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kompas - Wednesday, December 1
Julian Assange, wrecker Corruption
KOMPAS.com - For the fans, Julian Assange is a courageous truth warrior. For his critics, he is a publicity seeker who has a lot of people with life-threatening present sensitive information to the public domain.
Assange is an Australian journalist, Internet activist, known as a spokesman and Chief Editor of Wikileaks, a website that put confidential documents. Launched in 2006, a nonprofit organization that has the mission of divulge confidential information to combat corruption in government and corporate.
According to people who had worked with him, Assange energetic, ambitious, and very intelligent, with an uncanny ability to break computer codes.
Nomadic He has lived in several countries. He said he would continue to move to handle Wikileaks from an arbitrary location. He could not eat the old and focus to work with little sleep, according to Raffi Khatchadourian, the New Yorker magazine reporter who traveled with him for several weeks, as mentioned in the BBC News profiles prepared.
"He created the atmosphere around it, which makes people close to him want to take care of it to help him continue to work," Khatchadourian said. "This is probably because of his charisma."
Julian Paul Assange born in Townsville, Queensland, Australia, in 1971, of parents who run a traveling theater group that moved around a lot.
He left home when 16 years old and at age 18 had a son. He and his girlfriend and child custody fight.
In 1992, Assange Australian federal police arrested and pleaded guilty to 24 charges of hacking and released with a fine of 2100 Australian dollars.
He had studied physics and mathematics at the University of Melbourne, although not to a degree.
Assange start Wikileaks-which had nothing to do with Wikipedia-year 2006 with a group of people with similar thoughts: leaking secret documents to combat corruption in government and corporate.
He sat in with a nine-member advisory body and, although not referred to as the "founder", the decision to publish the document to the site was in hand.
Disclosure of documents about Iraq, Afghanistan, and Iran is considered dangerous for the government to make certain. That's one reason he kept moving. (Reuters / DI)

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