New York Times Kicks Off Media Frenzy With First Published WikiLeaks Reports
About 12 hours before Wikileaks latest enormous leak was scheduled to be released, a Twitter user bought a copy of a German news magazine outlining the leak after it was placed on newstands too early, according gawker.com.
According to tweets from German-speaking Twitter users who snagged an embargoed copy of this week's Der Spiegel (cover above), the cache of over 250,000 confidential diplomatic cables may be a bit of a let-down. At least from the German point of view there are no earth-shattering revelations, just a lot of candid talk about world leaders.
Angela Merkel is praised as "teflon," though she "avoids risk and is rarely creative," and German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle is repeatedly bashed. There is talk of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's "wild parties," (duh) and Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is likened to Hitler. French President Nicolas Sarkozy is called an "emperor with no clothes." The cables also show Obama has "no emotional relationship with Europe," focusing instead on Asian countries, according to Der Spiegel.
The full tranche of cables was scheduled to be released by Wikileaks Sunday afternoon at around 4:30 pm EST in concert with The New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel. The NYTimes posted coverage Sunday afternoon at 1:15pm,
But Sunday morning, a sharp-eyed Twitter user spotted a copy of Der Spiegel at a a rest area on the Germany-Switzerland border.
Read more here.
Also read here.
Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels (NYTimes Coverage)
A Note to Readers: The Decision to Publish Diplomatic Documents (NY Times)
WikiLeaks Hit By DDoS Attack Just as Its Newest Leak is Leaked Early (Mashable)
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