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Huge Interest Brings Wikileaks Offline
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Sat Mar 29, 2008 07:55 AM
from the yet-drudge-still-stands dept.
from the yet-drudge-still-stands dept.
DragonFire1024 writes "Wikinews.org — The Wikileaks website, which publishes sensitive and censored material submitted by anonymous contributors, has experienced unprecedented levels of Internet traffic today through public interest. This interest has caused the website's servers to be unable to meet the enormous demand of over 164 gigabytes of download traffic within twenty-four hours, leading the site to be temporarily inaccessible."
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Conspiracy theorys (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Freenet? (Score:2)
Re:Freenet? (Score:4, Informative)
According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikileaks#Technology [wikipedia.org] :
"Wikileaks is based on several software packages, including MediaWiki, Freenet, Tor, and PGP."
No-one involved with the Freenet project knows exactly how it uses Freenet; it certainly doesn't seem to be an official partnership.
Freenet is ideally suited to this kind of thing: freesites (Freenet's equivalent of websites) are fairly quick to retrieve and tend to stay in the network long-term. And of course, creating and reading them is totally anonymous and uncensorable.
There has been a lot of work done recently into making the Freenet installation process as easy as possible, and an official release of Freenet 0.7 is due in the next few weeks, so watch this space.
Parent
rubbing salt in the wound (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
This interest has caused the website's servers to be unable to meet the enormous demand of over 164 gigabytes of download traffic within twenty-four hours, leading the site to be temporarily inaccessible."
And so you post the story to slashdot with a link to the site in the summary. Why don't you give 'em papercut and pour lemon juice in, too?
I was thinking EXACTLY the same. But the site is still up so it seems they have done something about it. /. summary links to a text only page so byte traffic should be relatively light.
OTOH, it seems it was because they put the video Fitna on their site and that draw all the traffic. The
No matter what, good for them, more publicity for their cause.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
coral cache (Score:3, Informative)
Must be the thethans... (Score:5, Funny)
Wrong setup (Score:2)
Re:Wrong setup (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Server move (Score:5, Informative)
How ironic... (Score:2, Insightful)
So, if you're afr
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
As you said, you just can not "solve" the differences between Islam believers and the western society. Because for them, solving means that all of us convert to Islam. Some p
Re:How ironic... (Score:4, Insightful)
Whereas I do not doubt that everything shown in the film has happened, I do think that it is highly selective; someone trying to stir up trouble against Muslims.
There are people on both sides of this who are stirring the pot. I do not think that most muslims are seeking Jihad, however some are. I don't know enough about it. It is an error to put all muslims into one group, there are many different sects with different views, some benign, some not so.
Whatever you do: don't take everything at face value.
Parent
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People like you said the same thing about Judaism 70 years ago, and look how that turned out...
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Try thepiratebay.org and search for 'fitna', you'll find plenty of mirrors - and a lot of people are seeding it, too.
It's also still available on google video [google.com], but you'd have to rip the stream if you want to rehost it I guess.
This is largely due to Fitna (Score:4, Informative)
http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=3369102968312745410 [google.com]
—after Islamists told Wikileaks that they would be killed for hosting the film.
Not offtopic (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the Slashdot editors might have been looking for a story about Fitna that doesn't explicitly mention Fitna in the summary, since they no doubt wish to avoid getting some death threats of their own.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
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--after Islamists told Wikileaks that they would be killed for hosting the film.
Most users of Slashdot are intelligent enough to know the difference between Muslim and Islamist/Islamic Activist. However, the distinction is not as well understood among the general populations of both the Western and non-Western worlds. That's the sad part of it all. The resulting misconceptions about and misinterpretations of Islam are the cause of most of the violent and non-violent extremism shown by both sides.
For those who care to know, the term Islamist, when used in such a context, is generally a
Re: (Score:2)
Bullshit story / press release (Score:2)
Huge Interest (Score:3, Funny)
R.I.P Wikileaks
May you pay off your debt and rise once again.
Hmmmm. (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's only about 2MB/s on average, which shouldn't scare any decent web-server.
Sure enough, 2MB/s on average means bursts to some dozens of MB/s.... but what is the amount of data Slashdot has to deliver every day?
Re: (Score:2)
I know who it was... (Score:4, Funny)
Big news (Score:3, Funny)
164 GB/day = "enormous demand" ? Oh please ... (Score:2)
mirror, mirror on the net (Score:2)
Not a Lot of Bandwidth (Score:2)
No, this outage is more likely the result of shortsighted planning. Either
Moved more than that after a slashdotting (Score:3, Informative)
Got slashdotted a few years ago when I was hosting Beethoven's symphonies [slashdot.org] that the BBC had made available for download.
~167GB in 5 hours. More here [polyscience.org]. The MRTG graphs are fun:
The sheer volume of traffic in GB for wikileaks doesn't seem terribly surprising. Rather, I suspect it is the dynamic nature of the website that brought it down. Simple filehosting doesn't take much in terms of resources provided your pipe is fat enough. Dynamic content, OTOH, does. I suspect they'll need to tweak/implement a caching system to mitigate this problem going forward.
Damn it, that is misleading (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Now... If only (Score:2)
headline (Score:2)
Huge Interest Brings Wikileaks Offline
How about "drives"?
Also, it's not the interest that drove them offline, but the traffic. So maybe, "Massive Traffic Drives Wikileaks Offline."
Wikileaks back up, "Fitna" sucked. (Score:2)
Wikileaks is back up. I've seen "Fitna"; it looks like a YouTube mashup, zooms over stills and all. There's little original footage.
A much better comment on militant Islamic types, The Burqa Project [google.com], is down, though. That's a delightful little piece from 2005 showing three French models running around Paris in flowing, see-through burgas. Google still has thumbnails up, but the video site is now password protected.
As Heinlein liked to point out, religion needs a good belly-laugh once in a while.
Pfft, Wikileaks (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
WikiLeaks is awesome as it is - a place where anyone can put up any document, free of any fear that they might be tracked down. Why you think that that makes anything true on there, I have no idea. Seriously. Were you born just yesterday?
"Interest"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Surely the possibility that this is an attack rather than "interest" has crossed some people's minds? And if there is strong evidence that it isn't, why the hell isn't that evidence in the summary?
Re:Not offline? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Re:Not offline? (Score:4, Insightful)
But Wikileaks simply succumbed to an overwhelming demand of visitors. This news story is like saying "Look! People are actually reading shit about the Tibetan protests rather than trying to find out who Paris Hilton's new best friend is going to be! Oh my god!"
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Spread the word. (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
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The website would post a torrent, and would also seed the torrent. If nobody else seeded it then the website would end up uploading the file to anybody who asked for it - which is no worse than what they'd otherwise end up doing. However, as soon as more than one person starts downloading at the same time you get automatic load-distribution, and if anybody sticks around and seeds then you get even more bandwidth.
A
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
With the kind of material involved it could open up the "distributors" to repercussions in their home countries much more serious than those regarding copyright infringement; e.g. repercussions involving imprisonment, harassment, just being added to the wrong list, or even death in some places for treason.
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To make matters worse slashdot points to the site.