Originally published Wednesday, February 20, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Order to close Web site may mean little
In a move that legal experts said could present a major test of First Amendment rights in the Internet era, a federal judge in San Francisco...
The New York Times
In a move that legal experts said could present a major test of First Amendment rights in the Internet era, a federal judge in San Francisco has ordered the disabling of a Web site devoted to disclosing confidential information.
The site, Wikileaks.org, invites people to post leaked materials with the goal of discouraging "unethical behavior" by corporations and governments. It has posted documents said to show the rules of engagement for U.S. troops in Iraq, a military manual for the operation of the prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and other evidence of what it has called corporate waste and wrongdoing. The site claims to have posted 1.2 million leaked government and corporate documents.
The case in San Francisco was brought by a Cayman Islands bank, Julius Baer Bank & Trust. In court papers, the bank claimed that "a disgruntled ex-employee who has engaged in a harassment and terror campaign" provided stolen documents to Wikileaks in violation of a confidentiality agreement and banking laws. According to Wikileaks, "the documents allegedly reveal secret Julius Baer trust structures used for asset hiding, money laundering and tax evasion."
Judge Jeffrey White of U.S. District Court in San Francisco granted a permanent injunction Friday ordering Dynadot, the site's domain-name registrar, to disable the Wikileaks.org domain name. The order had the effect of locking the front door to the site, a largely ineffectual action that kept back doors to the site, and several copies of it, available to sophisticated Web users who knew where to look.
Domain registrars such as Dynadot, Register.com and GoDaddy.com provide domain names — the Web addresses users type into browsers — to Web site operators for a monthly fee. White ordered Dynadot to disable the Wikileaks.org address and "lock" it to prevent the organization from transferring the name to another registrar.
The feebleness of the action suggests the bank and the judge did not understand how the domain system works or how quickly Web communities will move to counter actions they see as hostile to free speech online.
The site itself could still be accessed at its Internet Protocol address — http://88.80.13.160/ — the unique number that specifies a Web site's location on the Internet. Wikileaks also maintained "mirror sites," or copies usually produced to ensure against failures and this kind of legal action. Some sites were registered in Belgium, Germany and the Christmas Islands, through domain registrars other than Dynadot and so were not affected by the injunction.
Fans of the site and its mission rushed to publicize those alternate addresses this week.
In a separate order, also issued Friday, White ordered Wikileaks to stop distributing the bank documents. The second order, which the judge called an amended temporary restraining order, did not refer to the permanent injunction but may have been an effort to narrow it.
Lawyers for the bank and Dynadot did not respond to requests for comment. White has scheduled a hearing in the case for Feb. 29.
On its site, Wikileaks compared White's orders with ones eventually overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Pentagon Papers case in 1971. In that case, the federal government sought to enjoin publication by The New York Times and The Washington Post of a secret history of the Vietnam War.
"The Wikileaks injunction is the equivalent of forcing The Times' printers to print blank pages and its power company to turn off press power," the site said, referring to the order that sought to disable the entire site.
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The site said it was founded by dissidents in China and journalists, mathematicians and computer specialists in the United States, Taiwan, Europe, Australia and South Africa. Its goal, it said, is to develop "an uncensorable Wikipedia for untraceable mass document leaking and analysis."
White's order disabling the entire site "is clearly not constitutional," said David Ardia, 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."
Material from The Associated Press is included in this report.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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