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"Assange vows Google, US election leaks as WikiLeaks turns 10"

T J

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Assange vows Google, US election leaks as WikiLeaks turns 10

Oct 4, 2016​

Controversial website WikiLeaks began spilling secrets 10 years ago, and

it's not done yet.

In coming weeks, the site is set to publish documents related to Google, the US presidential election and more, according to controversial founder Julian Assange.
A video showing the top 10 leaks on the site today opened a press conference marking the 10th anniversary of the whistleblower site, in which time it has published 10 million documents. Assange promised new information every week for the next 10 weeks, related to Google, military operations, arms trading and mass surveillance. He also promised that all documents related to the US presidential election would be published before the vote on November 8.



Assange denied reports that he intended to harm the campaign of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, although he did describe the reaction to leaks of Democratic emails as "neo-McCarthy-esque hysteria."

Asked if he had any affinity for Clinton's Republican rival Donald Trump, Assange said, "I feel sorry for Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. They are two people that are tormented by their ambitions."

The WikiLeaks domain name was registered on October 4, 2006, and the site published its first document on December 28. "A decade ago, we knew a lot less about the world's leaders and institutions," says the top 10 video. "We knew only what they wanted us to know." Then, the video tells us, came WikiLeaks.

The not-for-profit site came to prominence by publishing classified documents relating to the detention of prisoners by the US in Guantanamo Bay, military operations in Afghanistan and NSA surveillance of world leaders. Among the documents made public by WikiLeaks were millions of military and diplomatic files revealed by US soldier Chelsea Manning, currently serving a 35-year prison sentence for the leak.

The countdown also includes a leak of thousands of emails from the Democratic National Party relating to the current presidential election.

MORE ON WIKILEAKS
Addressing journalists at today's press conference in Berlin via video link, Assange pledged to create "an army" to defend the controversial site against outside pressure. "WikiLeaks needs to change in order to survive and thrive," he said. "We have engaged in a new project to recruit people across the world to defend our publications...We are going to need an army."​
 
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