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February 29, 2008 12:00 PM PST

Judge: Wikileaks gets its domain name back

by Declan McCullagh
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Paul Levy outside courthouse

Public Citizen attorney Paul Levy, who had asked to intervene in the case on behalf of Wikileaks, speaks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in San Francisco after the judge hands down his ruling.

(Credit: Declan McCullagh/CNET News.com)

Updated at 1:42 p.m. and again at 5:02 p.m. PST.

SAN FRANCISCO--Wikileaks is getting its domain name back.

After spending more than three hours hearing arguments from a raft of attorneys--two representing the Swiss bank that fought to get the site's plug pulled and about 10 who have been trying to get the site back online--a federal judge here has ruled in favor of Wikileaks.

Wikileaks, which uses Wikileaks.org as its primary domain, is a whistle-blowing site that focuses on posting leaked documents.

"The court denies the motion for preliminary injunction, and the court hereby dissolves the injunction against (domain name registrar) Dynadot, and the litigation may now proceed," said U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White, who had called a brief recess around 11:40 a.m. PST, indicating that he was inclined to revisit his order from earlier this month that effectively pulled the plug on the Wikileaks.org domain name.

White said he will issue a written order very soon and added that he is skeptical that an injunction would survive free-speech scrutiny: "There are serious questions about prior restraint, possible violations of the First Amendment, which the court can make no definitive findings about at this point."

"The court has the obligation to get it right," White had told attorneys for Bank Julius Baer, or BJB, earlier Friday. "I took an obligation to uphold the Constitution. The court has its own obligation to raise these issues. Contrary to what you say, my obligation is to look down the road and see where this thing is going."

From the bank's perspective, it sued Wikileaks in federal court in California because the registrar, Dynadot, is located here. (Wikileaks alleges that the documents in question show that the bank supports the "ultrarich's offshore tax avoidance, tax evasion, asset hiding, and money laundering.")

But a host of free-speech groups, including Public Citizen, the California First Amendment Coalition, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Project on Government Oversight, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, requested to intervene in the case on behalf of Wikileaks.

They threw down a series of legal land mines against BJB, including that Wikileaks can't be sued in a U.S. court by a foreign company because it consists of foreigners; that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act prevents any action against Dynadot; that the First Amendment prohibits an overly broad attack against a Web site just to delete a subset of pages; that Dynadot cannot refuse to transfer the domain name to another registrar; and so on.

Some of the filings amounted to an implicit criticism of White, who granted the allegedly First Amendment-problematic order in the first place. So the first thing White did on Friday was defend himself--more to the half dozen reporters in the back of the room than to the attorneys.

"The parties need to understand, and those in this courtroom need to understand, the status of this case," White said. "This is a case in which we had a (dispute) with named parties, and the parties were duly served. One of which properly responded and came to this court with a proposed settlement in this lawsuit...Nobody filed any timely responses to the court's order."

While giving his ruling, White explained that the case is properly in his jurisdiction, in part because the domain name holder, an Australian citizen living in Kenya, sent an attorney to court Friday.

One attorney for BJB said there were no First Amendment problems, invoking a U.S. Supreme Court precedent dealing with an intercepted conversation played by a radio station because, "We allege, your honor, that Wikileaks has actively solicited the theft of private information...they are participants in the illegality."

BJB also said, "We're talking about private banking information, account numbers, personal numbers like Social Security numbers...all this is private information that's not newsworthy...None of the publishers here today would want their own banking information posted on the Internet."

The judge's preruling reply: "Let me play devil's advocate here. Is it newsworthy if some prominent citizen is...evading taxes, laundering funds? Wouldn't that be something in the public interest?"

(Update 5:02 p.m. PST) The judge's written opinion is out. It does three things; it denies BJB's request for a preliminary injunction; it dissolves the permanent injunction against Dynadot; and it sets a hearing schedule. One key phrase: "It is clear that in all but the most exceptional circumstances, an injunction restricting speech pending final resolution of the constitutional concerns is impermissible." As for the timing, the motions are due March 14, oppositions to those motions are due March 28, and reply briefs are due on April 4. The next hearing will be on May 16 at 9 a.m.

