I’ve heard that there are usually three sides to every story: yours, mine and the truth. I’m starting to believe that axiom is changing. Today, there are probably 100 sides to every story.
Blame it on rise of social networks, citizen broadcasting and, now, the forced disclosures of copious and raw information proffered through WikiLeaks and its copycats. Since every person and institution carries a bias, everyone has a competing claim to what they view as truth as all of this information gets publicly dissected.
This is not necessarily good or bad. It does raise challenges.
As I stated in my original post on WikiLeaks, we can only begin to scratch the surface on effects and implications for businesses. As predicted, spinoff sites are already propagating and the leading contender, OpenLeaks, is rumored to launch on Monday. Therefore, since I already opened this Pandora’s Box with my first post, I thought I’d follow up with more perspectives and implications from the best articles I’ve read since last week:
- This article from The New York Times highlights the U.S. Justice Department’s efforts to determine if Assange encouraged or helped Pfc. Manning to gain access to the classified data. This would make Assange a conspirator and would fundamentally undermine his position as “one who simply provides the vehicle for leakers.” Corporate communicators would be unwise to think a prosecution here will provide a respite. The copycat sites will likely render WikiLeaks and Assange as merely a footnote.
- Reason magazine raises two possible outcomes of forced disclosures. It opines that some companies will keep fewer secrets and behave more carefully, or some will “…try harder not to be caught.” I don’t like the author’s implication that companies are only shadowy, reckless, or both. I think one other possible outcome is missing: that companies and individuals may exhibit more caution with all written, digital transmissions. It will take time, but the pendulum can swing back on this. All history is cyclical – there’s no reason to believe that our networked world will always remain as candid and open as it is today. I also think that “digital fingerprinting” will make electronic communications (and leak sources) less anonymous, which will lead to less leaks. This article from The New York Times raises several other reasons that future secrets may be kept WikiSafe. Continue reading 100 sides to every story: more perspectives on forced transparency