Posted on 06/21/2020 4:58:36 PM PDT by CheshireTheCat
It appears the group Anonymous and their Antifa affiliates hacked ten years worth of data from fusion centers and police departments across the United States. The groups claim hundreds of thousands of law enforcement sensitive bulletins are in their hands.
Under the code name #BlueLeaks, the group, commonly known as Anonymous and their self-claimed antifascist affiliates like Distributed Denial of Secrets known online as DDoSecrets leaked sensitive law enforcement data from federal, state and local law enforcement databases...
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
We need an “Open Season” and Bounties placed on Hackers.
If I were in law enforcement I would change careers.
And we’re expected to entrust the police with sensitive critical information? Nah, not me. At least not anymore.
Wonder if the taking of the precinct in Seattle gave them access.
Are you Antifa saying there wasn’t any inside government help?
fedgov ain’t any better
You have to “register” to see the “good” stuff.
Looks like a trap.
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Communist Chinese and Anonymous hackers working with antifa and BLM
We need better data security experts on our side.
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Mostly Indian H1B trash that runs our networks now. Think about it.
“hacked” my a$%...it was leaked and prolly from FBI...
I am pointing my finger at the NY US attorney that was just fired!!
Geez, took the media long enough to notice this!
Just proves no personal records should be kept on computers attached to the internet.
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Crimes that can get you 5 to 10 years in the Big House.
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Netsential, the data warehousing and web hosting firm at the core of the leak, is pretty odd when you start looking at it.
Their Federal contract expired October 3, 2019.
https://samsupport.net/registrations/035996508
They incorporated in Delaware 4/5/2000 and are not currently listed as in good standing. Search file number 3183427 here:
https://icis.corp.delaware.gov/ecorp/entitysearch/NameSearch.aspx
Their listed address of 12832 Willow Centre Dr STE C in Houston is just a small office in a low rent office condo park. No indication of where they host the massive amount of data they obviously manage.
Their director, Stephen Gartrell, has a nice picture with Robert Mueller here:
Stephen Gartrell is also listed as involved in another business called “C & C Mattingly Business Interests” which seems to be almost non-existent.
https://www.corporationwiki.com/Texas/Houston/stephen-m-gartrell/30230302.aspx
And then there’s this tidbit that ties Gartrell and C&C together:
“Stephen Gartrell
May 30, 2006 - General Partner, C & C Mattingly Business Interests, Ltd Nonclassifiable Establishments, 14550 Torrey Chase Blvd, Houston, TX 77014.”
Just a lot of ????????????
Good luck finding them. Can’t get trained, tested and certified fast enough.
Based on my experience, you're right. Won't say exactly where I work but will say this: We have a handful of quality network engineers that we have (Americans) and network operations was outsourced to Infosys three years ago. (We're in the process of bringing that back in-house.)
They f'ed up so badly I cannot even begin to describe it. Thankfully we never had a data breach but some of the things that those idiots did to our network put us in jeopardy and we had to fix it.
Infosys will be gone by the end of this year. Thank God.
old bump
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