23 Burst results for "Syrup Tissue"

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan

Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan

05:51 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan

"The apostles also assigned to help using a book. They'd found in the library that apparently had like one loan drawing of one wing of a hypothetical glider. The men figured out all the specs and set to work building in their rooms. They quickly realized though that as the pieces came together they needed a bigger less conspicuous place to build so these dudes built a fake wall in the attic of the chapel using shutters and mud. How i hear you asking. Did they get mud into the attic. By using dust folks they made mud out of dust even if they had brought heaps of mud up to the attic from the outside considering what else they managed to get up there without being caught mud would have been a piece of cake. Oh they also built a trap door in the attic floor. In order to access their secret workshop both wings took more than six thousand pieces to build six thousand pieces. I should mention that. We're all made by hand. They used floorboards and bed slats. They used some of the food. They were rationed to seal the cloth covering the glider. The cloth was made of bedsheets. According to a piece about this a novaya quote to make just one rib they had to shape a piece of wood. Steam it to render it pliable bend and then finally glued into place and the glider required hundreds of these. The roof above the chapel attic was conveniently the perfect launching spot and was part of the castle that was unseen by guards. The design included police and ropes and counterweights. I don't know. I'm not an engineer. But part of the plan included a bathtub full of cement. That would be dropped off the cliff into the courtyard below. Look okay. I can see smuggling floorboards like not really but i can see someone casually walking down the hall with the floorboard stuff down their pants but a bathtub filled with cement. Even if you wait to fill it with cement until you get it up to the attic. How're you syrup tissue carrying a fucking bathtub through an entire castle filled with nazis. You'd think at least one. Nazi would have seen people lugging a bathtub through the castle and been like a nice veda minute vodka. You're doing this best talk. That was my nazi accent. Also wears this bathtub coming from. Isn't anyone going to notice a missing tub. next time. They go to take a hot bath after a day of being piece of shit nazis not to mention the cement. And what were the nazis doing this whole time that they're prisoners are flitting about the castle hither and thither prying up floorboards and stripping stuff of wires and shit and no one noticed that the attic was suddenly eight feet shorter. One day like veered. I saw this room was. I don't know room lia. The plan was to make the escape during an air raid blackout which i assume includes one of those super loud air raid sirens that way when they dropped the bathtub.

lia
"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Peter Schiff Show Podcast

The Peter Schiff Show Podcast

05:42 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Peter Schiff Show Podcast

"Spending one hundred percent of your money who your living expenses and then those living expenses go up. Well you have no cushion to fall back on. I mean unless you want to dip into your savings which you can only do for so long but of course. A lot of americans have no savings not only. Are they living paycheck to paycheck but they have nothing saved for rainy day so they just hope it never rains or if it does they get by the government but those people who are paycheck to paycheck with no savings if their cost of living goes up. They have to cut back. Especially if you're seeing increases in food and energy and all the things that people have to have where they have to cut back in the things that they want to have all the discretionary purchases they have to give those up rich. People don't have to give those up if the cost of living goes up but the middle class does the working. Poor does so. This tax falls particularly hard on all the people that joe biden claims. He doesn't wanna tax because remember all the official tax hikes are aimed at everybody who makes more than four hundred thousand dollars a year but because even the democrats are not willing to hit the rich with anywhere near the tax hikes that they were threatening or promising depending on your perspective it means that more of the biden spending is going to fall on the middle class in the form of inflation because assuming that the spending plans are not tapered as much as the taxing plans so if the government doesn't raise taxes as much as it hoped but it still raises spending by amount that's higher in relation to the tax side. The deficits are going to end up being that much bigger and as a result more of the government spending will be paid for by inflation by the federal reserve printing money. Which again is why. They're going to have to expand not taper quantitative easing program so the extent to which democrats are reluctant to tax the rich but they still want to dole out all these goodies to their constituents. The burden of paying for them is gonna syrup tissue asli fall on the backs the middle class in the working poor through higher inflation. But what i want to talk about now is some of these modifications to the tax plan because now we have some idea of what the democrats to congressional democrats anyway are proposing in the house. Now they got a kick it up to the. Us it but let me first start on the corporate side. So biden was originally promising. Twenty eight percent corporate tax and now the house democrats are saying. We're not willing to go all the way to twenty eight but we'll support twenty six and a half right now. The republicans are still saying. It's terrible because communist. China is twenty five percent so the democrats want attacks. Us corporations at a higher rate than the communist chinese tax..

