A group of hackers defending WikiLeaks brought down the Swedish government's website (Telegraph) for several hours overnight amid warnings they will attack again. The group, which calls itself Anonymous (AFP), also claimed responsibility for closing down the sites of MasterCard and Visa for awhile yesterday after the two firms suspended payments to WikiLeaks, and for attacking the site of a Swiss bank that closed an account of site founder Julian Assange, who is being held in Britain on Swedish charges of sexual assault.
A spokesman for Anonymous (Guardian) said the approximately thousand-member group is "quite a loose band of people who share the same kind of ideals" and wish to be a force for "chaotic good." Over the past several days, WikiLeaks' primary Web address was deactivated, its PayPal account was frozen, Facebook and Twitter (FT) removed accounts by run by WikiLeaks "hacktivists" and more, but WikiLeaks ability to publish online is stronger than ever, as the number of "mirror" sites (WashPost) -- clones of WikiLeaks' main contents pages - has grown to more than one thousand.
Analysis:
The relationships that will suffer most from WikiLeaks include many that the neoconservatives, who shaped the Bush administration's foreign policy, were most willing to risk, writes Robert Wright in this New York Times blog.
Julian Assange's arrest on questionable sexual assault charges and the attack on Mastercard's website indicate the WikiLeaks episode is becoming a conflict between Western governments and internet-based anarchists, writes Gideon Rachman (FT).
CFR President Richard Haass writes in Newsweek that State Department leaks offer enough lessons for a course in foreign policy.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange argues in this op-ed (TheAustralian) that his group should be protected not attacked.
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