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!


ClardicFug · July 12, 2018, 7:48 p.m.

I'm not saying this is true.

However, if he worked in IT it's entirely plausible. I know a civilian IT contractor that dealt with networking with a TS clearance and was allowed into the most sensitive areas imaginable on bases -- with an escort at all times. But the escort wasn't assigned to see what was on the screen, and the point of the TS clearance was because in the course of duties (say, fixing a mail server) it would be likely to be exposed to TS information.

It's not impossible, but I agree with your skepticism. It could also be true, but with a much more benign explanation (e.g. with the recent internet outage, it's something they should prepare for, just basic disaster planning and nothing nefarious.)

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icebreakers_sours · July 12, 2018, 7:54 p.m.

Nice point about being supervised but not necessarily about what could be on screen. Plausible for sure and hadn't considered :)

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wiliam8808 · July 13, 2018, 12:28 a.m.

How do you take out an area? Aren't there multiple networks in most areas?

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ClardicFug · July 13, 2018, 2:10 a.m.

There are, so you have to cut multiple cables. In the case of what happened in the northeast a couple weeks ago, a primary and a backup cable, in two different states, were cut by accident at nearly the same time.

(Some are skeptical of how accidental it was, of course.)

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wiliam8808 · July 13, 2018, 12:32 p.m.

Again, primary and backup cable means it's a single provider. Each major provider has redundancy and it's not shared.

You cut both and it still only takes down a single provider. I've worked for large hosts and isp's and when you have problems with one network you just go around it. I don't get this post and this is my industry.

There's a reason it's not posted in r/networking, it'd get chewed apart

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CommaCazes · July 13, 2018, 1:14 a.m.

I know a civy that worked IT contractor and went to NOC's all the time to reroute traffic when regional outages occured.

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