Anonymous ID: d8e2fd Feb. 23, 2022, 5:44 a.m. No.15698762   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9002 >>9154

@bennyjohnson

I Have Been On TRUTH Social For A Week - Here Is What I Learned

 

youtube.com

I Have Been On Truth Social For A Week - Here Is What I Learned

7:28 PM ¡ Feb 22, 2022¡Twitter for iPhone

 

https://twitter.com/bennyjohnson/status/1496280885661995008?s=20&t=AQ0YKdpiTNuA4M9kte2OpA

Anonymous ID: d8e2fd Feb. 23, 2022, 6:06 a.m. No.15698850   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8864

This is hilarious, Kekkity

Benny

 

Canadian Freedom Truckers HECKLE MSNBC Live on Air— Control Room Freaks Out. LOL!

 

https://t.co/E7mIaG7Bne

 

https://twitter.com/bennyjohnson/status/1495896520943616000?s=20&t=4U6qcPDykAxKsqYRGxxxpg

Anonymous ID: d8e2fd Feb. 23, 2022, 6:34 a.m. No.15698994   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9002 >>9031 >>9154

revelation buried in a cache of documents opens a new and potentially important investigative corridorfor Special Counsel John Durham. The shady tech executive who featured prominently in the federal indictment of Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann was also communicating with a covert group of computer scientists skilled in mining internet data. This revelation raises concerns that the man referred to in special counsel documents as Tech Executive-1, Rodney Joffe, may have shared sensitive government and private internet data more broadly than previously thought.

 

Joffe’s role in Spygate represents one of the most recent developments exposed by the Special Counsel’s office.But recent court filings indicate theClinton campaign also holds blame for peddling a second con concerning the Russian Alfa Bank.

 

The indictment then explained how Sussmann obtained the data and white papers showing the supposed Alfa Bank-Trump connection. According to the indictment, by July 2016, a computer researcher, now known to be April Lorenzen, “had assembled purported DNS data reflecting apparent DNS lookups between Russian Bank-1 and an email domain, ‘mail1.trump-email.com.” Lorenzen, according to Durham’s team, shared the information with Joffe and others, and Joffe told Sussmann about the data.

 

While the indictment focused mainly on Joffe’s alleged exploitation of data to craft the Alfa Bank-Trump hoax, a subsequent filing by Durham revealed Joffe “and his associates” had also “exploited his access to non-public and/or proprietary Internet data” to track internet traffic at the Trump Tower, Donald Trump’s Central Park West apartment building, and the Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP).

 

Using data culled from Joffe’s exploitation of that internet traffic, Sussmann met with the CIA on February 9, 2017, and told the intelligence service that data showed supposed connections between the Trump-related locations and the “internet protocol” or “IP addresses” of a supposedly rare Russian mobile phone provider. According to the indictment, Sussmann told the CIA that “these lookups demonstrated that Trump and/or his associates were using supposedly rare, Russian-made wireless phones in the vicinity of the White House and other locations.”

 

These revelations in themselves are huge, showing that, in addition to the Clinton campaign paying for the peddling of the Alfa Bank hoax, “enemies of Donald Trump surveilled the internet traffic at Trump Tower, at his New York City apartment building, and later at the executive office of the president of the United States, then fed disinformation about that traffic to intelligence agencies hoping to frame Trump as a Russia-connected stooge.”

 

When Slate initially floated the Alfa Bank story on October 31, 2016, the liberal outlet spoke of the discovery of the supposed Alfa Bank-Trump secret communication network coming from “a small, tightly knit community of computer scientists who pursue such work—some at cybersecurity firms, some in academia, some with close ties to three-letter federal agencies. . ..”

 

This group, Slate stressed, had unprecedented access to internet data. “They are entrusted with something close to a complete record of all the servers of the world connecting with one another,” Slate bragged.

 

Then, in explaining how this community of computer scientists weaved together the Alfa Bank connection, Slate noted that Lorenzen, identified merely as “Tea Leaves” in the article, began keeping “logs of the Trump server’s DNS activity.” Lorenzen then “circulated them in periodic batches to colleagues in the cybersecurity world,” with six computer scientists in total “scrutinizing them for clues.”

