QM, as I said, in my opinion generally one is free (i.e. has the choice) to tell of what one knows, including the trivial, personal (your accounts) or whatever. I would feel free to tell/show you anything I know without requiring you to keep it secret - then repeat that ad infinitum. Mischief is in the eye of the beholder and in that will be such a perception by those who don't want to be quoted (or their deeds made known, whether crimes or not). The question this thread raised was whether Wikileaks are doing anything illegal - my perception, under the presumption of freedom of expression, is that they are not doing anything illegal. There is absolutely no doubt that what they are doing annoyes the hell out of some, and indeed that in some countries what they have done is very possibly distinctly illegal. However, the internet is not the preserve of any single country's laws - what one does legally in one country is just that even though elsewhere it may be illigal - and thereby arises the question central to this thread. We once had the absurdity of something being published in France, but could not be quoted in the UK - the whole world knew but it could not be breathed on a few islands. The issues raised by Wikileaks are to me essentially ones of morality, not ones of crime versus innocence. Whether you choose to hold a group of institutions/officials/etc. up to the light is up to you, some will consider you mischievous, others brave, yet others perhaps amusing or the whole storm just plain uninteresting. Those who are furious would like it to be treated as a crime, whether there is any basis for that or not. If the messenger is handed over to a country where his otherwise free expression is illegal then clearly he is likely to be prosecuted. In the old days to question the system was illegal in the Soviet Union but the US and the West were vocal in protest and felt righteous when they "freed" and/or "protected" defectors. Now certain countrie