Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 5:09 a.m. No.808770   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>808756

https:// web.archive.org/web/20150731092044/http:// www.fas.org/sgp/crs/mideast/RL33222.pdf

 

israeli iron dome missiles are malfunctioning and attacking people with guns on the ground, and we're sitting here dealing with their internet force comprised of only the most autistic israeli fags

Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 5:21 a.m. No.808799   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8805

>>808785

https:// sol.sapo.pt/artigo/589076/atriz-de-smalville-e-acusada-de-ser-lider-de-seita-sexual

 

https:// www.inquisitr.com/4687346/leah-remini-will-return-to-ae-to-investigate-jehovahs-witnesses-and-nxivm/

 

AE is MSM! They have people from OBAMA STAFF currently! Mostramonaco was obamas chief of staff now at A&E, A&E exec now CO-CEO at VICE media

 

https:// forward.com/fast-forward/385451/bronfman-sisters-named-as-members-of-shadowy-group-that-branded-women/

 

Two daughters of the late philanthropist Edgar Bronfman were named in a New York Times investigative story about a shadowy upstate New York group in which female members were branded to enforce loyalty to its leader.

Read more: https:// forward.com/fast-forward/385451/bronfman-sisters-named-as-members-of-shadowy-group-that-branded-women/

 

https:// usa-sciencenews.com/2017/10/18/a-new-york-self-help-club-for-women-allegedly-requires-naked-photos-for-admission-brands-members-with-a-hot-iron-and-urges-them-to-follow-a-near-starvation-diet/

Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 6:23 a.m. No.808998   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9008

>>808983

actually its starting to make sense.

 

JPB was in control of, or friends with those in control of major tech companies that were milking government contracts under obama, and also illegally accessing and using information on children through "library" software and such.

 

example https:// www.beanstack.com/

Serving over 600 libraries and schools in the United States, Canada, and Australia. Plus the US Department of Defense Libraries abroad.

 

DoD???????

Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 6:26 a.m. No.809008   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>808998

WASHINGTON, March 4, 2016 —

Five tech organizations pitched their technologies to Defense Secretary Ash Carter this week during a technology showcase hosted by DoD’s six-month-old forward operating unit, the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental in Silicon Valley.

 

So far, the unit has identified 22 pilot projects with tech companies and start-ups that have never before worked with the Pentagon. Five projects are being executed, and 17 others are in various acquisition phases, DIUx officials said in a statement.

 

Carter visited DIUx as part of a trip to Silicon Valley – his third as defense secretary – and to Seattle to discuss technology and cybersecurity initiatives with officials at some of the region’s top tech companies.

 

The technologies range from cyber and intelligence analysis to drones and new ways to bring DoD and Silicon Valley together, DIUx Director George Duchak said.

 

Technology Outpost

 

In San Francisco this week, Carter spoke with Ted Schlein, a general partner at Menlo Park venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, which focuses on early stage tech companies in enterprise software and infrastructure markets.

 

“I would like our people to learn more about what's out here,” Carter said. “That's one of the reasons why I have this Defense Innovation Unit Experimental. By the way, it's called experimental because we're still experimenting with it, and it's going to change, and we're going to keep innovating with it.”

 

DIUx can help technology entrepreneurs “understand places in the Department of Defense where they can secure funding for ideas that they think are relevant to defense,” he said, “and it’s a place where our people can come and connect with all of you.”

 

Metrics of Success

 

The metrics of success for the unit include “projects that we use, money that we spend,” Carter added. “That means people. So down the road, … if there are a couple of 10s, a couple of hundreds of people who have come into the Department of Defense and made a big difference, – well, … that would be a measure.”

 

Carter officially opened DIUx in August in the heart of Silicon Valley, and the unit has since hosted individual meetings with more than 500 start-ups, entrepreneurs, executives and corporations and hosted several signature events, Duchak said.

 

DIUx also has familiarized several DoD leaders with opportunities to work more closely with Silicon Valley innovators and entrepreneurs.

 

“Just as we’ve worked hard to introduce entrepreneurs in the Silicon Valley to DoD and opportunities to work more closely together, we’ve worked equally hard to contextualize what we’ve learned here for the Pentagon’s senior leaders,” the DIUx director said.

 

Funding Pilot Projects

 

Because DIUx has hosted many visits by Pentagon senior leaders, the unit will have access to science and technology and research development, science and technology funding to execute pilot projects with Silicon Valley vendors, the director said.

