OpenLeaks

OpenLeaks
OpenLeaks
Logo of OpenLeaks
URL openleaks.org
openleaks.net
openleaks.rs
openleaks.ws
Type of site Document archive & whistleblower
Available language(s) English
Launched January 2011
Alexa rank increase 153,958 (November 2011)[1]

OpenLeaks is a whistleblowing website which has yet to become active. It aims "at making whistleblowing safer and more widespread".[2]

Contents

History

The OpenLeaks project was founded in September 2010 by Daniel Domscheit-Berg.[3] Domscheit-Berg said the intention of OpenLeaks was to be more transparent than WikiLeaks. "In these last months, the Wikileaks organization has not been open any more. It lost its open-source promise."[4]

OpenLeaks was supposed to start public operations in early 2011 but despite much media coverage it is still not functioning.

Team members

Openleaks have two public contacts, Daniel Domscheit-Berg and Herbert Snorrason, both previously involved in WikiLeaks.[3]

Conduit

Instead of publishing the documents, OpenLeaks will send the leaked documents to various news entities or publishers.[5]

At the time of its announcement, WikiLeaks was facing a number of threats: founder Julian Assange had been arrested in connection with sexual assault charges; the site had issues finding safe DNS and web hosting; and many companies had blocked payment to the site. According to Domscheit-Berg's initial statements, he expected OpenLeaks to bypass WikiLeaks problems by serving only as a safe conduit for whistleblowers to leak information, which would then be passed on to the press, instead of acting as a publisher itself. The organization also intends to be democratically governed, rather than being run by one person or a small group.[6][7] "Our long term goal is to build a strong, transparent platform to support whistleblowers — both in terms of technology and politics — while at the same time encouraging others to start similar projects," says a colleague wishing to remain anonymous.[8]

See also

References

External links