at Al Jazeera.
See also: Why the DNC Is Fighting WikiLeaks and Not Wall Street
(Score: 5, Informative) by takyon on Wednesday May 02 2018, @11:26PM
Most of the comments on this article and previous ones already support Wikileaks and Assange, so your premise is incorrect.
As for endangering servicemembers:
Chelsea Manning leaks had no strategic impact on US war efforts, Pentagon finds [theguardian.com]
Roughly zero impact even from the "worst" leaks. (Note that pretty much all SSNs are compromised, or will be. See the OPM hack among others.)
As for those cooperative Afghans and Iraqis, the U.S. government has proven unwilling to protect them:
Asylum Program Falls Short For Iraqis Aiding U.S. Forces [washingtonpost.com]
Iraqi translators who served the US military are desperate for an exemption to Trump's travel ban [pri.org]
Afghans Who Worked With U.S. Forces Told They Can No Longer Apply For Special Visas [npr.org]
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]