 

Current DIUx projects will support offices across DoD, including the Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center, U.S. Army Medical Command, Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Agency, U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command, U.S. Cyber Command, U.S. Special Operations Command, Navy 10th Fleet and others, according to the DIUx statement.

 

Feature areas for the technology showcase included the following, the statement said:

 

– Dynamic network mapping;

 

– End-point protection through micro-virtualization;

 

– Wind- and solar-powered unmanned maritime vehicles;

 

– Automated textual analysis and content curation.

 

– Lean startup methodology applied to DoD problems; and

 

– Dynamically formed aerial and terrestrial mesh networks.

 

Duchak said DIUx outreach in Silicon Valley is part of an important effort to maintain and increase the U.S. military’s competitive advantage.

 

https:// www.defense.gov/News/Article/Article/686507/carter-reviews-new-technologies-from-dods-silicon-valley-unit/

Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 6:29 a.m. No.809018   🗄️.is đź”—kun

The Defense Department is seeking novel ideas to shape its future, and officials are looking to industry, small business, academia, start-ups, the public –- anyone, really –- to boost its ability to prevail against adversaries whose access to technology grows daily.

 

The program, called the Long-Range Research and Development Plan, or LRRDP, began with an Oct. 29 memo by DoD acquisition chief Frank Kendall.

 

The memo said the LRRDP will identify high-payoff enabling technology investments that could help shape future U.S. materiel investments and the trajectory of future competition for technical superiority. The plan will focus on technology that can be moved into development programs within the next five years.

 

Defense Innovation Initiative

 

The LRRDP is part of the larger Defense Innovation Initiative, an effort to harness the brightest minds and cutting-edge technology to accelerate the way the department innovates and operates.

 

Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work is managing and integrating the initiative’s five technology areas, one of which is the LRRDP. In a summer meeting, Welby said, Work “introduced and drew out a historical analogy to where we are today.”

 

In 1973, the nation was moving out of the Vietnam War, where the military had been focused on counterinsurgency. Budgets were declining. And the Soviets, among other things, gradually had begun to build up their strategic nuclear forces, Work said during a January speech.

 

In the summer of 1973, with the dangers of nuclear escalation growing, what would later become the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, launched the first LRRDP program to give the president and the joint force better tools for responding to a Warsaw Pact attack, the deputy secretary said.

 

The group recommended going after conventional weapons with near-zero miss capability – “a very simple idea that had profound implications throughout the entire defense program,” he added.

 

In 1977, the DoD leadership directed DARPA to integrate all of the promising military technologies into a system of systems for deep attack. The program, Assault Breaker, called for aircraft with light-area-sensor cueing and surface-to-surface ballistic missiles that could dispense a blanket of anti-armor submunitions.

 

https:// www.defense.gov/News/Article/Article/604159/dod-seeks-novel-ideas-to-shape-its-technological-future/

Anonymous ID: 4fd0a8 March 27, 2018, 6:30 a.m. No.809023   🗄️.is đź”—kun

The Future of Digital Money. Unlike Bitcoin, the virtual currency it supports, blockchain has garnered

wide support for its ability to reduce the cost and time of verifying transactions without the need for a

central authority. New Fintech (financial technology) entrants are playing their part in helping drive

payment digitization. Dubai-based bank Emirates NBD partnered recently with Open Bank Project on a

Fintech hackathon to identify new financial start-ups. The Dubai Government has also taken up the

potential of next-generation e-commerce. Similarly, the Dubai Smart Government initiative aims to

record all government transactions on blockchain by 2020—an initiative that could amount to savings of

more than $1.5b in document processing and more than 25 million hours in lost productivity. The Dubai

Government is also trying to position itself and the emirate at the forefront of technology development,

creating the infrastructure to allow Emiratis and expatriates to start new blockchain-based businesses.

Blockchain also promises intermediary-free remittances across the UAE with an estimated 60%

reduction in transaction costs for users. While these pockets of progress in the Middle East and North

Africa—and the future global potential—are very encouraging, a coherent plan is still needed to harness

the open source approach to the development of financial services, and reap the rewards offered by the

digital and demographic dividend. The natural place to start is installing the flexible but robust regulatory

infrastructure needed to leverage mobile money.

 

https:// media.defense.gov/2017/Apr/27/2001738806/-1/-1/0/NOTES%20FROM%20THE%20EDGE%20-%20APRIL%202017.PDF