Nobody Wants to Talk About Jacob Applebaum
Rolling Stone called American Jacob Appelbaum “the most dangerous man in cyberspace.” An ascending powerhouse in the internet freedom/security movement, heir-apparent to Julian Assange at Wikileaks, Appelbaum is suddenly cast into exponential exile. A spy-story cum cautionary tale-of-our-times improbably framed by filmmaker Jamie Kastner’s bumbling, self-deprecating humor. Rolling Stone called American Jacob Appelbaum “the most dangerous man in cyberspace.” An ascending powerhouse in the internet freedom/security movement, heir-apparent to Julian Assange at Wikileaks, Appelbaum is suddenly cast into exponential exile. A spy-story cum cautionary tale-of-our-times improbably framed by filmmaker Jamie Kastner’s bumbling, self-deprecating humor. Rolling Stone called American Jacob Appelbaum “the most dangerous man in cyberspace.” An ascending powerhouse in the internet freedom/security movement, heir-apparent to Julian Assange at Wikileaks, Appelbaum is suddenly cast into exponential exile. A spy-story cum cautionary tale-of-our-times improbably framed by filmmaker Jamie Kastner’s bumbling, self-deprecating humor. Rolling Stone called American Jacob Appelbaum “the most dangerous man in cyberspace.” An ascending powerhouse in the internet freedom/security movement, heir-apparent to Julian Assange at Wikileaks, Appelbaum is suddenly cast into exponential exile. A spy-story cum cautionary tale-of-our-times improbably framed by filmmaker Jamie Kastner’s bumbling, self-deprecating humor.