Archive for February 20th, 2008

Update on Wikileaks censorship. Costly mistake for bank?

On Monday I wrote about the unprecedented attempt by Bank Julius Baer to censor the Wikileaks.org web site by having a San Francisco judge issue a restraining order telling the web site’s domain name registrar to stop Wikileak.org from pointing to its actual IP address, 88.80.13.160. This was the first known instance of a court shutting down an entire web site. One Kafkaesque feature of this omnibus order is that the court order and other materials were ordered to be emailed to Wikileaks. But with the domain name Wikileaks.org abolished, no mail sent to them could get to anyone.

Two days after my article, the New York Times finally covered the Wikileaks censorship effort and concluded:

Judge White’s order disabling the entire site “is clearly not constitutional,” said David Ardia, the director of the Citizen Media Law Project at Harvard Law School. “There is no justification under the First Amendment for shutting down an entire Web site.”

The narrower order, forbidding the dissemination of the disputed documents, is a more classic prior restraint on publication. Such orders are disfavored under the First Amendment and almost never survive appellate scrutiny.

Since the controversy broke Monday, this censorship has become a major topic in the news and on the web. after all, the shutting down of an entire web site threatens all citizens who use or rely upon the web for disseminating and obtaining a diversity of otherwise unobtainable information. A new blog site, http://wikileak.org/, has been created:

to discuss the ethical and technical issues surrounding the WikiLeakS.org project, which claims to be developing an “uncensorable” version of WikiPedia, for “mass document leaking” and whistleblowing.

While I have no direct knowledge of who is behind this new site , I assume it is tongue-in-cheek when it goes on to state:

This blog is not yet affiliated with the secretive and media manipulative WikiLeakS.org project, but the issues for discussion remain important, regardless of whether or not WikiLeakS.org ever overcomes its technical, legal, ethical and funding problems.

At this point they have a detailed analysis of the second restraining order against Wikileaks in which they argue that it is so broad that it may actually ban virtually all internet activity by the bank, Bank Julius Baer, that brought the suit! Read it and see for yourself.

The order was issued, allegedly because Wikileaks had obtained bank documents that, according to Wikileaks:

“allegedly reveal secret Julius Baer trust structures used for asset hiding, money laundering and tax evasion.”

Wikileaks has made a discovery potentially shedding light upon the bank’s motives in the case. Bank Julius Baer was about to launch a $1 billion IPO, and that the press attention and increased regulatory scrutiny flowing from it may well scuttle this deal. After all, it’s hard to launch an IPO when there are suggestions in the press and the blogosphere that your profts may be due to money laundering. It may turn out that this restraining order was an act of self destruction by Bank Julius Baer with few parallels. As a Wikileaks press release explains [not being a profesional journalist, I can actually quote their press release instead of paraphrasing and pretending I did the reporting myself]:

Wikileaks has discovered Bank Julius Baer was preparing to take their US operation public via an a billion dollar IPO. They filed the prospectus with the SEC on Feb 12, a mere three days before convincing Federal court Judge Jeffery White to order total censorship of the transparency site.

“We are an asset management company that provides investment management services to institutional and mutual fund clients. We are best known for our International Equity strategies, which represented 92% of our assets under management as of September 30, 2007.” They were going to call the business “Artio” (ticker symbol ART, to be listed on the NYSE). Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch were to underwrite the IPO according to Bloomberg.

So the last thing they needed was to be the subject of a New York Times story and all over the world press, associated with money laundering. Now the deal goes under a microscope. Their underwriters have to take a second look and the SEC may have questions. Julius Baer will probably have to file a “material event” 8-K report with the SEC. Newspaper and magazine reporters will be looking at Baer. The question will be raised that the rather high returns Baer reports may be achieved via money laundering.

All this is happening in a down market, in which it is hard to do an IPO and in which investors are very sensitive to unexpected risk. The whole deal may evaporate, or be repriced downward.

Attempting to censor Wikileaks was a very, very expensive mistake for Baer.

Meanwhile, the struggle against this censorship and prior restraint has suddenly become a central front in the battle to preserve freedom of speech for those without the millions to pay for it. We should all stand prepared to assist in any ways requested.

And remember that, while Wikileaks.org no longer points to it, Wikileaks still exists. Just past its IP address , 88.80.13.160, into your web browser, or go to http://www.wikileaks.cx/, or any of dozens of other cover names. Let the leaks continue!

2 comments February 20th, 2008

Psychologist Jim Andrikopoulos endorses Steven Reisner for APA President

The Reisner campaign for APA President seems to be arousing grass-roots enthusiasm. Psychologist Jim Andrikopoulos wrote and is circulating his own endorsement statement. [You can also read his PENS critique here.]:

There have been accounts in the press and in major medical journals (Lancet, JAMA and NEJM) of health care professionals, including psychologists, being involved in interrogation of suspected terrorists where torture is being used. As a result of this the American Medical Association and the American Psychiatric Association have issued policy statements forbidding their members from participating at all in the interrogation of terror suspects. It is important to emphasize that we are not talking about position statements regarding the use of torture, which all organizations, including the American Psychological Association, condemn and forbid. The issue at hand is if psychologists should be present during interrogations or advise interrogators?

Due to pressure from APA members, a resolution was put before the APA Council of Representatives that would have banned its members from participating in interrogations. This was voted down. This now puts us at odds with the American Psychiatric Association and the American Medical Association, not to mention a host of other organizations (British Psychological Society, World Medical Association, American Anthropological Association, and the Australian Psychological Association) some of who have more strongly worded statements than does APA.

I have spent more time researching this issue than I would have liked and have amassed some 40 documents. There is more to this story than I can relay in this e-mail. I plan to post a one or two page reference document. There are some statements and actions by the APA leadership that can only be described as Kafkaesque. This includes a media censorship incident that I mention only because it is more funny than frightening since it happened during an APA town hall meeting. In the meantime, I have prepared and attached a two-page commentary on an APA Presidential task force (see attached PENS document) that was convened to address the role of psychologists in national security-related activities.

Corrected nomination ballots for APA President are being mailed out Wednesday, February 13, 2008. One of the people asking for our nomination for APA President is Steven Reisner who wants to correct this problem. Please consider placing him first on your ballot. I have attached his nomination statement.

PLEASE FORWARD THIS E-MAIL AND THE ATTACHMENTS TO PSYCHOLOGISTS IN YOUR DEPARTMENT, STATE AND LOCAL PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATIONS, COLLEAGUES, OR ANY PSYCHOLOGY LISTSERV THAT YOU BELONG TO. ENCOURAGE THOSE THAT YOU E-MAIL THIS TO, TO DO THE SAME.

Jim Andrikopoulos, Ph.D., ABPP

Add comment February 20th, 2008


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