Wikileaks Decides: If The US Gov't Won't Create A Real Shield Law, We'll Shield Journalists Instead

from the technology-to-the-rescue dept

With the US federal gov’t continually watering down and limiting any attempt at a federal shield law to help protect journalists from being pressured into revealing their sources, it looks like the site Wikileaks wants to help. It’s trying to set up a system, whereby a source can leak information directly to a journalist for a period of time, before Wikileaks goes public with the info. But, either way, Wikileaks promises to protect the source, keeping the journalist separate from the source. While I have no idea if this particular program will actually work, it does show the futility of politicians trying to water down such a shield law. It seems like every time politicians try to do these sorts of things, the internet comes to the rescue with its own solutions.

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Comments on “Wikileaks Decides: If The US Gov't Won't Create A Real Shield Law, We'll Shield Journalists Instead”

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15 Comments
James (profile) says:

Internet comes to the rescue? Not for long. People think it is great that the US is “giving up” control over the internet. What our governement is “giving up” is having to deal with US law over issues like spying on email and other stuff. better to give it up to the UN who will then allow the governements of the world to do whatver they like in the name of “law inforcement”. Just like this pesky “bill of rights”. better to give and international police for jurisdiction in all countries of the world. Sorry chaps, feel like your rights were violated? the constutution of the US only protects you from the US government. Not the UN and not INTERPOL.

Davis Freeberg (user link) says:

Straw Man

The issue isn’t about stripping journalists of their rights or discouraging members of the public from sharing evidence of a crime with the press, it’s about preventing people from refusing to cooperate in police investigations by claiming that their Twitter account gives them a shield. There will still be plenty of journalists that people can leak to as well, they just won’t be able to clam up if they spill the beans on a public forum.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Straw Man

The issue isn’t about stripping journalists of their rights or discouraging members of the public from sharing evidence of a crime with the press,…

Err, in many cases that is exactly what may happen.

…it’s about preventing people from refusing to cooperate in police investigations….

And journalists ARE people.

…by claiming that their Twitter account gives them a shield.

I find your claim that it would only apply to Twitter accounts to be deceptive. In fact, the law doesn’t even mention Twitter. Talk about straw men. Oh well, I give you credit for at least being honest enough to disclose “Straw Man” in your subject line.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Straw Man

“There will still be plenty of journalists that people can leak to as well”

Journalists who would either

A: Censor it

B: Report it and make it their intellectual property.

No thanks. The laws should allow me to communicate it directly to the public, anonymously, without making it anyone’s intellectual property. PERIOD.

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