Saturday, December 4, 2010

Who Will Be The First To Decrypt The Wikileaks "Insurance" File

With Julian Assange's arrest now seen by many to be a matter of days if not hours, it seems that the Wikileaks founder has taken some modest retaliation precautions, primarily along the lines of the infamous "letter in the mail should something happen to me." Using Bit Torrent, Wikileaks has distributed an "insurance" file, which however is encrypted, and the contents of which are unknown, although may possibly contain at least some of the infamous BofA incriminating selection. It is very possible that Wikileaks will release the encryption code upon Assange's arrest. That said, the insurance file, which can be downloaded from Pirate Bay at the following link, is merely 1.4 GB, and far less than the expected 5 GB which the BofA data issupposed to contain. Since Zero Hedge is read by quite a few hackers, we would like to extend the challenge to all to find the proper key to decrypt the insurance file and spill its contents to the general public.



Jim Sinclair’s Commentary
You can’t say we didn’t warn you!

Ben Bernanke on 60 Minutes: Doesn’t rule out QE3
Annalyn Censky and Colin Barr,
On Friday December 3, 2010, 5:06 pm EST
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke this Sunday will make his second appearance on 60 Minutes, defending the central bank’s controversial $600 billion bond buying program.
And he doesn’t rule out the possibility that more could be on the way.
"He explains why the Fed announced its intention to buy $600 billion in Treasury securities, defending against charges the move will lead to inflation and not ruling out the purchase of more," CBS said Friday.
The Fed’s latest move would mark the central bank’s second round of quantitative easing since the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. Nicknamed QE2, it is meant to stimulate the economy by keeping interest rates low and encouraging consumers to spend more and businesses to create jobs.
More…



Dear Dad:
Subject: Reading your blog is a daily illumination
"The survival of the fittest is an ageless law of nature, but the fittest are rarely the strong.  The fittest are those endowed with the qualifications for adaptation, the ability to accept the inevitable and conform to the unavoidable, to harmonize with existing or changing conditions. Death is the only inescapable, unavoidable, sure thing.  We are sentenced to die the day we’re born. So is the Monetary System.”
CIGA Giancarlo
Johannesburg, RSA


A Day of Reckoning

Germany struggles to sell five year debt; Portugal stung

Deficit Commission Report Fails to Advance to Congress

Consumer Price Inflation: The Wolf at the Door  

Mug's Game (The Mogambo Guru) 

Could WikiLeaks Revealing Major Bank Secrets Crash The Global Economy? 

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