Anonymous ID: 8abd49 Nov. 18, 2020, 6:49 a.m. No.11693151   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3470 >>3491 >>3645 >>3717

Ron @ CodemonkeyZ retweeted this thread

 

David Shafer

 

One of our monitors discovered a 9,626 vote error in the DeKalb County hand count. One batch was labeled 10,707 for Biden and 13 for Trump - an improbable margin even by DeKalb standards. The actual count for the batch was 1,081 for Biden and 13 for Trump.

https://twitter.com/DavidShafer/status/1329062200737148932

 

Bidenโ€™s margin of victory in this batch of votes (99.9%) bested Bashar al-Assadโ€™s 2007 margin (97.6%) and Raul Castroโ€™s 2008 margin (99.4%). It matched Kim Jong-ilโ€™s 2009 margin (99.9%).

https://twitter.com/DavidShafer/status/1329063452271403016

Anonymous ID: 8abd49 Nov. 18, 2020, 7:13 a.m. No.11693425   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

German authorities seized the servers that hosted BlueLeaks police files at the request of the US government Jul 9, 2020, 1:55 PM

 

German authorities have seized a server that hosted thousands of sensitive police documents published as part of the BlueLeaks data dump. The German prosecutors behind the seizure were acting at the request of the US government, they told the Associated Press. The FBI and other US officials have not commented on the seizure. The takedown comes after DDoSecrets, the publisher that hosted the BlueLeaks files after they were obtained by an anonymous hacker, was permanently banned from Twitter. Hacking the government to steal information is illegal, but DDoSecrets says it was merely acting as a publisher โ€” and the Supreme Court has upheld the right of journalists to publish stolen material.

 

The site that hosted hundreds of thousands of leaked police files โ€” dubbed BlueLeaks โ€” has been taken offline after its servers were confiscated by German authorities acting at the request of the US government. The police files were published by DDoSecrets, a transparency-focused group that said it obtained the files from an anonymous hacker last month. DDoSecrets founder Emma Best said German prosecutors in the town of Zwickau seized their servers on Tuesday, but added that the publisher has not been given an explanation. "Unsurprisingly, German authorities won't say why the server was seized or what #DDoSecrets is accused of," Best tweeted on Tuesday. German prosecutors said in a statement Wednesday that they seized the servers at the behest of the US government. It's not clear what legal grounds the US has to take the server offline. Hacking the government is a crime, but the Supreme Court has upheld the right of journalists to publish leaked documents as long as they weren't involved in their theft. DDoSecrets maintains that it's a publisher without any ties to the hacker who first obtained the BlueLeaks files.

 

A spokesperson for the Zwickau prosecutor's office told the German outlet Zeit Online that they were aware DDoSecrets is a journalistic project, but declined to provide any further information. US authorities have yet to make a statement about BlueLeaks or the takedown. An FBI spokesperson declined to comment. After BlueLeaks' publication, DDoSecrets' official Twitter account was permanently banned from the site. Twitter said DDoSecrets broke Twitter's rules against sharing hacked material, but similar enforcement has not been taken against other news outlets who published information gleaned from BlueLeaks. DDoSecrets members remain undeterred by the seizure of their servers โ€” the BlueLeaks files will remain available via torrent networks, which decentralize file hosting and make takedowns more difficult. DDoSecrets Editor-in-Chief Lorax Horne told Business Insider that the organization will keep distributing information through other channels, including its Telegram channel and website. "We have never been more convinced of the need for our publishing work. We will continue to host and publish data that can cut through the noise and teach us about today's world," Horne said.

https://www.businessinsider.com/blueleaks-servers-seized-by-german-authorities-at-request-of-us-2020-7

 

Germany Seizes Server Hosting Pilfered US Police Files July 9, 2020

Acting at the behest of the U.S. government, German authorities have seized a computer server that hosted a huge cache of files from U.S. federal, state and local law enforcement agencies obtained in a Houston data breach last month.

https://www.usnews.com/news/business/articles/2020-07-09/germany-seizes-server-hosting-pilfered-us-police-files

 

Hmm, Trafficking rings on those servers? Who in the government requested the seizure? Suspicions: Three Letter Agencies.

Anonymous ID: 8abd49 Nov. 18, 2020, 7:20 a.m. No.11693524   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3592

>>11693479

 

Sad to say this but, why isn't this surprising? So much violence from that side, it really shouldn't be about sides, it should only be about the best person to protect the constitution, rule of law, and the freedoms this country was founded upon.

Anonymous ID: 8abd49 Nov. 18, 2020, 7:40 a.m. No.11693717   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>11693151 >>11693470

 

Ron@CodemoneyZ

 

Why were ballpoint pens recommended before election day, but "Markers" NEEDED on election day?

https://twitter.com/CodeMonkeyZ/status/1329083065235165203

 

Sharpie Markers in particular are mentioned.

Could it have something to do with a marginal mark threshold set by the county?

https://twitter.com/CodeMonkeyZ/status/1329084362554368004