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At around three in the afternoon, an Icelandic parliamentarian named Birgitta Jonsdottir walked in.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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Jonsdottir has been in parliament for about a year, but considers herself a poet, artist, writer, and activist.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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Gonggrijp, a Dutch computer security specialist, and Jonsdottir, a citizen of Iceland and member of its national parliament, moved to vacate that order.
FORBES: Why The Wikileaks Twitter Case Was Correctly Decided. And Why It Shouldn't Be.
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Jonsdottir, who is in her forties, with long brown hair and bangs, was wearing a short black skirt and a black T-shirt with skulls printed on it.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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Not only did Domscheit-Berg and Jonsdottir stop working with WikiLeaks, so did the "architect, " who took the software that had enabled the site to safely receive anonymous leaks.
CNN: Assange's stubborn grip hurt WikiLeaks
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Jonsdottir was now in tears, too, and wiping her nose.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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Jonsdottir turned to Gonggrijp, whose eyes had welled up.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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Jonsdottir walked over to the sink and made tea.
NEWYORKER: No Secrets
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And finally, should the Order should be vacated as to Jonsdottir, the Icelandic member of parliament, for reasons of international community? (For the record, the court answered the last question in the negative.).
FORBES: Why The Wikileaks Twitter Case Was Correctly Decided. And Why It Shouldn't Be.
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Assange was angry about comments Jonsdottir had made to the Daily Beast: "I am not angry with Julian, but this is a situation that has clearly gotten out of hand, " she told reporter Philip Shenon.
CNN: Assange's stubborn grip hurt WikiLeaks