Anonymous ID: 50d8a6 Oct. 7, 2021, 7:54 a.m. No.14739421   🗄️.is đź”—kun
  1. To take charge of this post and all government property in view

 

  1. To walk my post in a military manner, keeping always on the alert and observing everything that takes place within sight or hearing

 

  1. To report all violations of orders I am instructed to enforce

 

  1. To repeat all calls from posts more distant from the guard house than my own

 

  1. To quit my post only when properly relieved

 

  1. To receive, obey and pass on to the sentry who relieves me, all orders from the commanding officer, command duty officer, officer of the deck and officers and petty officers of the watch only

 

  1. To talk to no one except in the line of duty

 

  1. To give the alarm in case of fire or disorder

 

  1. To call the officer of the deck in any case not covered by instructions

 

  1. To salute all officers and all colors and standards not cased

 

  1. To be especially watchful at night and, during the time for challenging, to challenge all persons on or near my post and to allow no one to pass without proper authority

 

pepperidge farm remembers

Anonymous ID: 50d8a6 Oct. 7, 2021, 8:10 a.m. No.14739511   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9611 >>9752

>>14739450

>Rodney L. Joffe

yikes! how did we miss this DS fukk?

 

https://www.darkreading.com/author/rodney-joffe

 

https://patents.justia.com/inventor/rodney-l-joffe

 

https://inforver.com/view/Rodney-Joffe-H7C2CTB

 

The Ted and Karyn Hume Center for National Security and Technology at Virginia Tech has named three new members to its advisory board: Rodney Joffe, senior vice president at Neustar; Sherri Ramsey, a former executive with the National Security Agency; and Gwyn Whittaker, vice president at LinQuest.

 

The Hume Center advisory board is made up of intelligence professionals with significant experience in science, technology, and research. The group meets twice per year to provide strategic direction to the center, and ensure the mission of the Hume Center is carried out.

 

Joffe is a senior vice president and senior technologist at Neustar. His responsibilities include defining and guiding the technical direction of the company’s Neusentry security offering as well as heading the company's cybersecurity initiatives. Joffe has been a sought-after cybersecurity expert who, among other accomplishments, leads the Conficker Working Group to protect the world from the Conficker worm.

 

Ramsay is currently a senior advisor to CyberPoint International, and is the former director of the National Security Agency/Central Security Service Threat Operations Center where she led discovery and characterization of threats to national security systems, providing situational awareness for those threats, and coordinating actionable information to counter those threats. At the National Security Agency, she also served as a senior leader in the signals intelligence, technology, and information assurance directorates.

 

Whittaker is the vice president and general manager of LinQuest Corporation’s Mosaic Intelligence Integration group. She founded Mosaic after the terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001, with the mission to bring innovation solutions and senior technologists and strategists to focus on counterterrorist solutions for the intelligence community. She has also provided consulting services to numerous companies, while assembling a team of senior support staff to focus on efforts across multiple programs and agencies in the intelligence community.

 

“These three exceptional individuals bring a wealth of experience and insight to our advisory board,” said Hume Center Director Charles Clancy. “They join an already established group of leaders in the national security field who provide invaluable contributions to the mission and direction of the Hume Center.”

 

The Hume Center was founded in 2010 through an endowment from Ted and Karyn Hume.

 

With support from Virginia Tech’s College of Engineering and Institute for Critical Technologies and Applied Sciences, the Hume Center leads the university’s education and research ecosystem for national security technologies, with an emphasis on communication and computation challenges of the defense and intelligence communities.

 

Approximately 100 students receive scholarships, fellowships, or research assistantships from the Hume Center each year, and are vectored toward careers working for the federal government or its industrial base.

 

The center is located both in Blacksburg and National Capital Region at the Virginia Tech Research Center — Arlington.

 

Dedicated to its motto, Ut Prosim (That I May Serve), Virginia Tech takes a hands-on, engaging approach to education, preparing scholars to be leaders in their fields and communities. As the commonwealth’s most comprehensive university and its leading research institution, Virginia Tech offers 240 undergraduate and graduate degree programs to more than 31,000 students and manages a research portfolio of $513 million. The university fulfills its land-grant mission of transforming knowledge to practice through technological leadership and by fueling economic growth and job creation locally, regionally, and across Virginia.

 

https://vtx.vt.edu/articles/2014/08/081214-ictas-humeboard.html