joe biden biden federal reserve government house China Us
"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe

The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe

03:54 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe

"Hello again it's the way. I heard it episode number two fifteen. This one is called han. Shot first the han. In question of course is the one and only han solo brought to life by harrison ford. A little move. You may have seen called star wars. The title of this episode refers to the now infamous scene in star wars. That took place in the moss. Eisley cantina on the planet. Tattooing were a bounty. Hunter named grio announces his intention to abduct han solo and bring him to a gangster called job of the hut who plans to killing now in the original seen. Han solo is seated in a booth across from his kidnapper with a weapon pointed at his chest when he learns of the kidnappers. Intentions preferring not to be abducted and murdered haunt takes action syrup. Tissue asli removing a blaster that he had cleverly concealed in his boot and then shooting the bounty hunter from underneath the table killing him instantly in the original seen. Han shot first and everybody knew it. Two decades later though the director of the film george. Lucas re edited that scene in a way that showed grotto the bounty hunter firing first and missing. George lucas did this. He said to better justify han solo's decision to use deadly force. Now this struck. A lot of people is kind of absurd because in a gunfight. There is no line between drawing. I and firing i. Both moves are equally aggressive if a man or a woman or an alien bounty hunter for that matter points a weapon at you and demands that you leave with them against your will and you have every right to shoot them from beneath the table. Assuming you had the foresight to talk blaster into your boot and the courage to use it. But here's the point in nineteen seventy seven george. Lucas saw han solo's decision to shoot. I as an act of self-defense. Consistent with the actions of hero twenty years later he did not and so george. Lucas changed the scene. And with it. The history of that film. Then in two thousand four lucas authorized another edit in which han and grotto appear to fire at each other simultaneously and now in the most recent print airing on disney plus. A new camera angle has been inserted in yet another re edit..

Eisley cantina grio Han harrison ford han solo Lucas Hunter george George lucas lucas disney
"syrup tissue" Discussed on The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

05:44 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on The RIFT Radio Podcast Network

"I if the if they're not looking or niks agreement with jim we say hillary night we yeah. We stayed at the end at jim thorpe and like we. We made like a day of it and like we shop spooky shops and me syrup tissues. We investigated dungeon than the investigator hotel room. Yeah i brought my service to the phone. 'cause like how do you even. It looks like a camera. You can't be like you're doing ghost hunting stuff down here and it's like him out you are no on through that. Look at things in in for that okay. Let's just say it's opposite people's roll up cases on wheels and all kinds of things a camera bags and you know for sure. Be cool business. I wish i had that for election but time. Apparently sure i would break it during a flash light. That's all you knew that. I bring to you now. Do you both have a favorite piece of technology that you like to you. Do i mean yeah you go ahead maller you go 'cause i really don't well you. We're like getting into well. You are more like the digital recorder like short. I like where we can write back because edp's are just the most interesting thing in the world to me. The have an intelligent response to a question. There's just there's there's so much about that. The i like i love because i don't. I love the fact that was all of this. I if you asked me what. I believe i couldn't tell you i really don't know i go back and forth and i kind of like that. I i like not be sure because i feel like that means. You're not done big salang as you're always kind of like asking yourself. Well why the the edp smear just the most interesting piece of evidence that you have that like with all the equipment. It's it's equipment. I think anything that really gets us if you like..

jim thorpe hillary jim edp salang
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Talk Nerdy

