I was poking around on archive.org and notice 9 urls have been captured for the site. One of them is titled "http://findingassange.com/aes.js" which if you hover over the blue-circled date, gives you 4 separate captured pages and their timestamps.
This is what one of them looks like - https://web.archive.org/web/20161214025513/http://findingassange.com/aes.js
As I am not a programmer, I wondered if this is part of the encrypted data to be released or is standard for something else standard to websites.
An explanation would be appreciated.
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norobotono ago
Yes I figured it was something like that but what I was getting at is whether it is normal to have that on a normal website or does it make the site look more legitimate in terms of releasing something because it is there (which of course might also be a hoax)? I.e does it's being there fit in with the claims being made, otherwise why would it be there?
0xFFF ago
It is not normal. They decrypt the html with it before rendering it. The website won't work with js disabled (and empty browser cache). why? data is only decrypted client side and not that visible through traffic analysis?