Anna Edwards reports:
Despite his attempts to block an explosive autobiography, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s story has been published.
[…]
Publishers Canongate Books decided to put the memoir on sale after Assange, who is on bail in Britain facing extradition to Sweden, attempted to cancel his contract after reading a first draft.
Assange, 40, said he wanted to cancel his contract in June, but by this time he had already signed his advance over to his lawyers to settle his legal bills for fighting extradition.
Read more on The Daily Mail. Andrew Malone of the same paper has additional details.
Related:
- Assange’s response/statement on the publication.
- Coverage on The Guardian, who have had their own disputes with Assange after David Leigh published the encryption key to an archive of U.S. State Department cables, includes some interesting details of the contract between Assange and Canongate and Canongate’s response to claims made by Assange in his statement.
The irony of this situation is not lost upon most readers: a man who heads an organization that leaks other people’s secrets seemingly lost control over the release of his own details. In this case, though, it may be hard to see this as a privacy breach as much as a contract law dispute.