About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 84. Chapters: Anonymity networks, Crypto-anarchists, Cypherpunks, Financial cryptography, Freenet, Bruce Schneier, John Gilmore, Ryan Lackey, Assassination market, Dining cryptographers protocol, Phil Zimmermann, Cypherpunk anonymous remailer, Illegal prime, Mixmaster anonymous remailer, Virtual private network, Electronic money, Penet remailer, Pseudonymous remailer, Data haven, Len Sassaman, Lance Cottrell, Onion routing, Anonymous internet banking, Julian Assange, Jim Bell, Anonymous P2P, Tor, ORCA Platform, Digital credential, Crowds, I2P, Mark Shuttleworth, Friend-to-friend, Duncan Campbell, Netsukuku, Blind signature, Bram Cohen, Degree of anonymity, AnoNet, Java Anon Proxy, Cryptome, XeroBank Browser, Rop Gonggrijp, Haystack, Ripple monetary system, YaCy, Sameer Parekh, Sean Hastings, Chaum mixes, Marabunta, E-Dirham, Peter Gutmann, Phantom Anonymity Protocol, Ian Goldberg, Yodelbank, Vipul Ved Prakash, Timothy C. May, Jude Milhon, Steven M. Bellovin, David Chaum, Turtle F2F, Matt Blaze, Mixminion, Peter Junger, Paul Kocher, Ivan Krsti, Adam Back, Portable Tor, Ecash, Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn, Peter Wayner, Phil Karn, Anonymous veto network, Arm, Peppercoin, P2PRIV, Vidalia project, Bitblinder, StegoShare, Ben Laurie, Digital Monetary Trust, Nikita Borisov, Hal Finney, Infoanarchism, Jon Callas, ECache, PaySafe, Cyphernomicon, Matt Curtin, Unode, Invisible IRC Project, Double-spending, Crypto-society, Eric Blossom, Cipherspace, Brian LaMacchia, Freesite, Free Haven, Anonymity application, Infrastructure for Resilient Internet Systems, Secure Mobile Payment Service. Excerpt: Julian Paul Assange (; born 3 July 1971) is an Australian publisher, journalist, computer programmer and Internet activist. He is the editor in chief of WikiLeaks, a whistleblower website and conduit for worldwide news leaks, with the stated purpose of cr...