In a story that  continues to get more interesting with each passing day, one of our  keynote speakers for The Next HOPE is said to be in great danger of being apprehended or worse by the  United States government after a source of sensitive information was  arrested.
 Our keynote speaker, Julian Assange of  Wikileaks, published a video back in April that showed U.S. troops firing on unarmed Reuters  journalists in Baghdad, killing them and wounding a number of others.  Attempts by Reuters to get this video through the Freedom of Information  Act had failed. It was only after it was sent to Wikileaks that the  truth came out and a major scandal followed.
Our keynote speaker, Julian Assange of  Wikileaks, published a video back in April that showed U.S. troops firing on unarmed Reuters  journalists in Baghdad, killing them and wounding a number of others.  Attempts by Reuters to get this video through the Freedom of Information  Act had failed. It was only after it was sent to Wikileaks that the  truth came out and a major scandal followed.
But it didn’t end there.  It seems that the alleged source of this particular leak had struck up a  conversation with someone in the hacker community named Adrian Lamo. According to chat transcripts provided by Lamo, Army intelligence  specialist Bradley Manning admitted to the leak along with one other  video that has yet to be released. That video supposedly shows the 2009  Garani air strike in Afghanistan which killed dozens of civilians. But  there was still more. According to a report in Wired, who claim to have copies  of the chat transcripts, Manning had also sent 260,000 diplomatic  cables to Wikileaks. This was supposedly the point at which Lamo felt he  had no choice but to turn Manning in, according to the Wired story.  Meanwhile Wikileaks will not confirm whether or not Manning is a source  and also claims to not have 260,000 diplomatic cables. And that’s where  it all stands now.
So what does this all  mean? According to a report in the Daily  Beast, it means Julian Assange is a marked man. In fact, former  Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg said Assange was “absolutely” in danger and should “stay out of the  U.S.” Meanwhile, in another  report, an anonymous U.S. official was quoted as saying of Assange,  “We’d like to know where he is.”
Assange is scheduled to  give The Next HOPE Saturday keynote on July 17 in New York City. To make  things even more interesting, Lamo has also been planning on appearing  at the conference and may now wind up facing a hacker community who  views his actions with, to put it mildly, disappointment. Lamo claims he  was put in an impossible situation and is actually a supporter of  Wikileaks, saying he even contributed money to the organization in the  past.
That’s pretty much the  story as it stands now. One person is in prison, another is in fear of  arrest or even physical harm, while a third is being ostracized by much  of the hacker world. We have not been immune from this, having been  subjected to a denial of service attack the day after the story broke,  ostensibly because of Lamo’s loose affiliation with 2600 as head of our  Facebook group, among other things. But that is a relatively small price  compared to the real hell being experienced by those involved  firsthand.
We need to be clear on one  thing. We find it reprehensible that Assange, a journalist whose only  mission is to reveal the truth and protect sources, has to be subjected  to this type of harassment. Wikileaks embodies all that is sacred to the  hacker mentality: freedom of speech and of information, anonymity for  sources, and a dedication to getting the story out, above all else. This  is why Assange was chosen as one of our keynote speakers and we believe  we all can and will learn a great deal from his words. That said, we  will not encourage any speaker to put themselves in harm’s way for us or  for anybody. But we will expend every effort to make sure that they are  not silenced and that their message will be heard by our attendees. We  call upon (but hardly expect to hear back from) the State Department and  federal authorities to ensure that Julian Assange can travel freely to  our country without harassment or detainment. We ask that you help us by  spreading the message “Let Julian Speak!” far and wide. If nothing  else, the world needs to know that such intimidation will not go  unnoticed.
We also intend to do  everything possible to support and strengthen the Wikileaks  organization. That includes helping to fundraise, establishing links  with other communities, and getting HOPE attendees to volunteer their  services. We can think of no group more worthy of this level of support,  especially in light of these recent developments.
As for the controversy  itself, we will not avoid it. You can count on this being a hot topic at  The Next HOPE, wherever the  story happens to take us by then. As always, you can count on HOPE being  lively, provocative, and above all else, relevant.
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* photo credit New  Media  Days / Peter  Erichsen via Flickr here, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0  License.