<p>"Inside WikiLeaks" is billed as a warts-and-all account of Daniel Domscheit-Berg's time as chief programmer and media spokesman for what his tell-all book calls "the world's most dangerous website."<br /><br />Set for release in 16 countries from tomorrow, it says that "chaotic" WikiLeaks cannot protect its sources and accuses the "power-obsessed" Assange of being uneconomical with the truth, according to leaked excerpts.<br /><br />Domscheit-Berg, along with others, left WikiLeaks in September complaining that Assange was being autocratic and that the organisation, ironically for a group on a crusade for openness, was becoming excessively secretive.<br /><br />WikiLeaks is "far too easy to attack," the 32-year-old told German magazine Stern this week, quoting him as calling Assange "brilliant" but "paranoid" and a "megalomaniac."<br />Founded in 2006, WikiLeaks caused a storm last year with major document leaks on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as publishing US diplomatic cables that have caused Washington and others considerable embarrassment.<br /><br />Assange, 39, is currently in London fighting extradition to Sweden over allegations of rape and molestation following his arrest by British police in December.Domscheit-Berg was due to present his book in Berlin at 11:00 am local time.</p>
<p>"Inside WikiLeaks" is billed as a warts-and-all account of Daniel Domscheit-Berg's time as chief programmer and media spokesman for what his tell-all book calls "the world's most dangerous website."<br /><br />Set for release in 16 countries from tomorrow, it says that "chaotic" WikiLeaks cannot protect its sources and accuses the "power-obsessed" Assange of being uneconomical with the truth, according to leaked excerpts.<br /><br />Domscheit-Berg, along with others, left WikiLeaks in September complaining that Assange was being autocratic and that the organisation, ironically for a group on a crusade for openness, was becoming excessively secretive.<br /><br />WikiLeaks is "far too easy to attack," the 32-year-old told German magazine Stern this week, quoting him as calling Assange "brilliant" but "paranoid" and a "megalomaniac."<br />Founded in 2006, WikiLeaks caused a storm last year with major document leaks on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as publishing US diplomatic cables that have caused Washington and others considerable embarrassment.<br /><br />Assange, 39, is currently in London fighting extradition to Sweden over allegations of rape and molestation following his arrest by British police in December.Domscheit-Berg was due to present his book in Berlin at 11:00 am local time.</p>