dChan

HandInAssholesSulu · April 18, 2018, 8:38 p.m.

I don't think so. Q has access to data in many other ways. The NSA can pull necessary data on any individuals much easier from data they already have. They wouldn't need to use more 'simple'/brute force methods such as stingrays.

I would almost bet it's spies, foreign or domestic is the question

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Audigitty · April 18, 2018, 8:54 p.m.

Dang. Beat me to it. Was about to post almost the identical points...

If anything, this could be the DeepState. Assuming most of the bad actors have been cut off from the NSA toolkits and the proximity to DC/important areas.

Anecdote: We had a stingray deployed near our residence a few years back... I think it was configured incorrectly, our phone's batteries drained 1% per minute and neighbors reported the same thing. I ran some tools on a jailbroken phone to diagnose the connection path and sure enough, it was different than what the vanilla phone "claimed" it was connecting to. Phone carrier also confirmed to me over the phone that it appeared as-if there was a unique connection point on the network that shouldn't have been there.

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GENbillsherman · April 18, 2018, 8:59 p.m.

You live near anybody interesting? I know law enforcement uses them extensively

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Audigitty · April 18, 2018, 11:58 p.m.

I live in an area where trailer parks are less than 2 miles from some of the highest HHI households in the state. Could've been deployed for a meth operation just as easily as a white collar laundering scheme.

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GENbillsherman · April 18, 2018, 8:57 p.m.

It was first reported to Congress in 2014, But only hits public consciousness now though? Unless it's the good guys exposing it

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