The post on HADOOP sheds further light.
Both posts pertain to a QMS fronting a DBMS. So I'm in the right ballpark apparently.
The post on HADOOP sheds further light.
Both posts pertain to a QMS fronting a DBMS. So I'm in the right ballpark apparently.
> 5c4c982a279a7ddâ‹Ż.jpg posted in error. Ignore.
The anon is phoneposting.
The dark gray post
AT&T → telco with major cooperation with intelligence agencies
SITE R. → Raven Rock?
RAVEN ROCK. → posted Wikipedia abstract
DIG.
DISA = Defense Information Systems Agency.
Try their Twitter account. @USDISA
I'm not a very good digger.
Pic 1 related.
Looks like a job fair recruitment thing.
Hmmm…. proud of their new cloud.
I can't understand how people can put their personal data into a cloud and assume it is safe. Cloud security depends on encryption. DISA would presumably have used AES (not verified, just guessing). AES is broken. What security!?!
Next post will check Wikipedia cite on USDISA.
Per wikipedia (I paraphrase):
SITE R. refers to the USACC (U.S. Army Communications Command) Site R Telecommunications Center within the Raven Rock complex. Or "Raven Rock Site R Alternate Joint Communications Center (AJCC) – United States Nuclear Forces".
Quoting:
"Raven Rock Mountain that has been called an "underground Pentagon."[4][5] The bunker has emergency operations centers for the United States Army, Navy, and Air Force. Along with Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center in Virginia and the Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado, it formed the core bunker complexes for the US Continuity of Government plan during the Cold War to survive a nuclear attack."
Instead of guessing these terms I'll look each one up to be sure to get it right:
→Command and Control (acronym C2):
C2 in a military organization is the exercise of authority and direction by a properly designated commanding officer over assigned and attached forces in the accomplishment of the mission. The term may also refer to command and control systems within a military system.
//In context here I believe it refers to both the command function as well as the IT and other systems that support the command function. //
MNIS leads to an article explaining the terms listed below MNIS:
disa.mil/mission-support/command-and-control/mnis
Too long to paste here
Screencapture instead (pics)