RacerDave, PinchValve, I'm not defending the media. I'm explaining there are existing laws on the books precisely for this sort of thing that have been there since the release of the Pentagon Papers caused a hubbub decades ago. The point is, publishing classified documents is quite legal. Releasing them is not. I didn't make the law, and I think it's kind of a weird distinction to make in the first place. But they didn't ask me.
Far from defending the media, I agree with Lainford. If they had been doing their job over the past, oh, 10 or 20 years, wikileaks would be largely irrelevant. But they don't, and we don't ask them to.
SVRex, I have no idea what motivates the leakers. Maybe they were offered hookers and blow, maybe they're just disgruntled jerks, maybe they see themselves as some sort of knighted whistle-blowers, telling truth to power at any cost. I have no clue.
I can only speak for myself, and I know when I put my years in, I just kept my mouth shut about pretty much everything I saw and heard. Under the UCMJ I would have been obligated to report anything I knew to be unlawful, but embarrassing and stupid? Hell that's what the military and government traffficks in daily. If you're going to release everything that's embarrassing and dumb, you'll have to release almost everything.
Regardless of all the above, I'm mostly interested in the whole thing because of what it signifies:
The internet is inherently decentralized, democratic and libertarian to the point of anarchy. And everything on the internet is a commodity. There is no scarcity, only dispersion.
It was built to be that way way back when the gov't ran it (and thought only they would have access). When everyone had access, it only accelerated and magnified the inherent traits built in. What we're seeing now is how those traits affect pretty much everything. Media was an obvious and easy first casualty, but wikileaks is the first example of how the internet will, inevitably, change the way governments operate. Essentially, we're seeing the same sort of power shift they saw in Gutenberg's day.
We can argue about it, and rail against the change, and wail and gnash our teeth, but this shift is happening. It WILL happen.
What really matters is how soon we come to grips with the new reality, and how well we manage to craft whatever comes next.