 

The New Yorker, which revisited the Alfa Bank story in 2018 in “Was There a Connection Between a Russian Bank and the Trump Campaign,” likewise spoke of the discovery of a supposed secret communication channel as originating with “a group of prominent computer scientists” who “went on alert” after news broke of the alleged Democratic National Committee computer hack. Joffe, identified in The New Yorker article by the alias “Max,” described this small group of scientists, some of whom work “with law enforcement or for private clients,” as “self-appointed guardians of the Internet.”

 

According to The New Yorker’s interview of Joffe, his “group began combing the Domain Name System, a worldwide network that acts as a sort of phone book for the Internet, translating easy-to-remember domain names into I.P. addresses.” Again, The New Yorker stressed that the “group are part of a community that has unusual access to these records.”

 

https://thefederalist.com/2022/02/23/lets-hope-the-special-counsel-and-others-are-investigating-the-people-who-watch-you-online/

Anonymous ID: d8e2fd Feb. 23, 2022, 6:40 a.m. No.15699031   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9040 >>9068 >>9089 >>9154

>>15698994

More

AuthorDexter Filkinsincluded much more in his approximately 7,000-word tome, but it is the timing he reported, coupled with his reference to Joffe’s group of

 

“self-appointed guardians of the Internet” that “are part of a community that has unusual access to these records” that in retrospect proves striking.

 

Joffe’s group reportedly claimed it scoured the internet soon after the April 2016 DNC hack, which coincides with Durham’s allegations that by July 2016, Lorenzen had assembled data purporting to show DNS lookups between Alfa Bank and the email domain, “mail1.trump-email.com,” spanning the period from May 4, 2016, through July 29, 2016.

 

The indictment, however, presents Lorenzen’s work as independently derived, which conflicts with Joffe’s claims to The New Yorker that after the April 2016 DNC hack, his “group began combing the Domain Name System, a worldwide network that acts as a sort of phone book for the Internet, translating easy-to-remember domain names into I.P. addresses.” Also, according to the indictment, it was not until August 2016 that Joffe allegedly began providing data to the Georgia Tech researchers to mine for information to support the inference of a Trump-Russia connection.

 

Where Did They Get This Access?

So where did Joffe’s group get access to the data it had reviewed? And what was the community this group was part of that has “unusual access” to the D.N.S. lookup data of “private companies, public institutions, and universities”? A random email, forwarded by Joffe to Georgia Tech’s Antonakakis, provides a possible answer: Ops-Trust.

 

Ops-Trust is a self-described “highly vetted community of security professionals focused on the operational robustness, integrity, and security of the Internet,” that “promotes responsible action against malicious behavior beyond just observation, analysis and research.”

 

According to the scant public portion of its webpage, “the community’s members, span the breadth of the industry including service providers, equipment vendors, financial institutions, mail admins, DNS admins, DNS registrars, content hosting providers, law enforcement” and other third-party security-related organizations. Membership in Ops-Trust is extremely limited with new candidates accepted only if nominated and vouched for by their peers.

 

While there is little public information on Ops-Trust, it is a well-known cyber-security information-sharing community, and its members appear to meet, and even make presentations at various conferences, such as the Forum of Incident Response and Security Team, or FIRST conference.

 

Slides still available online from a 2014 conference contain several interesting tidbits of information. First, the link to theOps-Trustpresentation includes the name “Paul Vixie,” who as noted above told The New Yorker Joffe’s group is “widely understood” to have the ability “to see nearly all the D.N.S. lookups on a given domain.”

 

That was not Vixie’s only connection to the story. Rather, Vixie’s name first appeared when Slate pushed the Alfa Bank tale shortly before the November 2016 presidential election. “The group of computer scientists passed the logs to Paul Vixie,” Slate wrote about the supposed discovery of the Alfa Bank-Trump connection, and then, after studying the logs, Vixie concluded that “the parties were communicating in a secretive fashion.”…

 

https://thefederalist.com/2022/02/23/lets-hope-the-special-counsel-and-others-are-investigating-the-people-who-watch-you-online/

Anonymous ID: d8e2fd Feb. 23, 2022, 6:47 a.m. No.15699070   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9085 >>9090

Wait Trump sends NG for violent city destroying protests to MN, he gets called a tyrant, but a Freedom Convoy coming to DC calls out the NG, btw the NG that Nanshee wouldnt deploy for J6. See how this works

 

https://twitter.com/JohnBasham/status/1496367785580052481?s=20&t=ZvpUahipx2og6mMcH02fnA