By Bill Brenner, CSO December 09, 2010 02:13 PM ET
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The WikiLeaks story has snowballed so quickly and dramatically that it can be hard to keep track of everything that has taken place. In an attempt to sort all this out, CSO has constructed a timeline of events, starting with the most recent news and working back to when the story first gained our attention in late November.
What follows is taken directly from articles that have appeared on CSO since the story broke on Nov. 28.
CSO - The WikiLeaks story has snowballed so quickly and dramatically that it can be hard to keep track of everything that has taken
place. In an attempt to sort all this out, CSO has constructed a timeline of events, starting with the most recent news and
working back to when the story first gained our attention in late November.
What follows is taken directly from articles that have appeared on CSO since the story broke on Nov. 28.
We will update the timeline in the days to come.
A loosely organized group of Internet hacktivists take down Visa's website, continuing the revenge attacks against companies that cut ties with WikiLeaks.
DEC 8:
Daniel Ellsberg, leaker of the Pentagon Papers, comes to the side of WikiLeaks, lauding the site for trying to expose government secrets.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) boots WikiLeaks from its servers for "breaking rules designed to ensure websites use their own content and that it won't injure others." Amazon denies the
action is due to pressure from the U.S. government.
Interpol issues a "red notice" for Wikileaks' Julian Assange, telling police around the world that he's wanted for questioning by Swedish prosecutors related to sexual assault accusations.
Wikileaks starts releasing a cache of 250,000 leaked US embassy cables, igniting a global firestorm of anger from governments
and a massive wave of attacks between WikiLeaks haters and supporters.
Within hours, the DDoS attacks against WikiLeaks begins.
WikiLeaks before Nov. 28Though many people only started hearing about WikiLeaks in late November, the site has actually been
around since 2006. The global non-profit organization, run by The Sunshine Press, is dedicated to the release of otherwise
unavailable documents it receives from anonymous leaks and news sources. WikiLeaks database was said to have reached 1.2 million
documents within its first year.