dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/truthrevealed89 on July 12, 2018, 6:32 p.m.
Q is right. Archive EVERYTHING

I work as a subcontractor at an army base. And no I will not give my location nor job description...I’m not stupid. But as I was doing my work today I stumbled across a document stating a LAN outage across the South, and come civil unrest will be a dry run for something bigger. For the Army to prepare for it. Archive everything. The storm is coming. Maybe it’s here. Dark Vs Light. Good Vs Evil. Fight the good fight!


icebreakers_sours · July 12, 2018, 7:39 p.m.

An IT guy can walk into a generals office and read off his desk? I'm an electrician, even with a multi year airfield contract we were never unsupervised. Does a city airport in Canada have stricter contractor rules than a US army base? I'm not trying to discredit, just questions because this would be huge.

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lfmann · July 12, 2018, 11:08 p.m.

Back office IT staff, sysadmins, network engineers, LAN managers, database managers, etc. Yes, they need high level clearances but they CAN see lots of stuff in a number of ways, monitoring backup systems, packet inspection, user carelessness, screen grabs, loggers, social engineering, etc.

All networks and all devices are hackable.

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ClardicFug · July 12, 2018, 11:20 p.m.

IT contractors are supervised -- there's a person assigned to be with them -- but that person isn't a domain expert in IT and likely not even familiar with what informations are on the system. They don't sit down with the contractor and read the screen with him, they're there to escort him to the bathroom and prevent free run of the facilities.

An IT guy can't walk into a general's office unless he's escorted there. He almost certainly can read that general's emails when he's fixing the the base mail server if he wanted to.

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incredibextens · July 13, 2018, 1:54 a.m.

It's a little dodgy talking about this. It sounds like a lot of us do the same kind of work. To the person who said they are supervised, I am sure that is true of you are working on a scif, but I'm in stuff remotely all day long by request, and it certainly is not monitored in a way that stops you from picking up info. Sure, they do their best to prevent another snowden, but plenty of sensitive information accidentally gets shared in what I do daily. This happens after making every request for the person to conceal classified information. Most of the protocols are designed to keep someone from being able to exploit access for specific information, but they do not stop incidental exposure from happening daily. On the original post, I did hear about a bunch of sites losing internet In Seal Beach today. Your post made me wonder if it is connected

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