recognize that voice
DC protest from early June.
Streamed the Prop wash++
PB
>>9836715 Absolutely HORRIBLE video of possibly John Podesta and a lil boy.. WE hope he gets MORE than what he did payed back to him.
recognize that voice
DC protest from early June.
Streamed the Prop wash++
PB
>>9836715 Absolutely HORRIBLE video of possibly John Podesta and a lil boy.. WE hope he gets MORE than what he did payed back to him.
If you're a professional business do you have to repeatedly say "I'm a professional business" while being livestreamed taking someones phone and detaining them?
anons check this hashtag in the window
#fightklub
can confirm
Canadian judge releases encrypted BlackBerry messages from 20,000 users to Dutch crime probe
https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/canadian-judge-releases-encrypted-blackberry-messages-from-20000-users-to-dutch-crime-probe
list of some other similar firms in the article
The phones are not cheap: Manupassa’s customers have to pay between 1,200 and 1,800 per year for a PGP device. Other companies offer even more features: SkySecure, seemingly one of the larger firms, includes a “duress password,” which can be entered to surreptitiously wipe the device, and Ciphr provides a “vault” for extra-protection of data stored on the phone.
Manupassa is far from alone in this space. A dizzying number of companies offer these sorts of phones all across the world: Phantom, Global Data, Encrochat,Secure Mobile, PublicPGP, PGPClass, Elite, Fortis Iceland PGP, and many more. Some companies simply sell re-branded versions of other firms’ devices, muddying exactly who really developed a particular phone, and who is responsible for selling it to particular customers. The firms, and the people behind them, all promise the same thing, though: to keep messages secure.
To be clear, some of these companies will be legitimate businesses, trying to provide a service to customers who are looking for private and secure communications. But others are more nefarious.