Anonymous ID: 511488 April 11, 2018, 12:25 p.m. No.1000495   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0523

This is probably old news, but I am thinking that the spider web is the method used by deep state countries to collect the data on all of us along with their selected targets.

 

The graphics which show how this is done between systems and countries look like webs, world-wide webs, in fact.

 

Here is something I found in wikileaks which talks about UK’S TEMPORA, and this:

 

“19 June 2013 - Projeet Chess, by which Skype permits access to the NSA” p.7.

 

Tempora is the codeword for a formerly secret computer system that is used by the British Government Communications Headquarters. This system is used to buffer most Internet communications that are extracted from fibre-optic cables, so these can be processed and searched at a later time. It was tested since 2008 and became operational in the autumn of 2011.

Global submarine cables are the main arteries of the Internet worldwide.

If they can be successfully tapped, then they provide a 'fast track' to total Internet surveillance, without the need to target an individual user with more specialised surveillance methods. I

exhibit a map of showing their location around the world2 ("IB1/4/p.848").

 

The comparison made by the Guardian was that this quantity of data was equivalent to sending all the information in all the books in the British Library 192 times every 24 hours. It was reported that this programme gave GCHQ the largest Internet

access out of the "Five Eyes" group ofcountries referred to in the classified documents (Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the USA and the UK).7

 

https:// wikileaks.org/bnd-inquiry/docs/SV/MAT_A_SV-3-1.pdf

 

Snowden’s on UK spying : https:// www.dailydot.com/news/uk-gchq-spying-cable-tap-tempora/

 

“Snowden: The U.K.’s spying operation is worse than PRISM”

Anonymous ID: 511488 April 11, 2018, 12:58 p.m. No.1000852   🗄️.is 🔗kun

English scientist Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989. He wrote the first web browser computer program in 1990 while employed at CERN in Switzerland.[2][3] The Web browser was released outside CERN in 1991, first to other research institutions starting in January 1991 and to the general public on the Internet in August 1991.