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Originally posted by PhoenixOD
A few weeks ago its was reported that Daniel Domscheit-Berg had deleted 3,500 unpublished Wikileaks files and now this. Im starting to think Daniel Domscheit-Berg is working for 'the other side' now.
edit on 29-8-2011 by PhoenixOD because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by PhoenixOD
A few weeks ago its was reported that Daniel Domscheit-Berg had deleted 3,500 unpublished Wikileaks files and now this. Im starting to think Daniel Domscheit-Berg is working for 'the other side' now.
edit on 29-8-2011 by PhoenixOD because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Shenon
Me thinks this Insurance File tells the Truth about 9/11...imagine opening the File and seeing unaltered Footage of the Pentagon beeing hit by an American Missile
Originally posted by Xcathdra
reply to post by PsykoOps
Actually you would be wrong. Wikileaks does have informant / sources names. Assange himself has stated a few times now they try to redact names / identifying info before release.
In a statement posted on Twitter, WikiLeaks said, "Guardian investigations editor, David Leigh, recklessly, and without gaining our approval, knowingly disclosed the decryption passwords in a book published by the Guardian."
The London-based Guardian newspaper responded to the WikiLeaks tweet with its own statement: "It's nonsense to suggest the Guardian's WikiLeaks book has compromised security in any way. Our book about WikiLeaks was published last February. It contained a password, but no details of the location of the files, and we were told it was a temporary password which would expire and be deleted in a matter of hours.
It's not clear exactly when WikiLeaks discovered the security breach. But in the last week, WikiLeaks has dramatically sped up the publication of the diplomatic cables. Before last week, the website had released less than 10% of the entire cache. As of Wednesday evening, more than 140,000 had been released, more than half of the entire cache.
# Once it’s downloaded, Unzip the package and you’ll find each a .exe and .msi file. # Doubleclick on the .msi file and follow the prompts. # AESCrypt has been installed to C:\Program Files\AESCrypt\ # Using Windows Explorer, navigate to that directory and take the 3 files from it.. two .exe and one .dll and put them back into C:\ (the root of the drive) # Take insurance.256aes and put that in your C:\ drive too, so you have 4 files sitting there. AESCrypt.dll aescrypt.exe AESCrypt32.exe and last but not least, insurance.256aes # Click on your Start button and goto Run or in Windows 7 / Vista, you can type it straight into the ‘Search for Files or Programs” bar.. type in command and hit enter. # From there, you need to get back to c:\ type in “cd \” and you will be returned to the root of the drive being C:\. # From there, type this.. aescrypt32 insurance.aes256 # A window should pop up prompting you for the magical password. # Or you can just install aescrypt, go to the insurance file>right click>properties>change opens with>browse to aescrypt32>ok # then you just need to double click the insurance file whenever you want to view it/prompt for password.
Originally posted by hadriana
Hearing that the file is NOT the insurance file - I've got it here somewhere but not sure which computer it is on - what was the name of it again when it was first released?
I'm hearing that this file that the password
CollectionOfDiplomaticHistorySince_1966_ToThe_PresentDay#
is to the uncensored diplomatic cable dump - NOT the insurance file.
Can anyone verify?
Ok, Cryptome is carrying this now - answered my questions.
edit on 1-9-2011 by hadriana because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by loves a conspiricy
reply to post by rayuki
Yup....
www.twitlonger.com...