Wikispooks:Anonymous Submissions

From Wikispooks
Revision as of 17:30, 14 October 2018 by Robin (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "WikiSpooks" to "Wikispooks")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Envelopeopenindigo.png

As of January 2017, Wikispooks has withdrawn provision of an Anonymous file upload upload facility.

Anonymous submissions are still welcome but, in view of low historical usage of the secure upload-form facility, pgp-encrypted email (with or without file attachments) is the only practical method available for the site. Use of pgp-encryption with a single-use email address over a public WiFi facility is probably as 'anonymous' as was the discontinued form.

Note: Unless anonymity is of fundamental importance, the best way to publish a document file on Wikispooks is through the 'Regular file upload' page, available to all registered users. Files uploaded using this option are immediately available to both view and edit on the Wikispooks site.

What Wikispooks does with an anonymous submission

  1. The received file name is entered in a simple, publicly accessible list on the 'Anonymous Uploads Received' page, topmost entry latest. This is a manual process and may take up to two days from actual receipt of the upload. The purpose of the page is simply to give uploaders additional confidence that the file upload was successful. There is no receipt date/time entered since this could become a major input for anyone trying to trace the source of the information. Note: The actual upload file name is listed, NOT the file(s) contained inside any zip file at this stage.
  2. Subject it to preliminary vetting for Wikispooks suitability.
  3. If judged suitable
    • reformat the submission to remove any possibility of it being traceable back to the originator.
    • forward it to at least three other sites that actively solicit "whistlebower" information.
    • publish the document to Wikispooks with a skeleton explanatory page. This page can be viewed by anybody and edited by registered users
  4. If judged unsuitable on preliminary vetting
    • seek the consensus view of Wikispooks administrators.
      • If majority administrator view is "suitable" proceed with steps outlined at 3.
      • If majority administrator view is "unsuitable", remove the submission from Wikispooks servers.

More on the anonymous submission vetting process

Wikispooks focus is on the deceptions of authority epitomised by the Official Narrative of almost all events of significance affecting public policy and the exercise of power, together with the arbitrary and/or abusive exercise of power. That focus effectively defines the criteria for the suitability of anonymously received information for publication. Anyone who is privy to such information and, with those criteria in mind, feels aggrieved, outraged or just plain public-spirited enough to wish to make it widely known, is likely to see it published on Wikispooks and/or elsewhere following an anonymous upload.

A non-exclusive list of candidates for non-publication are: axe-grinding, agenda-promoting, disinformation, advertising, obvious spam and probably a few others - all with the caveat that disinformation (recognised or not) may make it to a Wikispooks page anyway. Obvious examples of disinformation may be published for a bit of fun. ALL published anonymous uploads have a 'Registered User editable' and 'publicly readable' talk/discussion page attached.

Tips on maintaining anonymity

There is no way to guarantee that any form of internet-based communication will remain anonymous. The internet surveillance activities of SIS's, their Agencies and contractors, together with their technical forensic capabilities, are simply too comprehensive to allow anyone using a single ISP and home computer to remain anonymous for long if their internet activities are of the remotest possible interest to Authority. The age of Orwell's 'Big Brother' really is upon us in other words. However, there are a number of simple steps you can take to increase the likelihood of a successful anonymous document submission to Wikispooks:

  1. Use an anonymous proxy service such as Tor for your submission.
  2. Use a private VPN service such as BTGuard so that all your internet site visits can be logged only by the VPN provider and NOT your ISP. Most VPN providers undertake to delete their logs daily but, as with all other 'anonymity' services the watchword should be Caveat Emptor.
  3. Use PGP encryption for your emails - See here for a simple effective open-source PGP email solution that Firefox browser users can get up and running in just a few minutes. There are also open source PGP solutions for MS Outlook, Thunderbird and assorted other email clients available here
  4. If you have more than one document file, bundle them into a single compressed Zip file.
  5. Upload your file to a single recipient only - then wait a week or two to see what happens.

If you upload multiple files or to multiple recipients, the prospects of successful interception/diversion/copying by Authorities during transmission are correspondingly multiplied. If you upload to Wikispooks, our first action after reformatting it to remove information that could tie it to a particular machine operating system and/or user, is to forward it to at least 3 other sites dedicated to shining light in dark places, so that multiple submissions should be unnecessary.

Remember that evidence of your having stored the document and sent it to Wikispooks may remain on your computer and be accessible using forensic examination tools. An effective way of frustrating such forensics is to use a LiveCD operating system to boot your computer before sending the document and to store the document using a system such as Truecrypt which facilitates a "hidden encrypted volume" whose existence is plausibly deniable because it cannot be forensically proven to exist at all.

Final judgement on what is and is not suitable for publication on this site rests of course with Wikispooks administrators.

A Final note on encryption and anonymity

The nature of our surveillance society dictates that those who use encrypted communications and make strenuous attempts to maintain anonymity will be of considerably more interest to the SIS's and other 'Powers-That-Be' than those who do not. The value of such efforts therefore becomes a matter of judgment and warrants careful consideration.

Wikispooks PGP public encryption key

Click here for the Wikispooks PGP public encryption key and brief information about how to use it to encrypt your email exchanges with Wikispooks.

See Also

Wikispooks logo.png Policy.png Wikispooks to do.png Tools2.png SMW.png Help.png