Another Assange? Good luck

Do you aspire to be the next Julian Assange or create a site like WikiLeaks? You'll have your work cut out for you.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- Julian Assange has been bunking for more than a week at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London as he waits to see if the South American country will grant him asylum. If he leaves the embassy, British police say, he'll be arrested. Apparently fed up with the waiting game, late this week police sent a note to Assange asking him to turn himself in. He's apparently ignoring it.

This is just the latest Assange nail-biter since he became globally famous two years ago for publishing a trove of classified U.S. documents and sensitive State Department cables, acts that angered a lot of people who'd like him to go away.

Assange is dangling from a cliff, for sure.

Hanging by a pinky finger next to him -- WikiLeaks.

"Could the site itself go? Yes. As an idea, though, WikiLeaks isn't dead. The idea, the spirit, of leaking online is much bigger than WikiLeaks, and there are groups trying to do it," said former Guardian journalist and Columbia University journalism professor Emily Bell, who taught a class about ethics and WikiLeaks.

The operative word is "trying."

"WikiLeaks has shown that, in real life, facilitating leaks takes a lot of money and it leaves a lot of people vulnerable," she said.

The future of leaking online is bright, she said, but any WikiLeaks aspirants will have to figure out one thing.

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Another Assange? Good luck

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