LOL...
"WikiLeaks criticizes lack of access to Panama Papers"
"Whistleblowing group WikiLeaks criticized the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists' decision not to allow open access to documents
that show how wealthy people have links to offshore financial services. "If
you censor more than 99% of the documents you are engaged in 1% journalism
by definition," WikiLeaks said in a tweet Wednesday."
See:
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2016/04/07/wikileaks-criticizes-lack-access-panama-papers/82736064/ Interesting that I now find myself on Julian Assange's side of the fence!
-- Jack Krupansky
On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 1:40 PM, Klaus Ramelow <Klaus.Ramelow@gmx.de> wrote:
> in my opinion,
> it is the "nature" of open source to be open to erverybody who is
> interested in it
> and use it and / or modify it under the respective GPL
>
> Klaus
>
>
> Am 07.04.2016 um 18:38 schrieb SIDDHAST® Roshan:
>
>> It is not necessary that open source is available to you. open source mean
>> that code is open to client. Now it is on Client how he provide it or sell
>> it . If client further sells it he or she shall also open the code.
>> Hope you got it
>> Roshan
>> On Apr 7, 2016 8:55 PM, "Jack Krupansky" <jack.krupansky@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> Hmmm... I seem to have missed it, but remind me where the link is for
>>> public access? I mean, if this is all open source, it should be available
>>> to me, right?
>>>
>>> -- Jack Krupansky
>>>
>>> On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 6:52 AM, Erik Hatcher <erik.hatcher@gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Also of note, Blacklight was used for the Solr-based UI -
>>>> http://projectblacklight.org
>>>>
>>>> And another link about the data analysis process -
>>>>
>>>>
>>> https://ijnet.org/en/blog/how-icij-pulled-large-scale-cross-border-investigative-collaboration
>>>
>>>> "Layered on top was the shiny interface, built using Blacklight, another
>>>> open source development."
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Apr 6, 2016, at 04:45, Uwe Schindler <uschindler@apache.org> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> I just wanted to repost the following by Chris Mattman on the TIKA
>>>>>
>>>> list:
>>>
>>>> If you have been following the news you’ve seen the Panama papers and
>>>>>
>>>> how the world’s rich and elite have been storing all their money
>>>> offshore
>>>> to hide it. Two of the ASF’s key technologies were used in uncovering
>>>>
>>> that
>>>
>>>> story and showing the world what was going on: Apache Tika and Apache
>>>>
>>> Solr.
>>>
>>>> Solr was used for making the Terabytes of Panama Papers available to
>>>>>
>>>> journalists. The preprocessing of the documents for indexing was done
>>>>
>>> with
>>>
>>>> Tika (maybe through the contrib/extraction module).
>>>>
>>>>> Here is the article by Forbes about that:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>> http://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2016/04/05/panama-papers-amazon-encryption-epic-leak
>>>
>>>> Uwe
>>>>>
>>>>> -----
>>>>> Uwe Schindler
>>>>> uschindler@apache.org
>>>>> ASF Member, Apache Lucene PMC / Committer
>>>>> Bremen, Germany
>>>>> http://lucene.apache.org/
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>>>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-help@lucene.apache.org
>>>>>
>>>>>
> --
> Mail-Anhang - Dementies
>
> /D e m e n t i e s/
>
> stellen die Basis
>
> in der Politik ...
>
> (Klaus Ramelow 2015)
>
>