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WikiLeaks and the Age of Transparency
 
 

WikiLeaks and the Age of Transparency [Kindle Edition]

Micah L. Sifry , Andrew Rasiej
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 21, 2011
The United States government is diligent—some might say to the point of obsession—in defending its borders against invaders, be they terrorists, natural disasters, or illegal immigrants. 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. The WikiLeaks organizers themselves “are going to have blood on their hands” (U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman), it is the “9/11 of world diplomacy” (Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini), they present “a clear and present danger to the national security of the United States” (U.S. Congressman Peter King). Even noted free-speech advocate Floyd Abrams says that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange “may yet have much to answer for” and blames him for the certain defeat of federal shield-law legislation protecting journalists. Hyperbole, hysteria? Certainly. We heard much the same in 1971, when Daniel Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times (ironically, Abrams was the Times’ lawyer in that case).

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. “What is new,” he writes, “is our ability to connect, individually and together, with greater ease than at any time in human history. As a result, information is flowing more freely into the public arena, powered by seemingly unstoppable networks of people all over the world cooperating to share vital data and prevent its suppression.” Despite Assange’s arrest, the publication of secret documents continues, and websites replicating WikiLeaks’ activities have sprung up in Indonesia, Russia, the European Union, and elsewhere. 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.”


Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for WikiLeaks and the Age of Transparency

"An absorbing, comprehensive examination of one of the most vital issues of our time." —Publishers Weekly

"It's not a dig-up-the-dirt-on-Julian-Assange volume . . . In this work, Sifry examines other fronts in the battle for openness." —Mother Jones

“The effects of the ongoing WikiLeaks are cumulative––sort of like mercury poisoning––and reveal much about how dreadful many of our policies, especially regarding the war in Afghanistan, have been. With insight and clarity, Micah Sifry explores the red-hot spot where politics and the Internet intersect. An indispensable resource for the future fight over secrecy and openness.” —Arianna Huffington

“No one better grasps the interplay between innovative media technology and politics than Micah Sifry.” ––Kevin Phillips, author, Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism

“A leading participant in and observer of how the Internet is changing politics and society, Micah Sifry has given us a riveting, from-the-trenches report on how the clash between power, truth, access, transparency and small-d democracy is unfolding in our newly hyper-networked world. Inspired by WikiLeaks and the urgent debates that have been ignited by that phenomenon and its founder, Sifry explores the rise of the transparency movement in the US and around the world. This is a fascinating, trenchant and personal guide for smart, engaged people who seek to understand the new realities of this age of transparency.” —Katrina vanden Heuvel

“Micah Sifry doesn’t just know WikiLeaks. He sees how it relates to everything from the Obama’s victory to the Tea Party’s appearance to electoral politics in Croatia, and he uses his incredible breadth of experience to show us how WikiLeaks is part of a large, long-term trend in favor of the spread and visibility of information about our world, including information people often don’t want shared.” —Clay Shirky

“Just one piece of a much larger story of how the people and the powerful relate to each other: That’s how Micah Sifry sees WikiLeaks. By studying so carefully how technology is changing politics, he’s been preparing for years to write this book. We should be grateful that he actually did.” —Jay Rosen, Professor of journalism, New York University; author of PressThink.org

About the Author

Micah Sifry is the co-founder and executive editor of the Personal Democracy Forum (where Assange has spoken twice), editor of its award-winning techPresident.com blog, and a senior technology adviser to the Sunlight Foundation. A former editor and writer at The Nation magazine, he is the author of one book (Spoiling for a Fight, 2002), co-author of another (Is that a Politician in Your Pocket?, 2004) and co-editor of two anthologies: The Iraq War Reader (2003) and The Gulf War Reader (1991). He is also a member of the board of Consumers Union. His personal blog is at micah.sifry.com.

Product Details

  • File Size: 352 KB
  • Print Length: 224 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: OR Books (February 21, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B004R1QGLK
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #321,377 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
"WikiLeaks and the Age of Transparency" by Micah L. Sifry offers both a philosophical and practical assessment of the WikiLeaks phenomenon and the revolutionary path it may portend for the future. Mr. Sifry, who has years of experience reporting on technology and working for the cause of greater transparency and accountability in government, is the right man for the job. Mr. Sifry's keen perceptiveness and familiarity with many of the key players in the openness movement (including several interactions with Julian Assange) has prepared the author to deliver an extraordinarily astute and thought-provoking book.

