Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Daniel Domscheit Berg

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
German

Movies
  
The Fifth Estate

Role
  
Spokesperson

Name
  
Daniel Domscheit-Berg

Other names
  
Daniel Schmitt


Daniel Domscheit-Berg Daniel DomscheitBerg Photos Former WikiLeaks Coworkers

Known for
  
former spokesperson for WikiLeaks, founder of OpenLeaks

Books
  
Inside WikiLeaks, Inside Wikileaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website

Similar People
  
Julian Assange, David Leigh, Bill Condon, Luke Harding, Josh Singer

Daniel domscheit berg why the world needs information transparency at imagine2012


Daniel Domscheit-Berg (né Berg; born 1978), previously known under the pseudonym Daniel Schmitt, is a German technology activist. He is best known for stealing and destroying whistleblower organization Wikileaks unpublished documents and the website encrypted submission system. . He is the author of Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website (2011).

Contents

Daniel Domscheit-Berg Daniel DomscheitBerg TheXtraordinary

After leaving WikiLeaks, he announced plans in January 2011 to open a new website for anonymous online leaks called OpenLeaks. At a Chaos Computer Club (CCC) event in August 2011, he announced its preliminary launch and invited hackers to test the security of the OpenLeaks system, as a result of which the CCC criticized him for exploiting the good name of the club to promote his OpenLeaks project and expelled him from their club, despite his lack of membership. This decision was revoked in February 2012. In September 2011, several news organizations cited Domscheit-Berg's split from Julian Assange and WikiLeaks as one of a series of events and errors that led to the release that month of all 251,287 United States diplomatic cables in the Cablegate affair. In 2011, he was named by Foreign Policy magazine in its FP Top 100 Global Thinkers, with Sami Ben Gharbia and Alexey Navalny. Since then he has lapsed into obscurity.

Daniel Domscheit-Berg wwwfordhallforumorgwpcontentuploads201102D

Talk with internet activists anke and daniel domscheit berg talking germany


WikiLeaks

Daniel Domscheit-Berg Daniel DomscheitBerg Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Domscheit-Berg began working with WikiLeaks after meeting Assange at the Chaos Computer Club's annual conference (24C3) in 2007. On 25 September 2010, after reportedly being suspended by Assange for questioning him too much, Domscheit-Berg told Der Spiegel that he was resigning, saying "WikiLeaks has a structural problem. I no longer want to take responsibility for it, and that's why I am leaving the project."

Daniel Domscheit-Berg Daniel DomscheitBerg The Man who Soldout WikiLeaks

Domscheit-Berg was highlighted in the Sveriges Television programme WikiRebels - The Documentary, released in the second week of December 2010.

Daniel Domscheit-Berg Daniel DomscheitBerg Gulltaggen

A book about his experience with and separation from WikiLeaks was released in Germany in February 2011, entitled Inside WikiLeaks: Meine Zeit bei der gefährlichsten Website der Welt ("My Time at the World's Most Dangerous Website"). An English translation followed some days later by Australian publisher Scribe Publications. In Domscheit-Berg's book he criticizes Julian Assange's leadership style and handling of the Afghan War Diaries.

Domscheit-Berg stated he would destroy WikiLeaks data when leaving WikiLeaks. He wanted to be sure that duplicates would be confirmed deleted by a notary with an affidavit. In leaving, WikiLeaks state that Domscheit-Berg representing OpenLeaks, held the organisation to ransom over the unpublished documents and internal organisation communications with mediations by a member of the hacker collective Chaos Computer Club between OpenLeaks and WikiLeaks. Domscheit-Berg apparently told weekly Der Freitag that "I took no documents from WikiLeaks with me", leading to suspension of mediations. Domscheit-Berg was eventually kicked out of Chaos Computer Club due to his conduct during the mediation and for requesting the Chaos Computer Club to test OpenLeaks' security. This decision was revoked in February 2012 by the general assembly of the Chaos Computer Club.

WikiLeaks and other sources later confirmed the destruction of over 3500 unpublished whistleblower communications with some communications containing hundreds of documents, including the US government's No Fly List, 5 GB of Bank of America leaks, insider information from 20 neo nazi organizations and proof of torture and government abuse of a Latin American country.

OpenLeaks

In December 2010, Domscheit-Berg announced the intention to start a site named "OpenLeaks" with the intention of being more transparent than WikiLeaks. "In these last months, the WikiLeaks organization has not been open any more. It lost its open-source promise."

Instead of publishing the documents, Domscheit-Berg said that his proposed OpenLeaks process would send the leaked documents to various news entities or publishers.

OpenLeaks was supposed to start public operations in January 2011. However, on 23 December 2012 Domscheit-Berg announced on the website that the organisation would not go ahead as previously intended and would now only focus on spreading information and expertise regarding how to set up and run leak websites rather than directly facilitating leaks themselves.

Book: Inside WikiLeaks

  • Daniel Domscheit-Berg (2011). Inside WikiLeaks: Meine Zeit bei der gefährlichsten Website der Welt (in German). Berlin: Econ Verlag. ISBN 978-3-430-20121-6. 
  • Daniel Domscheit-Berg (2011). Inside WikiLeaks: my time with Julian Assange at the world's most dangerous website. Carlton North, City of Melbourne: Scribe Publications. ISBN 978-1-921844-05-8. Retrieved 2011-02-09. 
  • Daniel Domscheit-Berg (2011). Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website. New York City: Random House. ISBN 978-0-307-95191-5. Retrieved 2011-02-10. 
  • References

    Daniel Domscheit-Berg Wikipedia