Do you hate reading boring speeches about Wall Street and trade on your desktop computer? Well, now you can be bored in a more convenient format.

Anti-secrets website WikiLeaks -- whose founder, Julian Assange, despises former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- has made stolen excerpts from Clinton's private Wall Street speeches available for download on the Amazon Kindle e-reader.

RELEASE: Hillary Clinton's private paid speech extracts now in handy Kindle, book reader and PDF formats https://t.co/Q3hbGVcyFI pic.twitter.com/Z78PzVAp4V — WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) October 10, 2016

What do the excerpts, part of a cache of emails heisted from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, reveal? Nothing shocking to anyone who has followed Clinton's career. Writes the BBC:

"They provide yet more evidence that Mrs. Clinton is pro-open-trade and sympathetic to Wall Street interests, despite her protestations otherwise. They also reveal a decidedly middle-of-the-road, pragmatic political attitude that won't sit well with the populist wing of her own party."

Clinton's opponent during last spring's Democratic presidential primaries, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, is wary of free-trade agreements and opposes the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership. Her opponent in the general election, Republican Donald Trump, also is a critic and has insisted he will renegotiate the U.S.' various trade agreements.

Clinton has long been a free-trade advocate, though she has come out in opposition to TPP. "My dream is a hemispheric common market," the Democratic nominee apparently said in one of the Wall Street speeches, "with open trade and open borders, some time in the future with energy that is as green and sustainable as we can get it, powering growth and opportunity for every person in the hemisphere."

The WikiLeaks trove does not include complete speeches or even necessarily the final draft of any of Clinton's speeches. Instead, the stolen documents are excerpts that were part of an internal review by her staff.

Clinton's vice-presidential running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, suggested the WikiLeaks release might be peppered with faked information. "I don't think we can dig into documents dumped by WikiLeaks and just assume they're all accurate and true," he said Sunday on CNN.

Podesta, meanwhile, argues the leaks will offer no big surprises -- certainly not when it comes to her plans for Wall Street.

"[Clinton has] said all throughout this campaign she will crack down on Wall Street," Podesta said Sunday on Fox News. He added: "She's put forward the most aggressive Wall Street plan of any candidate."

Here's what Clinton has said publicly about Wall Street (and it's highlighted on her campaign website): "Our banking system is still too complex and too risky. ... While institutions have paid large fines and in some cases admitted guilt, too often it has seemed that the human beings responsible get off with limited consequences -- or none at all, even when they've already pocketed the gains. This is wrong, and on my watch, it will change."

Her Wall Street reform plan calls for prosecuting individuals (not just firms) who break the law through their work on Wall Street, imposing a "risk fee" on large financial firms and taxing high-frequency trading.

Clinton gave eight speeches to Wall Street firms after leaving the State Department in 2013, CNN reports. She was paid about $1.8 million for the speeches.

-- Douglas Perry