I don't think there's a soul among us who didn't grin and rub their hands together eagerly the first time they read about Wikileaks. The notion of anonymous whistleblowers getting a safe place to drop damning stuff from anywhere in the world, and they'd make sure it got to the right reporters? Fan-freaking-tastic. I sent money, because it sounded awesome.
But expectations are a tough thing to live up to. Ask our President, for example. Wikileaks has had more to live up to every time it scored a goal -- a sports metaphor. Julian Assange may be many things, but a keen judge of human nature he isn't. If he were, he'd have paid more attention to sports -- particularly our species' ability to move goal posts.
We saw it in a matter of hours, from both sides: those who are against the latest diplomatic cable dump have said, nearly in the same breath, that the information is trite palace-intrigue gossip, even as it threatens U.S. diplomatic efforts worldwide. Similarly, those who support Assange's latest release argue both that the transparency is critical to the very survival of a vital democracy -- and, simultaneously, that the leaks are seemingly trivial because the "real dirty stuff" the government is doing would never be written down.
And we wonder why the ball never actually moves? :D
Not that Assange isn't the king of irony in his own right; the ferocity with which he guards attempts to un-rebrand his own history is well known in journalism circles. Bringing up his early attempts at "hacktivism" is a great way to bring an interview to a huffy close. As rumors of countless internal fallings-out swirl, calls for transparency within the ranks of Wikileaks itself, he argues, are character assassination meant to damage the organization and chill potential leakers. In his last interview he even went so far as to chide Wikileaks spin-offs and imitators for having inadequate security measures in place, pointing out how his own organization has grown
because people trust their privacy and anonymity will be protected....Did he really say that?
http://blogs.forbes.com/andygreenberg/2010/11/29/an-interview-with-wikileaks-julian-assange/">Yup.
"Our pipeline of leaks has been increasing exponentially as our profile rises, and our ability to publish is increasing linearly."
Interviewer: You mean as your personal profile rises?
"Yeah, the rising profile of the organization and my rising profile also. And there’s a network effect for anything to do with trust. Once something starts going around and being considered trustworthy in a particular arena, and you meet someone and they say “I heard this is trustworthy,” then all of a sudden it reconfirms your suspicion that the thing is trustworthy. So that’s why brand is so important, just as it is with anything you have to trust."
No one in their right mind would expect Assange and Wikileaks to be held to the same standard of a government, of course. But Wikileaks has been a grand disappointment, I think, for the same reasons we find ourselves periodically disappointed in government: repeated expressions of lofty ideals raise expectations, whether they write them in press releases or stamp them on coins. The set-up in enormous, and the payoff has to match it.
The sheer volume of the latest release may be, on its surface, enough to "top" the last one. But what next? The entire operation continues to lack consequence -- no one has yet to be
fired, much less indicted, for crimes revealed by any of the latest leaks. The only arrest so far has been of the
alleged leaker himself. Even Assange isn't really a target, breathless "insurance file" announcements to the contrary; the feds have made is clear their investigations will continue to focus on the source of the leaked information, an avenue that will get them a conviction -- and the most bang, shutting-up-leakers-wise, for their buck. Assange is probably the safest man on the planet; no one with two brain cells to rub together would risk creating a martyr in the information wars.
No one has asked Assange the most important question about all this, and the one I would if I could: are you genuinely surprised that the world hasn't changed?
Is anyone?