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Yahoo NewsWikiLeaks, the secret-killing online repository for leaked documents and video, was passed over yesterday in the awarding of the Knight Foundation's News Challenge grants, and it's not exactly being gracious in defeat. Each year, the Knight Foundation hands out millions of dollars to support organizations that "use digital technology to inform specific geographic communities." A $500,000 proposal from WikiLeaks was reportedly one of about 50 finalists — winnowed from a field of 2,400 applications — for this year's grants. To judge by founder Julian Assange's increasingly desperate appeals for donations, the site could use the money.
But it wasn't to be, and this morning WikiLeaks suggested via Twitter that something was amiss: "WikiLeaks was highest rated project in the Knight challenge, strongly recommended to the board but gets no funding. Go figure." The implication is that the Knight Foundation backed away from a popular proposal in the face of the recent controversy surrounding the site's collection of sensitive military and diplomatic data. Army investigators are reportedly seeking founder Julian Assange as part of their inquiry into Spc. Bradley Manning, an Army intelligence analyst who's been accused of providing Assange with a massive cache of classified data. The material Manning released includes more than 200,000 State Department cables and a video of a 2009 NATO airstrike in Afghanistan that killed more than 150 civilians.
Knight Foundation spokesman Marc Fest disputed part of WikiLeaks' claim, saying "WikiLeaks was not recommended by Knight staff to the board." Fest said the contest employs an advisory panel of outside experts to winnow applications down to a manageable group. After that, staffers take over and conduct "due diligence" on the finalists. Those staffers, he said, make final recommendations to the board, and WikiLeaks "didn't make the cut."
But Fest did confirm that the advisory panel uses a Web-based system to rate applicants, and he declined to say whether WikiLeaks was indeed the highest-rated project. "In terms of how popular certain applications were among advisers, we don't comment," he said. "Every year some applications that are popular among advisors don't make the cut after Knight staff conducts due diligence. That's not unusual."
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100617/ts_ynews/ynews_ts2677_3
Considering what Wikileaks does, I'm disappointed that they didn't win.