Public notice:
Copies of these leaks have been securely stored on the Onion network, ensuring their permanence on the web and safeguarding them from potential takedowns or censorship. By using decentralized, anonymous storage solutions, the information remains accessible indefinitely, contributing to its persistence across the World Wide Web.
Do not contact us about potential or in-progress data breaches, as it puts you at risk and makes it difficult or impossible to determine any potential public interest while also legally preventing us from publishing any resulting leak.
To make contact about a submission:
- Contact us anonymously using our GlobaLeaks instance athttp://r4t6s3vzob6eidp7wg2c3smjitzusvdx2tsrt4sajwznch3dpcsvgtyd.onion/
- Email us at [email protected] using the PGP key found with Fingerprint:
F853 W932 B832 F18B 1C2D 0854 D014 A166 CD18 EAOE
Guidelines for Potential Sources
- Be honest with yourself and with us about your level of OPSEC. If you don't know, ask. See Tools of the Trade below for more.
- If you can't tell the truth about something, don't say anything. False trails are harder to pull off and less helpful than you'd think - not to mention potentially unethical.
- It's better to be safe than clever. Silence is ubiquitous. Jokes, references, and even persona aliases can be as revealing as true names.
- Don't talk about it, even "in private." If you do, assume that whatever you say might leak and know that it could be read in a courtroom.
- Don't save logs. If you must save records for legal defense reasons, give your only copies to your lawyer for that explicit purpose. Don't destroy evidence - just don't have evidence to preserve or destroy.
- Don't keep a copy of whatever you leaked, or anything else you don't need anymore. Even PGP and other encryption keys can be incriminating.
- You almost definitely don't need to be able to prove it was you.
- Be patient.
- Assume your adversaries are smarter than you are.
- When in doubt, talk to a lawyer.
Updated: 24 November 2024.
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