'Trouble in Paradise': GOP Plan to Reopen DHS Is Looking a Little Shaky
Pam Bondi Reportedly Isn't the Only One on the Chopping Block
AI-Powered Schools Might Be Coming to Your Neighborhood
Cinematic History Is the Kryptonite of 'Supergirl' Lead Actress Milly Alcock
Jim Acosta Proudly Delivers Toilet Content, and Trump's War Speech Sees the Press...
Will Gov. Spanberger Ignore Detainers for These Violent Criminal Illegals? ICE Is Warning...
Fewer Than Half the Number of Guns Turned in Than Canadian Government Expected
BBC Radio Should Have an IQ Requirement for Its People, Apparently
Watch an Old Clip of Charlie Kirk Debating a Student on Birthright Citizenship
Stephen A. Smith Explains Why He Regrets Voting for Kamala Harris
New CNN Poll: Even Democrats Are Done With Democrats
The White House's New Fraud Task Force Takes Down It's First Target in...
Massachusetts Democrat Wants to Tap Millionaire’s Tax to Fund Legal Defense of Illegal...
Multi-State Team Rehabilitation Services Settles Alleged Overbilling Scheme for $4.9M
New Jersey Man Charged in Multi-Million Dollar No-Fault Insurance Fraud Scheme
Tipsheet

Did the U.S. Government Attack WikiLeaks?

Did the U.S. Government Attack WikiLeaks?
It's astonishing that WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, is not scuttled away with some military drone or remote CIA operation. The U.S. government may have struck back in some way, however, after WikiLeaks reported a massive denial of service attack. That doesn't really matter  — Spain's El Pais, France's Le Monde, Germany's Der Spiegel, Britain's Guardian newspaper and The New York Times vowed to publish the documents anyway. But the denial of service attack might indicate that our government is seeking to fight back in some way.
Advertisement


It will be hard to tell exactly what involvement our government may have had given the nature of the attacks. ABC:
In a typical denial-of-service attack, remote computers commandeered by rogue programs bombard a website with so many data packets that it becomes overwhelmed and unavailable to visitors. Pinpointing the culprits is impossible because the Internet's structure does not allow for the tracing back of the data packets used in such attacks, computer security expert Bruce Schneier told The Associated Press on Sunday.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement