Anonymous ID: e07118 Feb. 6, 2025, 3:15 p.m. No.22526549   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6733 >>6840 >>7069 >>7139 >>7205 >>7243

>>22526427

Soooo many in Epoch Times under investigation Or indicted!

Also heavily funded by USAID! Imagine that the FBI director isn’t such a good investigator!

🤣🤣🤣

 

https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/223848589

 

22-3848589

 

Charity graph

Displaying THE EPOCH TIMES ASSOCIATION INC

 

NOTE: Funding is fungible, meaning USAID dollars do not directly flow into these NGOs in a literal sense. Instead, the money moves through multiple layers, with various entities handling and redistributing it.

 

Rather than focusing solely on individual grants or making definitive statements for how NGOs benefit from USAID, it’s more important recognize the broader pattern of funding distribution and influence, and getting rid of the layers of inaccountability.

 

https://datarepublican.com/expose/

Anonymous ID: e07118 Feb. 6, 2025, 4:15 p.m. No.22527053   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7067 >>7069 >>7139 >>7182 >>7205 >>7243

>>22526733

Ultrasurf, Freegate, the Open Technology Fund, and whistleblower allegations

In the early 2000s, Falun Gong adherents in the United States developed Ultrasurf and Freegate, freeware intended to circumvent Chinese government internet censorship.[129][130] According to NPR:

 

Adherents of Falun Gong first developed Ultrasurf nearly two decades ago to get around censors in China and elsewhere. Early on, Ultrasurf seemed a highly promising tool in aiding activists and journalists to talk securely online. It earlier received development money from the State Department and the predecessor agency to USAGM.[131]

A Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society report on the circumvention landscape in 2007 found Ultrasurf's performance to be "the best of any tool tested in filtering countries, the only tool to display okay speed for both image heavy and simple, text oriented sites."[132] A Wired article described Ultrasurf as "one of the most important free-speech tools on the Internet, used by millions from China to Saudi Arabia."[133]

 

Beyond China, Freegate gained popularity among Iranian protesters soon after its Farsi version was introduced in July 2008.[134][135] During the Green Movement protests surrounding the 2009 election, its servers were overwhelmed by Iranian Internet users.[133][136][137]

 

In 2010, the US State Department under the Obama administration offered a $1.5 million grant to the Global Internet Freedom Consortium founded by Falun Gong adherents that developed Ultrasurf and Freegate, drawing opposition from the Chinese government.[138] A 2011 Center for a New American Security report recognized the need for the US government to fund high-performing technologies like Ultrasurf and Freegate, despite the stress it might cause on the U.S.-China relationship, but recommended the US government diversify the technologies it funds.[139]

 

In recent years, Ultrasurf has been a major point of contention in large part because it is not open source, meaning that it cannot be reviewed by outside engineers for vulnerabilities and back doors.[140][141] Additionally, as reported by The Verge, since the 2000s, the software has drawn criticism "for its content filtering (which blocks pornography) and its ability to surveil user traffic, which is often impossible by design in competing tools".[140]

 

Although it receives public funding, both its creators and owners have rejected attempts at allowing outside parties to review its effectiveness and utility.[140][141] A 2020 audit by the U.S. State Department concluded that "censoring Ultrasurf nation-wide would have been trivial for a moderate-budget adversary".[131][141]

 

After conservative documentary filmmaker Michael Pack was appointed CEO of the U.S. Agency for Global Media during the Trump administration in 2020, Pack tied up $19 million in federal funds from other projects for the Ultrasurf project. Numerous other projects, including other secure communication projects, lost funding during this period. Ultrasoft eventually received $249,000 of the allotted funds. Once receiving funding, only "four people abroad used it to access Voice of America and Radio Free Asia, a key purpose for its subsidy" during December 2020 and January 2021.[131]

 

Two days before U.S. President Joe Biden's 2021 inauguration, Pack appointed a columnist from the Epoch Times to the board of directors for the networks his agency oversaw. This columnist had claimed the January 6 insurrection was a "false flag operation". During his eight months in office, Pack regularly appeared in the Epoch Times, where he also discussed Ultrasurf.[131]

 

As of 2020, Pack, along with other USAGM officials he did not fire during his time there, faced a criminal inquiry in response to whistleblower allegations that the "concerted effort to divert funds to the Falun Gong software Ultrasurf was a criminal conspiracy".[131]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falun_Gong

Anonymous ID: e07118 Feb. 6, 2025, 4:31 p.m. No.22527182   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7205 >>7243 >>7276

>>22527053

 

Evangelicals are helping Falun Gong, the Chinese religious movement, which seeks to save the world with its mix of Taoism and Buddhism while creating “the world’s largest and most authoritative media.”

 

The Epoch Times, Falun Gong’s nonprofit media outlet, has become a trusted source for conservatives and is now the fourth-largest newspaper in America, according to its own unverified subscription numbers. It reportedly reaches a larger audience than other conservative outlets, including Newsmax and The Daily Caller.

 

The Epoch Times grew its revenue by 685% over two years to $122 million, according to the article, “How the Conspiracy-fueled Epoch Times Went Mainstream and Made Millions,” a 3,000-word profile published recently by NBC News.

 

https://baptistnews.com/article/evangelicals-help-falun-gongs-epoch-times-reach-the-masses/