Mr. Sifry does a superb job of contextualizing WikiLeaks' moment in history. Mr. Sifry describes as only he can how the Internet has provided a platform for the distribution of information, with results that can be quite discomfiting to those in power. He believes the controversy surrounding WikiLeaks has to do with its spectacular exposure of the contradictions of U.S. government policy: in which the rights of people elsewhere to challenge sovereign power is expressed on the one hand; while on the other hand, little to no tolerance is permitted when its own privileges might seem to have come under scrutiny.

Sharing his own personal experiences, Mr. Sifry discusses many lesser-known web sites that are subtly but inexorably changing politics as we know it. As Mr. Sifry demonstrates, the overall trend has been towards the wider sharing and use of information. Some might be surprised that the author's main concern is not that government and business could ever succeed at putting the information genie back in the bottle; rather it is about the rate at which ordinary citizens can adapt to a new reality in which we have access to much more information than ever before possible.

On that point, Mr. Sifry reopens the WikiLeaks case to discuss its meaning for participatory democracies. Although Mr. Sifry does not believe that Assange's peculiar personality and WikiLeaks' frequently-changing mission statement has helped its cause, he unreservedly supports the public's right to know what its government is doing. Although it should probably come as no surprise that certain dim wit politicians would lash out at WikiLeaks, the many attempts to prosecute Assange and to close the site does raise concerns about how the public might be able to permanently secure a stable platform for discussing important issues without fear of censorship or reprisal.

I highly recommend this outstanding book to everyone.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Micah Sifry's work has long been at the cutting edge of the intersection of technology and policy. (Note: He's a friend.) In this book, he does a terrific journalistic service: He connects the dots and offers context.

The book, as the title suggests, is less about WikiLeaks -- though there's plenty of nuanced discussion about that controversial media innovator -- than about the emerging information ecosystem. Transparency is being forced upon opaque institutions and practices. On balance this is a positive development, but the downsides are not trivial.

If you want to know why WikiLeaks matters so much, how it fits into that wider ecosystem and why these developments are so important to the future of politics and policy, you won't find a better place to start than this book.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By sien
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Wikileaks and the Age of Transparency (2011) by Micah Sifry is an interesting but flawed book about Wikileaks and how the internet is changing politics. It uses the fame of Wikileaks to promote the author's own agenda.

Sifry is a successful and interesting person who set up the Personal Democracy Forum and works with Techsoup in similar domains. The book refers to his endeavors repeatedly. It's a serious problem with the book that it is annoyingly self-promoting.

What's good about the book is that it places Wikileaks in context which is so important and is often so lacking in discussions about Wikileaks. Sifry points out that Crypthome was doing what Wikileaks does long before it did but hasn't had nearly the impact that Wikileaks has had. In addition to this Wikileaks is just one of a myriad of sites and movements that the internet has made possible. Sifry discusses the Move On movement, the Tea Party and the uprisings in the Middle East and points out that they have a lot in common.

Sifry writes about how the internet means that far more government, corporate and non-profit information is now available easily to people. He also writes about how various government have repeatedly made noise about how they would put more information online and then have usually backed off.

Sifry also makes good points about Wikileaks and points out that what it is doing is providing information that causes foreign regimes problems with openness, such as with Wikileaks role in Kenya and other places, but that it is also doing it to Western democracies.

The book contains a lot of good ideas but is flawed. It would be great if the author, or someone else, wrote another more considered, less self-promoting work about how the massive increase in electronic information that is happening is changing politics. This book is still worth reading but is ultimately unsatisfying because it fails to put together a really coherent, deeper and more considered view.
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Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
The "Age of Transparency" is here: not because one transnational online network dedicated to open information and whistle-blowing named WikiLeaks exists, but because the knowledge of how to build and maintain such networks is now widespread. &quote;
Highlighted by 11 Kindle users
&quote;
If we promote the use of the Internet to overturn repressive regimes around the world, then we have to either accept the fact that these same methods may be used against our own regimeor make sure our own policies are beyond reproach. &quote;
Highlighted by 10 Kindle users
&quote;
What is needed is not a call for radical transparency, which some might interpret WikiLeaks' mission to be. Rather, we should be demanding that the default setting for institutional power be "open," and when needed those same powers should be forced to argue when things need to remain closed. &quote;
Highlighted by 9 Kindle users

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