Talk Nerdy

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Talk Nerdy

"Yeah i think a it so important to talk really plainly and like make the information available in a way that is digestible. That is understandable and that is really clear and to the point. Because i think a lot of times part of the reason that pseudoscience at fake medicine is so sexy is its simplicity. Part of the reason that it resonates is because oftentimes it is propagandized in a way that feels intuitive and sometimes medicine feels counter intuitive and so to be able to speak in a very plain way away that many doctors. Unfortunately don't always speak is fundamentally important and so so on the one hand like a. I think you do such a beautiful job of doing that in this book like you can read it and go. Oh okay that's why he's crazy. Yeah i get it. Oh that's part of it. As well part of the writing. The book was also fighting against my own instincts. So i wrote in the book. And i got about two september of twenty twenty and then I showed it to my partner who's producer and he disliked. Read the book and said well read. You've written a very textbook. That's going to read it. So i so yes. So he really put me down and so then. I had like a couple of months to sort of like just rewrite the whole thing and spent a lot of christmas. Twenty twenty of buckling down and trying to rewrite everything and trying to put those personal touches into it. And this is what we find on as you're saying it's sort of appealing from an instagram perspective. We sort of like tend to be drawn towards these stories. These anecdotes where people just sort of like tell you a story and then we just like bios. We take on the messages. And it's sort of like getting you onside it's syrup tissue asli getting people on side. That's probably the subtext of fake medicine. Yeah like just sort of get under your skin may appear really really nice and lovely did and they kick you in the teeth. Later on and say look acupuncture. You're probably not going to do anything to you to your health. So it's underhanded plan. I love it though because you know. I think what's so important..

instagram christmas Twenty twenty september months two twenty
"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Tech Guy

The Tech Guy

04:52 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on The Tech Guy

"Let's let's make it really a lot of pressure a lot of fear and they're hoping that you will without thinking open that file the attachment at that point. It doesn't trigger the ransomware. What it does trigger is a back door so they can get into your system. Maybe it gets on your laptop then you go to work the next day. Say boss i did. the i couldn't open the presentation. He said. I didn't say he says i didn't send you anything you go the meanwhile your laptop has joined the company's wifi and that mel we're on. Your laptop is now spreading. It's called werm via the network into other. Computers is still not triggering ransomware. What it's really doing is allowing the bad guys access to the network where they browse around sometimes for months on average. It's about ninety one days where they'll look around. And what are they looking for. Well they're looking for a couple of things. I am looking for valuable data that they can steal things. You know like emails. Something that might be embarrassing would be the best. When they broke in the sony they got contracts so they could reveal what stars are getting paid. They got movies that weren't yet released. So they'll download these things syrup tissue in the background but they're also looking for. Where do you store your backups. And this is. This is kind of the answer your question. And they're going to put little bombs everywhere. Including in your backups. They're going to try to make it so you can't use their back your backups. They're also going to put malware on your system so that you cannot use your systems and this is important at some point once. They feel like they've done enough reconnaissance. They'll trigger it all and that's the day that everybody it works gets a pop up that says haha you've been hacked and it puts out an urgent call saying everybody immediately disconnected from the internet. But it's too late. it's on every machine. it's completely pervasive in your internet. Now your network is down the. It department he's not going to just kind of restore the data and bring your network backup because the malware still in there. They don't know where it is and it's had time to seep into every crevice every orifice so even if they were smart enough to have an off site backup the trick is to make it with call immutable. so they can't be modified it can't be encrypted and in most cases i think these. It departments especially for these big companies are smart. Enough colonial pipeline had backups. They did but they still have a system that is in unknown state so they still have to go through thousands of computers. Erase them reinstall. Set them all up again. As if they were brand. New make sure the medicaid everywhere before they restore if they can restore in the case of colonial pipeline. I'm wondering what they had because they did. You're right. They paid the bad guys for decrypt her..

sony next day medicaid about ninety one days thousands of computers every machine
"syrup tissue" Discussed on This Week in Tech