Declan McCullagh, CNET News' chief political correspondent, chronicles the intersection of politics and technology. He has covered politics, technology, and Washington, D.C., for more than a decade, which has turned him into an iconoclast and a skeptic of anyone who says, "We oughta have a new federal law against this." E-mail Declan.
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sic?
by Brandonius Maximus February 29, 2008 1:32 PM PST
Out of curiosity, what exactly was wrong with their quote that required a "(sic)"?:

"ultra-rich's (sic) offshore tax avoidance"

Looks right to me. Were you thinking it was supposed to say "ultra-riches" or something?
Reply to this comment
From Wikipedia: [sic]
by specv6racer March 1, 2008 10:47 AM PST
Sic is a Latin word meaning "thus", "so", "as such", or "just as that". In writing, it is placed within square brackets...

(sic) [sic]????
Hopefully they move the domain registration to a more democratic location
by richto February 29, 2008 2:54 PM PST
Like Iraq maybe?
Reply to this comment
Re: Default judgement
by dncarac February 29, 2008 5:38 PM PST
Hopefully next time they're sued, they'll make an appearance and not get hit with a default judgement. That's just too stupid.

DNC
View reply
Intellectually and Morally Defective Judiciary
by BobKalk February 29, 2008 4:40 PM PST
It would appear that Judge Jeffrey Dumb-ass White didn't see the light so much as feel the heat. It underscores the position that we need sites like Wikileaks if we are to ever get our democracy back.
Reply to this comment
Get Our Demorcracy Back?
by leafbreeze March 1, 2008 7:41 PM PST
Any time I see that the ACLU -- American Criminal Liberty Union -- is involved, I have to think twice about who's side I'm on. Sites like Wikileaks prey on sensationalism, hearsay, and manufactured proof (ala CBS and Dan Rather's faked documents about President Bush's Army Reserve time). You can't just post a so-called document and say "SEE! GUILTY!" BJB has every right to sue Wikileaks for libel since you can't defame someones character just to get business. BJB will probably win too since THAT IS HOW DEMOCRACY WORKS! You don't get to accuse people of wrong doing and then hide behind the First Amendment while you sell ad space, click throughs, and subscriptions. If you can't PROVE they did wrong -- then you OWE THEM FOR DAMAGES!! It's that simple. Now, if Wikileaks has actual facts to back up their claims, they also have nothing to worry about -- that is ALSO HOW DEMOCRACY WORKS!! But I would bet a dollar that Wikileaks will not survive the serious scrutiny they are about to receive. Which would explain why they need all those lawyers to keep their "web doors" open a little while longer. And the irony is that my dollars are already seeking some other source of news -- hence I'll be VOTING with my wallet on what I consider to be real journalism -- and that DEMOCRACY still exists too! For future reference, I suggest you go visit a country that does not have DEMOCRACY. Live there for awhile, try to criticize the government, its leaders, and its policies. Then, if you're still alive, come back to America -- the Greatest Country on the Face of this Earth -- and marvel in how GOOD you really have it here!! Until you REALLY have not had DEMOCRACY, you should shut your hole and go read the Constitution some more. And by the way, America is not a DEMOCRACY -- We are a Representative Republic... look it up! We don't need sites like Wikileaks -- we have enough tabloids as it is! Nuff said.
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Someday the intenet may even bring democratic freedoms to the USA.
by cyberbian March 1, 2008 2:52 AM PST
I hope we see that day!
It looks like corporations have superior standing to the individual today. Equality of rights with superiority of lawyers guns and money.
Reply to this comment
Dream On
by marc_90292 March 1, 2008 4:11 AM PST
But check csi-jacksonville.com for more disclosure of corruption
Reply to this comment
Jurisdiction not questioned
by dncarac March 1, 2008 7:44 AM PST
A judge, on his own, can question jurisdiction - meaning, among other things, was everyone properly served. He was satisfied enough to enter a default judgment. Next time you're served, make sure you show up.
Reply to this comment
by muthumadhu May 13, 2009 11:56 PM PDT
Hai,
Thanks for your information..I used website <a href="http://www.tucktail.com">www.tucktail.com</a>
for buy and register the domain.Its includes webhosting plans also
Reply to this comment
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