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posted by janrinok on Thursday August 13 2015, @09:06PM   Printer-friendly
from the just-another-5-years dept.

ABC (Australia) reports

Swedish prosecutors said they had dropped investigations into allegations of sexual assault made in 2010 against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange because they had run out of time to bring charges.

"Now that the statute of limitations has expired on certain offences, I am obliged to drop part of the investigation," prosecutor Marianne Ny said.

But prosecutors said they would continue with investigations over a further allegation of rape against Assange, also made in 2010.
...
They have a further five years to bring any charges over an allegation of rape.

In other news, Sweden and Ecuador have agreed to hold talks aimed at paving the way for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to be questioned over allegations of sexual assault, with 9news reporting that

Assange has challenged Swedish prosecutors to come to his refuge at the Ecuadorian embassy in London to take his statement on sex attack claims.
...
The 44-year-old Australian, who has been living at the embassy for more than three years, said in a statement on Thursday that he was an innocent man and hadn't been charged.

"Come to the embassy to take my statement or promise not to send me to the United States," he said, saying the actions of Swedish prosecutors were "beyond incompetence".


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  • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Thursday August 13 2015, @10:21PM

    by zocalo (302) on Thursday August 13 2015, @10:21PM (#222558)
    It's not a bad shorthand form in places where people are going to recognise the ISO 3166 codes and TLDs, so why not? "UK.gov" might be the most commonly seen one (thanks mostly to The Register), but there's no reason why you couldn't have "US.gov", "CN.mil", etc. as well; might not work to well for Canada/California though unless there was a defacto standard.

    There's also lots of potential for geek humour, of course.
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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Thursday August 13 2015, @11:51PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Thursday August 13 2015, @11:51PM (#222589)

    Yeah, they screwed up with those 2-letter country codes. It would have been better if they were all three letters instead; much less ambiguity that way, for only one extra character. Then you're have "usa", "can", "mex", "deu" (Germany), "bel", "fra", "ita", "rus", "irq", etc. I'm not sure what UK would be under that scheme though, maybe "uki"? (for United Kingdom and Northern Ireland)

    • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 14 2015, @12:06AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 14 2015, @12:06AM (#222596)

      ISO 3166-1 define 3 unique identifiers: alpha-2, alpha-3 and numeric. The United Kingdom is GB, GBR, and 826, respectively.

      • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Friday August 14 2015, @06:40AM

        by zocalo (302) on Friday August 14 2015, @06:40AM (#222712)
        True, the UK/GB is a bit of an anomaly since there are various groupings depending on which parts of the UK are being referred to; individual countries, Great Britain or The United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland. When referring to the central Government in London however, GB.gov would be incorrect since central government *does* cover the entirety of the UK - devolution and hopes of separatist parties preferences not withstanding, hence the use of the unofficial ccTLD "version" of ISO-3166. Another likely variant would be the European Union since "EU" is not included as a grouping in ISO-3166 either, yet EU.gov and the .EU ccTLD are both all too real.
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  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Friday August 14 2015, @08:53AM

    by TheRaven (270) on Friday August 14 2015, @08:53AM (#222740) Journal
    The UK government's domain is gov.uk. A uk.gov domain would be the part of the US government that is responsible for the UK. There's also a good administrative reason for having it this way around: everything under the .uk domain is under the control of a UK-based registrar. The delegation of {cc}.* to the correct registrars would be painful and would lead to situations where the registrar for the TLD could exert undue influence over the country code portion.
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    • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Friday August 14 2015, @10:36AM

      by zocalo (302) on Friday August 14 2015, @10:36AM (#222770)
      The usage has nothing to do with internet domain delegation other than using the same ISO defined list of country codes. It's merely a shorthand for a given country's government, military or whatever: "UK.gov" = "The UK's government", "UK.biz" = "UK based companies", and so on - the TLD part doesn't necessarily even have to exist in DNS for that matter, just be clear the context. If used consistently, as is generally the case on The Register, it's also potentially useful for searching and sematic tagging, kind of how stories on Slashdot are often tagged with the applicable state/country codes to aid searching.
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    • (Score: 3, Informative) by MrNemesis on Friday August 14 2015, @01:51PM

      by MrNemesis (1582) on Friday August 14 2015, @01:51PM (#222817)

      The .uk versus the .gb ISO 3166 debate is an interesting quirk and a side-effect of the fact that the Joint Academic NETwork [wikipedia.org] pre-dates the domain name system and most of the internet. JANET mail addresses [soylentnews.org] were basically backwards as we understand them today - username@uk.ac.someuniversity so when DNS and the internet came along it essentially became a backwards compatibility/interop hack to reverse the direction. Hence the use of .uk instead of .gb (especially since Ukraine didn't really have much say in the discussion at the time). Incidentally as well as being responsible for the .ac.uk domains Janet also manages .gov.uk.

      Source: buying one of the salty old CS bods a pint in the student union.

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