This Week in Tech

01:37 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on This Week in Tech

"We have a The mini movie for today The special movie we make every week some of the highlights. You might have missed this week on twitter watch. This has made a lego. Yeah two hundred seventy nine pieces. Oh my god. I have a typewriter planter bad habits previously onto it all about android one and a half years after the very first like the initial launch of stadia already year and a half later Support is finally coming to android tv in an official sense. Why hack was this done sooner metric weekly. I really liked this new a quick note feature an idea that you pull up from the coli note. I can't wait this automatic but is also attached to the app. The created sticky note that seems very useful and very interesting tech news. Weekly more than eight hundred arrests worldwide now tied to an fbi operation Euro-poll called one of the largest and most sophisticated law enforcement operations to date syrup tissue and secretly ran their own encrypted phone company deliberately selling it to criminals to basically run a very large scale encryption. Honeypot to it. Technology isn't always pretty but we are. I.

android today twitter more than eight hundred arrest two hundred seventy nine piece year and a half later this week first Euro-poll and a half years after Weekly one stadia
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Tech News Today

Tech News Today

05:44 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Tech News Today

"The journey along the way and we think it pro tv for their continued support. We they've been with us forever. It's great to continue to have you guys on board. Thank you to pro tv all right. I was just speaking about security. Well more than eight hundred arrests worldwide are now tied to an fbi operation That europol called one of the largest and most sophisticated law enforcement operations date in the fight against encrypted criminal activities. it's a mouthful of this also a big deal. Joseph cox wrote extensively for vice about enaam is or we're gonna find out in a second. This is the fbi's three year operation and encrypted phone business really cool stuff Very interested about this. Joseph is here to talk about it. Welcome back to the show. Hey thank you for having. Yeah it's great to get you back on. Thank you for taking some time with us. So let's before we get into a nam if well first of all is it an non raynham on it a norm. Because i think it's based on all right. We'll go with that that way. I don't have to question it anymore. Take a step back a little bit. The encrypted foam business. I mean this is a thing i mean there are a number of different companies offering encrypted phones in some in many ways. These are being targeted directly to criminals. Talk a little bit about that industry. In general yes. Show so for years serious organized. Criminals have been using these sorts of phones. And this isn't an iphone or norm android or something like that. These have sometimes the. Gps removed the microphone. Taken out the camera as well. And they're designed typically just to send encrypted messages to one another and previously the fbi enough law enforcement of shutdown some of these companies. They did this to phantom secure. Which i believe. We spoke about earlier episode as well they. Yeah they've hacked encroach where they deployed to the actual end devices but here the fbi has taken a pretty unprecedented step and gone. Fervor as syrup tissue streak ran their own encrypted phone company to then collect the content of messages from their users deliberately set to criminals or people who them provide it to criminals to basically run a very large scale encryption. Honeypot sir robin. Having to go to the companies and try to get data from them they just became the company itself. Wow okay that's that's fascinating It's also not abnormal for the fbi. Set up something elaborate like this. But it's just i mean. This is a three year operation. This is not an easy thing to set up a from a from a logistical standpoint. From a technology standpoint also from just a legitimacy standpoint is one thing that i'm unclear on are these devices or is this a messaging app because i saw it reported in both directions. You it seems like your through your writing. It seems to be that they were marketing devices. But i've seen others report that it was like a messaging service. But maybe that's just a little bit of a lack of clarity. The messaging service is on the device. What what is it exactly yet. It does seem to be quite knowingly. Both as in the primary mode of communication is through this app installed on the on the device itself but then when the fbi or an-and secretly being fbi sold access to this app. Hubei a phone with that. So it's kind of at both. And i imagine if if you try talking to more technical level you would describe it more as the app because that's where the encryption is happening it's not really happening on the operating system of the phone but if you are buying you know probably an android phone with this app put onto it which is very similar to a lot of the other companies as well. I mean you said this. This had to be difficult to logistically setup. And that's exactly what the former doj official. I spoke to said they essentially not only had to run a good investigation. They had to run a good encrypted phone company and by customer support and tech support and anything else any one of these other companies will be doing in the space anyway because they had to appear legitimate. Almost be legitimate in in in some ways right now not only legitimate credit credible and You know trustworthy and all of the things. Is there any indication as far as how they were able to pull that off how they were able to kind of see these out Obviously these devices had to had to hit potential targets. Somehow were they. Was it like were they giving them out or were they just really good at marketing with facebook ads. I don't even know right right. And then you you'll right in on one side there. Is you know they just have to be a good company and that sort of thing. But you're right. I have to get this in the hands of the people. They actually want to target. They don't want to i presume. Target the mass public. Because of course. I would be usually unethical potentially illegal in a lot of cases and i think it's fair to say this is already in and of itself something that's surprising or davis potentially controversial. You know we'll see if any legal challenges to we haven't heard anything from that because overseas ray ray new but when it comes to getting it actually in the hands of criminals and get credibility from them. They actually used people who had already sold phones of companies. They had sold phones from phantom. They sold phones from another company will sky which also shut down by the authorities and the person be confidential human source who actually authored a to nearly said the wrong word. Now you put the two versions in my head who initially created an offer. It's the fbi. They was someone who used to sell..

