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originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: F2d5thCavv2
I can't stop going back to this picture. Have you looked closely at the Hieroglyphics on the wall behind the figures?
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: F2d5thCavv2
There are two sets (one figure next to another) that look similar to the symbol we use for dna (twisted strands) then beside it looks like a person or being going after the dna with some sort of tool......
"Congress never gave the CDC the staggering amount of power it claims," the landlords argued in their filing in the Supreme Court.
In an unsigned opinion, six justices agreed.
"It would be one thing if Congress had specifically authorized the action that the CDC has taken. But that has not happened," they wrote. "Instead, the CDC has imposed a nationwide moratorium on evictions in reliance on a decades-old statute that authorizes it to implement measures like fumigation and pest extermination."
The opinion added, "It strains credulity to believe that this statute grants the CDC the sweeping authority that it asserts."...
A vulnerability in Microsoft's Azure cloud computing service left several thousand customers susceptible to cyberattacks. The tech giant has warned its clients of the flaw in its flagship database service Cosmos DB after it was discovered and reported by security company Wiz. In the blog post Wiz has published, it said it was able to use the vulnerability, which it has named "ChaosDB," to gain "complete unrestricted access to the accounts and databases" of thousands of Azure clients.
Azure customers, including Fortune 500 companies such as Coca-Cola and Exxon-Mobil, use Cosmos DB to manage the massive amounts of data they get in real time. The company explained that it found a series of flaws in the Cosmos DB feature called Jupyter Notebook that gives customers a way to visualize their data. That feature has been around since 2019, but it was switched on for all Cosmos DB customers just this past February. Wiz said that a series of misconfigurations in the notebook created a loophole, which allows any user "to download, delete or manipulate a massive collection of commercial databases, as well as read/write access to the underlying architecture of Cosmos DB."
Microsoft has warned thousands of its Azure cloud computing customers, including many Fortune 500 companies, about a vulnerability that left their data completely exposed for the last two years.
Azure Government for US National Security
This video shows how Azure Government provides advanced compute and analytics capabilities to help US National Security customers achieve more visibility, move faster, and make more informed decisions. This means greater intelligence at the edge, unified security to protect the nation’s data, and the ability to support secure remote collaboration for analysts and tactical teams working around the world.
For the purposes of the test, Telesat provided access to its satellite network in low Earth orbit. Ball Aerospace provided the event-driven architecture for dealing with the data beamed down from space. And Microsoft Azure provided the cloud-computing firepower for processing the data and pulling out insights.
When it comes to Microsoft’s ability to deal with big data from satellites, CASINO isn’t the only game in town.
The Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has a program called Blackjack that aims to develop a broadband satellite constellation in low Earth orbit for defense applications. Microsoft is part of a team that’s working on the mission management system for Blackjack satellites, known as Pit Boss.
Keane added that the insights gained from the CASINO project could also feed into commercial ventures, including Microsoft Azure’s partnership with SpaceX and its Starlink satellite broadband network.
According to DARPA, Pit Boss will be able to take data collected by the satellites, process it on orbit and then disseminate that information to users or platforms on Earth without human input.
Lockheed Martin wins DARPA contract to integrate Blackjack satellites
WASHINGTON — The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded Lockheed Martin a $5.8 million contract for satellite integration work for the Blackjack program, the company announced April 24, 2020.
Lockheed Martin will define and manage interfaces between Blackjack’s satellite buses, payloads and the so-called Pit Boss autonomous data processor. The work will be performed at the company’s satellite manufacturing plant in Sunnyvale, California.
originally posted by: carewemust
Re: twitter.com...
Maybe the same intel/law agencies Chuck Schumer told President Trump about, got to Wendy Rogers? Or, maybe the findings of the Arizona Forensic Audit are not indicative that election-changing fraud/cheating occurred?
Either way, this is not a good sign from Trump supporting, military hero, Arizona State Senator Wendy Rogers.