Meet #JulianAssange's family at Plan ₿ Forum 2023.
Financial freedom and freedom of speech will be central to the event.
Get your ticket now! 👉 planb.lugano.ch/planb-forum/
#LuganoPlanB 
Tour d‘Assange
I still meet people who are completely unaware of how unfair Julian Assange is treated.
But they are getting less and less.
I don’t know anyone who, after knowing the facts, doesn’t stand up for Assange.
Not a single person. 
Danke Free Assange Hamburg! ❤️
#FreeAssangeNOW
German newspaper „Frankfurter Rundschau“ Frontcover:
„Mrs. Bärbock, help Assange!“
Should be the on the Frontcover of all newspapers every single day!
#FreeAssange NOW 
#FreeAssange 
Happy birthday Roger Waters!
Nils Melzer / The Trial of Julian Assange 
Schade! Ich werde dich vermissen!
😢
In case you don’t know:
Wikileaks did publish the unredacted material after it was already in the public domain.
Let‘s have a look at the chronology:
Summer 2010:
WikiLeaks gives investigative journalist David Leigh access to the US diplomatic cables which are stored on a website as encrypted file with the filename “xyz_z.gpg”.
28 November 2010:
The Guardian, El Pais, Le Monde, Der Spiegel and the New York Times begin publishing redacted cables from WikiLeaks. WikiLeaks is subjected to a denial-of-service attack.
2 December 2010:
WikiLeaks service provider EveryDns.net terminates DNS hosting for WikiLeaks to protect its other customers against the denial-of-service attack on WikiLeaks.
4 December 2010:
Third-party organisations begin to mirror information from WikiLeaks by creating mirrors of the information on websites and BitTorrent. Some of the mirrors include the encrypted file given to David Leigh “xyz_z.gpg”.
1 February 2011:
David Leigh publishes his book WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange’s war on secrecy. The book disclosed the passphrase for accessing the encrypted file containing the unredacted diplomatic cables.
25 August 2011:
Der Freitag reports that it has discovered a copy of the full archive on the internet and was able to decrypt it using a passphrase found on the internet.
31 August 2011:
The website Cryptome publishes a report on the passphrase and which file it decrypts. A searchable copy of the decrypted cables appears on the website mrkva.eu. WikiLeaks makes a public statement about the disclosure of the passphrase in Leigh’s book.
1 September 2011:
A user called “droehein” creates a BitTorrent on the Pirate Bay website sharing the decrypted cables.
2 September 2011: Wikileaks republished the unredacted cables on the WikiLeaks site.
Source: Christian Grothoff, an expert in network security from the University of Applied Sciences in Bern, Switzerland

Der Koch hat frei heute.
Soll mir ja niemand sagen, ich könne nicht kochen.
nostr:npub1ewe0qgak4gykym236t6w4x06jyuw4q8v040lmn5lamude434yqcsz7uqlw ? 😁 
😅 I‘ve been here quite a while -
never seen nostr like that:
😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫😵💫
🤣
I‘ll bring my family to nostr if that‘s ok with you. 😏
Have I already told you that my father was the youngest child of 10 children and I am No. 8 out of 10 children as well?
With uncles and aunts with partners and children and my siblings with partners and children, the clan counts almost 100 people - close family.
And fucking X wants to make me believe my Assange supporting posts can‘t get 5 likes. 