Joseph Joseph cox iphone three year facebook two versions more than eight hundred arrest europol both Both one one side both directions one thing fbi Honeypot android Fervor first doj
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"Only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key to distributing the app was hakan peak identified as a key influencers by undercover agents those undercover agents. One of them are two of them. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds. Were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game vacation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before a thirties took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two two thousand three tonnes One millions one twenty threats one hundred countries single twelve thousand encrypted devi more than twelve thousand encr one person thirties up to twenty five million mess Three hundred criminal few years ago one way eighteen
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"You're only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key distributing the app was hakan peak identified as a key influencers by undercover agents. Those undercover agents. One of them are two of them. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds. Were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you know getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game vacation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before authorities took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two three tonnes millions One one hundred countries twenty threats more than twelve thousand encr twelve thousand encrypted devi single one thing up to twenty five million mess Three hundred criminal one person few years ago drugs eighteen one
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"You're only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their lighter. Sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key distributing the app was hakan identified as a key influencers by undercover agents those undercover agents. One of them are two of them. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds. Were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game vacation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before a thirties took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two millions one hundred countries One twenty threats three tonnes two thousand twelve thousand encrypted devi more than twelve thousand encr one thing single one person Three hundred criminal syndica up to twenty five million mess thirties few years ago one way eighteen one
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"Only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their lighter. Sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key distributing the app was hakan peak identified as a key influencers by undercover agents. Those undercover agents. One of them are two of them anyway. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you know getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game -cation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before authorities took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two One two thousand one hundred countries millions twenty threats three tonnes one twelve thousand encrypted devi single more than twelve thousand encr one person up to twenty five million mess Three hundred criminal syndica few years ago one way Feds eighteen them
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/

Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/

"Only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their lighter. Sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key distributing the app was hakan identified as a key influencers by undercover agents those undercover agents. One of them are two of them anyway. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you know getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game -cation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before authorities took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two three tonnes two thousand One millions one hundred countries one twenty threats twelve thousand encrypted devi more than twelve thousand encr one person Three hundred criminal up to twenty five million mess single few years ago drugs eighteen
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"Only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key to distributing the app was hakan week identified as a key influencers by undercover agents those undercover agents. One of them are two of them. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds. Were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game vacation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before a thirties took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person. Assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two two thousand three tonnes millions One one twenty threats one hundred countries more than twelve thousand encr Three hundred criminal single twelve thousand encrypted devi one person thirties up to twenty five million mess few years ago one way Feds eighteen
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

