The US government is one of the most powerful governments in the world. The government has the ability to kill someone remotely, follow people from space and collect & store data on millions.
This European article has suggested that the US government(hackers too) would be unable to hack this company in Sweden.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/could-us-military-take-wikileaks-offline-2147688.html
"Wikileaks was predominantly hosted in Sweden by a “bulletproof” service provider called PRQ which, over the past decade, has become the favoured choice for a variety of political dissidents, activists and refugee groups who would be closed down if they hosted websites in their own countries. The company deliberately keeps no logs on its clientele and specialises in protecting website against even the most sophisticated hacking techniques."
From the web page itself:
http://www.prq.se/?intl=1
"Refugee hosting
Our boundless commitment to free speech has been tested and proven over and over again. If it is legal in Sweden, we will host it, and will keep it up regardless of any pressure to take it down."
Is this really true? Has a company in Sweden designed a web hosting site that is simply uncrackable; unstoppable even if millions of dollars were thrown at it?
This is a pretty serious thing. We have leading generals and congress men calling wikileaks terrorist. 16-20 year old hackers have obtained access into more "secret" targets in the past haven't they?
Couldn't millions have been thrown at this and the data extracted, erased, changed or modified? Prior to the leaks getting out Wikileaks announced for months they had them.
Or is this it? Has this company in Sweden designed the first unhackable "network".
(I am not seeking individual opinions on Wikileaks, the US government) just the technical claims of the article, no one not even the US government could have hacked into the server where they had months notice information was being held then 'had their way' with that data.






OSCP - Offensive Security Certified Professional : Failed my first attempt at the OSCP exam





