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To: AzNASCARfan; All

Was the Black Eye question ever answered?

I can’t get the qanon drop page to load and I lost my place on the thread.

I was wondering if it could be security software or a security camera.

Rainbow Six Siege has Black Eye Cameras....


1,468 posted on 12/12/2018 11:49:06 PM PST by Califreak (Take Me Back To Constantinople)
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To: Califreak

Black Eye.....

Satellite? (Eye in the Sky)


1,469 posted on 12/13/2018 12:02:31 AM PST by Califreak (Take Me Back To Constantinople)
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To: Califreak

No nothing about the Black Eye Cameras mentioned tonight that I saw.

Which link do you use for drops?
I use https://qmap.pub/ and it seems to load really fast recently...
I was thinking Q was talking about that site when he said “Added server(s)/bandwidth improved performance” It is showing 221K online in the past 24hours


1,472 posted on 12/13/2018 12:08:56 AM PST by AzNASCARfan
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To: Califreak; StormFlag; LonePalm; Cletus.D.Yokel; ransomnote; bagster; bitt; TEXOKIE; KitJ

“””Was the Black Eye question ever answered?”””

Posting blind. But throwing out this suggestion

Don’t think seen. Think unseen.

“””Regarding the Q drop 2615

Q - Should we be prepping for some kind of shutdown?
No.
Reports of ‘power grid’ attacks (6 mo prep) should be disregarded. While attacks do occur, we are safeguarded by a ‘Black Eye’. Q “””

An enemy could attack either the power grid through two ways. Either attack and physically destroy generating facilities, transmission lines and substations, or, gain access and attack the computer software that controls all of the above. The later has happened in the past.

IIRC, when the Iranian centrifuges being used to refine the uranium for their nuclear program were wiped out it was done through gaining access to the computers that controlled them.

A physical attack is slower and can be seen, a software attack can be unseen and much faster.

I ran across this old article this morning which may offer a hint. Note date:

RCN ‘Upgrade’ Crashes System
Starpower Subscribers Among Many Off-Line for 33 Hours

By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 7, 2000; Page E01

“The technicians “gave the Internet a black eye,” said Merle Roberson, 67, a retired Pentagon computer expert who was part of a team that helped develop the original Internet, the government’s Arpanet.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/2000-03/07/025r-030700-idx.html

What if in addition to the normal computer security measures taken by blocking outside hacking attempt pathways to gain access to grid or internet software, upon detection of those attempts, the security software injects its own attack aimed back at the attacker’s software or computer disrupting the attack, giving the attacker a “black eye”.

If such a thing exists, then by its crucial defensive nature it would be hard to read about it in the public domain.

I don’t know. Food for thought.


StormFlag
http://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3712053/posts?page=1444#1444


1,548 posted on 12/13/2018 6:36:11 AM PST by haffast (Alternate universes held together by porridge.)
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