By Aja Romano on August
17, 2013 Email
Someone
remind WikiLeaks that
the U.S does not respond well to blackmail.
We'd think
this was some kind of interactive
Internet mystery if we didn't know better, but in fact WikiLeaks has
released about 400 gigabytes' worth of mysterious data in a series of encrypted
torrent files called "insurance." And no one can open it.
With nothing
better to go on, the Internet has decided that "insurance" may be
code for "back off" to the U.S. government—coming just before the
sentencing of WikiLeaks cause célèbre Bradley Manning.
File
encryption means that the data is hidden and no one can see what's in the
shared files without a key to unlock them—which, of course, hasn't been
publicly released.
The size of
one of the files is 349 gigabytes, which means that there's either A) enough
textual data inside to power a nationwide security crisis for the next 300
years or so, or B) a few very incriminating pieces of video footage.
"I'm
getting the feeling these people are spreading some serious material," commented Facebook
onlooker Angel Gabriell.
WikiLeaks
abruptly released the files and asked the public to mirror them—on Facebook and Twitter, no
less, hardly the place you go to drop off highly classified intelligence.
But the most
popular theories between the comments of Facebook, Reddit, and Hacker News, are
that the data contains information about the identities of U.S. secret agents
currently serving around the world.
WikiLeaks
has always anonymized the names of any agents associated with the data in its
leaks in order to protect their identities. But with a filename like
"Insurance," a few people are betting that
the website is preparing for a fight with any governments who want to keep its
info out of the hands of the public.
Another
popular theory is that the files contain the entirety of a dump that came from
the latest WikiLeaks hero, Edward Snowden.
"[C]ould
it be that Snowden did a database dump of their entire mainframe, like Manning
essentially did?" speculated
a user called swiddie on Reddit. "The file could contain the personal
information on everyone, aka stasi files, the NSA ever spied on."
That file,
if it existed, could be far bigger than 400 gigs.
The files,
which were seeded as torrents publicly, went up around 1:30am Eastern, roughly
12 hours or so after a
sentencing judge called the actions of former U.S. soldier Bradley Manning in
leaking classified data to WikiLeaks "wanton and reckless."
If the files
actually are "insurance" to keep the U.S. government from tightening
the noose around the necks of Manning, Snowden, and WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange, then it's a risky gamble for the site to take, to say the least.
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