Well, that sucks, then. Apple is just plain wrong. WikiLeaks hasn't been proven to have broken any laws. There's been no legal case brought, let alone a conviction.
The main point here isn't that Wikileaks may of broken a law, but Apple's belief that the papers WikiLeaks
CHOSE to publish may put people innocent of any wrong doing at risk.
Not if its in the interest of public in cases where it is revealing misconducts or information that has been distorted by a governing bodies and in such form previously distributed to the public. Free press, public watch dog... Ring any bells? No? Is California part of China now?
Please point out here where anyone is bashing WikiLeaks for the revelation of the US or it's forces doing wrong (such as the previously mentioned helicopter incidence). I've seen none. The issue is them publishing information that could possibly put innocent (or even helpful) people at risk, and seem to be published just for the sake of publishing government documents.
As the guy who stole the pentagon papers didn't serve a day in prison, I'm not sure what the legal precedent is, you'll have to wait for the trial (and inevitable appeals) of Manning to know whether he committed a crime - US law is based on common law, and precedent is key..
One major difference - did a quick look up, and Ellsberg was a civilian at the time of the Pentagon Papers. Not active military, and if I'm not mistaken, the effect the defendent(s) accused actions (if found guilty of doing them) have on the morale of the rest of the military is taken into account on sentencing.
And yeah, that guy didn't serve a day in jail because it had more issues (someone after a conviction offered the judge directorship of the FBI? Smooth move...) than OJ's trial, leading to mistrial.
That only applies to Manning, not to Wikileaks.
wikileaks is only doing what are american Press and News organizations used to do..well that was before they became corporate puppets.
Publish information without regards to the ramifications it might have on those who have done nothing wrong?
Reminds me of how I was upset with the local newspaper the other day when it mentioned after being told locally the names of the police officers who shot and killed a man connected to a Mexican drug cartel would not be released after they were found in the right due to safety for them and their families, they went up north to the state capital to "go around mommy and ask daddy". Thankfully, the upper folks agreed with the local law agencies assessment of the situation.
The american press never had the power to distribute 250,000 top secret files to billions of people across the world. Nor would they print a document without reading it first. In other words, you're wrong 🙄
Not only that, they recognized that they have the power to NOT publish, as well.