Anonymous ID: c2cdd0 March 20, 2018, 5:03 p.m. No.736748   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6930

Anybody else feel like they can't ignore all this even after dark?

McCabe firing was at 10 Fri night, kek

I loved that shit for its pure meanness

The cabal deserves every bit of psych abuse we and the Q team can dish out

Fuck them

"because physical wounds heal"

I want to see them broken, sobbing and crying for their mama and Jesus.

Anonymous ID: c2cdd0 March 20, 2018, 5:17 p.m. No.736866   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6922 >>6936 >>6966

This is so completely cringe-y that your ears should be ringing. BOOM. BIG BOOM.

 

This isn't how giant corporations behave. Causing an embarrassing scene in an office, only to have the UK IO show up like bar bouncers to kick the hired goons out? Facebook has zoomed past desperation like it was standing still. That company is DONE.

 

http:// fortune.com/2018/03/20/facebook-cambridge-analytica-auditors/

 

"Facebook failed in an attempt to get a handle on the Cambridge Analytica scandal Monday, after British authorities ordered its auditors to vacate the political consultancy’s offices.

 

Over the weekend, reports claimed that Cambridge Analytica had bought data on tens of millions of Facebook users that had been extracted from the social network by an academic named Aleksander Kogan. Kogan did so using a personality quiz app, and claimed at the time that the data would just be used for academic purposes, not for targeting voters with tailored messaging.

 

Facebook apparently knew about the data abuse in 2015, and said it had gained assurances from Cambridge Analytica that the data had been deleted. The weekend reports stated that this was not the case, so Facebook on Monday said it was sending its auditors to Cambridge Analytica’s offices.

 

"If this data still exists, it would be a grave violation of Facebook’s policies and an unacceptable violation of trust and the commitments these groups made,” the company said in a Monday statement.

 

However, the British data protection authority—the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)—had different ideas.

 

The ICO launched an investigation over the weekend, after the reports came out. Like the rest of Europe, the U.K. has strict (compared to the U.S.) data protection laws that govern what can and can’t happen to people’s personal data. If the reports are shown to be true, a lot of players in this story—Facebook included—could be in significant trouble.

 

And on Monday, after the U.K.’s Channel 4 broadcast covert footage of Cambridge Analytica CEO Alexander Nix boasting about how the company could sway elections, the ICO stepped up its probe by applying for a warrant to search the firm’s offices. (The firm said in a statement Monday that the Channel 4 report had been “edited and scripted to grossly misrepresent the nature of those conversations and how the company conducts its business.”)

Cambridge Analytica's CEO, Alexander Nix appeared in an undercover report by Britain's Channel 4 on Monday night.

 

Cambridge Analytica's CEO, Alexander Nix appeared in an undercover report by Britain's Channel 4 on Monday night.

 

So after Facebook’s auditors, from the cybersecurity firm Stroz Friedberg, went into Cambridge Analytica’s offices on Monday evening, the ICO told them to get out.

 

“At the request of the U.K. Information Commissioner’s Office, which has announced it is pursuing a warrant to conduct its own on-site investigation, the Stroz Friedberg auditors stood down,” Facebook said in an update to its earlier statement.

 

“These investigations need to be undertaken by the proper authorities,” tweeted Damian Collins, the chair of the British Parliament’s digital, culture, media and sport select committee.

 

This is all extremely unusual, if not unprecedented. The U.K.’s data protection authorities are not known for swooping into companies’ offices like this, nor for booting out experts hired by a company of Facebook’s scale—and the level of apparent coordination between the regulator and outraged lawmakers is also noteworthy.

 

It’s also deeply embarrassing for Facebook. Even if the firm wasn’t trying to cover anything up by sending in its own contractors, this episode may create that impression in some people’s minds. At the very least, it shows how Facebook—which, remember, told Cambridge Analytica and Kogan to delete the abused data a few years ago—only decided to check their assurances about the data’s deletion after the whole thing became an international scandal.

 

When Mark Zuckerberg (now billions poorer after Facebook’s share price tanked) or chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg finally decide to come out and address the situation, they have a lot to explain."

Anonymous ID: c2cdd0 March 20, 2018, 5:37 p.m. No.737081   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>737005

That's pathetic. Pick this dumb old bat up, and drop her off at a shitty assisted living home. If the food's bad and the staff ignores her, it might as well be jail, and probably cheaper than jail.

 

Damn SES.

Anonymous ID: c2cdd0 March 20, 2018, 6:05 p.m. No.737376   🗄️.is đź”—kun

The Senior Executive Service needs to get its butt blistered

Anybody got a confirm on whether this Kristine Marcy, Satan's handmaiden, was picked up today?

 

SES is using the "ConAir" flights to move their victims around. Flightfags, you know what to do.

 

There's shit so dark I don't want to type it. Just… just watch, man. Damn. This stuff is all kinda new to me & blowing my mind, but Twatter is blowing up with it all.

 

Mentions "U.S. Federal Bridge Certification Authority"

 

Named: Janet Reno, Frank Figliuzzi, James Comey, Jamie Gorelick, Francis Xavier Taylor, her beard Eric Marcy

Holy cow there's a lot there

Look at this

https:// threadreaderapp.com/thread/975406488666738688.html>>737111