Exactly three years after the mysterious disappearance of Malaysia Airlines MH370 on March 7 2014 (17:19 UTC time), the international whistleblowing site Wikileaks dropped a bombshell on how the US Central Intelligence Agency could weaponize just about every “smart device” on the planet.
According to WikiLeaks: “‘Year Zero’” introduces the scope and direction of the ...
... into alleged ties to Russia[5], as well as in the form of popular comedy skits such as Saturday Night Live, or prominent talk show hosts[6] that present Trump as operating as a Russian Manchurian candidate. The recent Vault 7 CIA leaks published by WikiLeaks have also cast additional doubt on the truthfulness of the conclusions by US intelligence agencies that Russia was behind the hacking of the DNC, as evidence now exists that the agency has the capacity to hack into electronics leaving foreign ...
... diplomacy finds itself increasingly less effective without the support of informal structures. What are the prospects of this symbiosis and how is the emergence of new communication technologies affecting the style of public diplomacy?
The phenomenon of WikiLeaks is a new word in public diplomacy?
The idea of open diplomacy, from which came WikiLeaks and J. Assange’s idea to make how international affairs are carried out available to the public was taken from the past. It is possible to remember ...