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Showing results for: Julian Assange (page 17)

Snowden seeking asylum in Ecuador, says WikiLeaks

Katie McDonough
Ecuador's foreign minister also issued a statement saying Snowden has submitted an asylum request

WikiLeaks helping Snowden seek asylum

Natasha Lennard
Assange said his organization has been talking to the whistle-blower's legal team about possible deal with Iceland

Ai Weiwei on his incarceration: “They never looked away from me, 24 hours a day”

Mike Doherty
His recent performance with Laurie Anderson dealt with surveillance; Anderson said she admires Edward Snowden

Daniel Ellsberg: Edward Snowden is a patriot

Brad Friedman
The man behind the Pentagon Papers talks NSA, Bradley Manning and whistle-blowers' importance in a new interview

Snowden not welcome in the UK

Thanyarat Doksone
The British government has warned airlines not to allow the whistle-blower to fly to the United Kingdom

Is Alex Gibney’s WikiLeaks film “state agitprop”?

Andrew O'Hehir
Respected left-wing journalist Chris Hedges joins the backlash against "We Steal Secrets." What's really going on?

The dangerous ethics behind Google’s transparency claims

Natasha Lennard
In an open letter to the attorney general and FBI chief, Google displays privilege, problems behind "don't be evil"

Russia offers to consider asylum for Snowden

Natasha Lennard
The whistleblower isn't known to have made any requests, but Putin's offer is sure to rile the U.S.

The woman behind the NSA scoops

Irin Carmon
Laura Poitras is "one of the bravest and most brilliant people I've ever met," Glenn Greenwald tells Salon(Updated)

What happens next to Snowden?

Alex Seitz-Wald
The NSA leaker fled to Hong Kong, but his fate remains unclear

David Talbot starts Open America: “The only way to keep power honest is to keep its operations visible”

David Talbot
As the war on terror becomes a war on our privacy, Salon's former CEO launches project to encourage whistle-blowers

Assange lawyer: DOJ has likely prepared indictment

Natasha Lennard
The publisher's attorney says a sealed indictment is possible, as the government war on leaks drives on

Manning trial has cloak-and-dagger feel

Eric Tucker, David Dishneau
Portions of the proceedings are expected to be closed to the public, and many documents have been heavily redacted

Government’s strategy: A double noose for Manning and Assange

Natasha Lennard
In Manning trial opening statement, prosecutor argument carries worrying First Amendment repercussions

Why I secretly recorded Mitch McConnell

Curtis Morrison
EXCLUSIVE: My effort to expose the Senate minority leader's ugly campaign upended my life. Here's what happened

The administration’s war on freedom of the press

Kevin Gosztola
Journalists must assert their rights to avoid playing victim to an overzealous government

Journalists file suit against Manning trial secrecy

Natasha Lennard
Plaintiffs including Glenn Greenwald and Julian Assange demand press, public access to trial and documents

Experts: Fox News spying scandal a game-changer

Natasha Lennard
Advocates see potential "sea change" now that government crackdown on leaks includes framing journalism as a crime

Alex Gibney: Julian Assange has become like “those he despises”

Andrew O'Hehir
An Oscar-winning filmmaker defends his Col. Kurtz-style portrait of the WikiLeaks founder in "We Steal Secrets"

Julian Assange declines meeting with Benedict Cumberbatch

Prachi Gupta
The "Star Trek" villain plays the WikiLeaks founder in "The Fifth Estate"

Julian Assange: The government is a vindictive loser

Chris Hedges
The Wikileaks founder reflects on his persecution in a rare interview from London's Ecuadorean embassy

Anonymous takes charge, the Web takes down governments

Nicco Mele
The Internet collective's approach to holding power accountable might suit this moment better than any military

Why Obama hates journalists

Alex Pareene
The president's rare press conferences do nothing to convince him that reporters are essential for democracy

Julian Assange: The Internet threatens civilization

Adam Morris
However disappointing, the Wikileaks founder's new book offers a fascinating -- and discomfiting -- thesis
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