Wikileaks and the Age of TransparencyThe United States government is diligent--some might say to the point of obsession--in defending its borders against invaders. Now we are told a small, international band of renegades armed with nothing more than laptops presents the greatest threat to the U.S. regime since the close of the Cold War. WikiLeaks' release of a massive trove of secret official documents has riled politicians from across the spectrum. Even noted free-speech advocate Floyd Abrams blames WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for the certain defeat of federal shield-law legislation protecting journalists. Hyperbole, hysteria? Certainly. Welcome to the Age of Transparency. But political analyst and writer Micah Sifry argues that WikiLeaks is not the whole story: It is a symptom, an indicator of an ongoing generational and philosophical struggle between older, closed systems, and the new open culture of the Internet. Despite Assange's arrest, the publication of secret documents continues. As Sifry shows, this is part of a larger movement for greater governmental and corporate transparency: "When you combine connectivity with transparency--the ability for more people to see, share and shape what is going on around them--the result is a huge increase in social energy, which is being channeled in all kinds of directions." |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
activists agencies Amazon American Andrew Rasiej Assange’s Barack Obama bill blog bloggers Cablegate cables called campaign citizens collaboration Congress congressional country’s Daniel Ellsberg database December Democrats Department developers disclosure documents Domscheit-Berg earmarks election Ellsberg Facebook going Google government data government’s Guardian human rights January January 28 Joe Biden journalists Julian Assange leaders leaked lobbyist Malamud million mySociety nonprofit officials Okolloh open data open government Open House Project organization Parliament participation Party Patriots PayPal Pentagon Papers Personal Democracy Forum political President published questions Rakar real-time Recovery.gov redact release reports secrecy secret Senator share Sifry social media social networking speech started Sunlight Foundation talk Tea Party TED conference told transparency movement Twitter United users Ushahidi volunteers vote Washington WikiLeaks Wikipedia wrote York YouTube
