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originally posted by: Jefferton
originally posted by: GuidedKill
originally posted by: Jefferton
Will more nothing happen because of this?
I'm excited.
I'm sure....Some are above the law.
Doesn't that make you all warm and fuzzy on the inside?
Trump.
Second line.
originally posted by: Jefferton
originally posted by: GuidedKill
originally posted by: Jefferton
Will more nothing happen because of this?
I'm excited.
I'm sure....Some are above the law.
Doesn't that make you all warm and fuzzy on the inside?
Trump.
Second line.
originally posted by: network dude
what truly amazes me is that Obama, and others who should have intelligence above that of a gnat, were corresponding with Clinton who's emails were likely [email protected], and nobody will admit to being smart enough to question the @myunsecureserver.net part. If it wasn't a .gov extension, then anyone with enough smarts to remember to open your mouth before you eat, should have been aware of her circumvention of the rules, and if they communicated classified messages, are just as damn guilty.
Or did they not explain commonsense101 to them? They should all be charged for this crime, and yes, it is a crime. It's a slap in the face to every enlisted or low level officer who was punished for this same crime, and only furthers the idea that two sets of rules apply, and only the poor get punished.
Between Hillary's server being hacked and/or shared with who knows who all and the CIA losing the most destructive hacking code known to mankind, our national security has probably never taken a greater hit.
On Tuesday morning, WikiLeaks released what it's calling Vault 7, an unprecedented collection of internal CIA files—what appear to be a kind of web-based Wiki—that catalog the agency's apparent hacking techniques. And while the hoards of security researchers poring through the documents have yet to find any actual code among its spilled secrets, it details surprising capabilities, from dozens of exploits targeting Android and iOS to advanced PC-compromise techniques and detailed attempts to hack Samsung smart TVs, turning them into silent listening devices.
A massive cyberattack has struck computers all over the world. The highly virulent self-replicating ransomware — known as WanaCryptor, Wannacry, or Wcry — has in part appropriated a National Security Agency (NSA) exploit released into the wild last month by a hacking group known as The Shadow Brokers.