Daily Tech News Show

05:29 min | 1 year ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show

"Only doing one thing with it. There's no other information on this phone now. This let authorities read up to twenty five million messages in real time because the authorities were the ones behind it. Officials reportedly took control of a non back in two thousand eighteen after access to the network was offered by someone who is a convicted criminal as part of a plea bargain for their lighter. Sentence so existed. Feds took control of it a few years ago and were running the whole thing now. A key to distributing the app was hakan week identified as a key influencers by undercover agents those undercover agents. One of them are two of them anyway. Gave him access to a handset with the app. He did not know the feds were behind it. Are you then recommended. The app to other criminal associates word gets around people. Think this great network. They were reportedly more than twelve thousand encrypted devices circulating on the black market using the app to communicate which required a code from an existing user to get onto the service kind of creates exclusivity element of trust. You think you're kinda you getting into a cool club. Three hundred criminal syndicates across one hundred countries were reportedly using the app before authorities moved in in the sting law enforcement seized three tonnes of drugs acted on twenty threats to kill and seized millions in cash and other assets. This was the big sting operation. Yeah to sit on that for quite a for quite a time and what's interesting there's a there's a couple of interesting parts to the story one is that we've seen a lot of calls from governments All over the world to kind of. Hey this is you know. We need encryption back doors. We need to be able to access these these chat apps. I guess one way around that is to syrup tissue. Asli run your own And then ceded to criminal organizations to kind of get access to that So so that ended up itself is interesting. The other thing though is kind of almost the game -cation elements that helped to spread this in that you know these were single use kind of burner phone devices. That could only use this app right. They weren't calling the weren't taxing. They're just using this app for communication. But it has like this clubhouse kind of invite code kinda feel like you were saying that i think the poll of that works for apps to make you feel like hey i got to be in on this and i have to imagine yes. It is also good for you. Know a limiting the circle of people. That could possibly communicate with you on this theoretically if you're a criminal but trying to stay discreet but i i have to imagine that kind of invitation basis had also similar in and of itself as well. Yeah i mean clearly. The network existed on some level before a thirties took it over but to have twelve thousand encrypted devices and and many of those devices could kind of be traced back to one person assuming yeah kind of underground word of mouth stuff it is..

two three tonnes two thousand millions One one hundred countries twenty threats one more than twelve thousand encr twelve thousand encrypted devi up to twenty five million mess one person thirties single Three hundred criminal syndica few years ago one way feds drugs eighteen
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Bitcoin Radio

Bitcoin Radio

03:33 min | 2 years ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Bitcoin Radio

"Can't get much faster than that Bitcoins infinitely recognizable which means that anyone running. A full node can verify its full. Supply verify their portion of the ut xhosa and they can all you can also sign a signature to represent to others your holdings so it's a fully auditable system. We've never had anything like that. And then finally as argument writing specifically the piece. I wrote titled the number zero in bitcoin. Bitcoin represents although it's an invention represents the discovery of absence scarcity which is a property of money that was simply not possible. With any physical commodity. So anything in the world. The quantity of it is just a product and a function of our time and energy necessary to produce it so even with gold the most difficult produce to produce physical substance in the world if we could just flip a switch and make everyone go mine gold. Today we could increase its flavor quickly. We get a lot more bug ground lockley but with bitcoin implemented with this brilliant mechanism called the difficulty adjustment such that no matter how much energy we allocate towards its production it becomes more difficult to produce in such a way that that it perfectly adheres to this fixed diminishing supply curve that started zero two thousand nine and asymptotically roses approaches twenty one million as of the one forty so. There's an old saying that. The artists achieves a paraphrasing. The artist achieves perfection. When there's nothing left to take away and saito. She's essentially removed all of the unnecessary flaws of money. Right it's it's perfectly satisfies the five properties money and in addition to that it's open source technology. So it is adaptive right legs. We talked about the visibility. If there is a market proven use case whether it's determined by a competing crypto asset or or anything else. Bitcoin has the capacity to absorb that feature said but it is structured in a way. It's governance is structured in a way that it's super resistant to any adversarial changes. You can't go in and increase the supply gap. So i hope that summed it up. Well it is. It takes a long time to get there. I think a lot of people are drawn in by bitcoin. They then go down shit coin boulevard and get curious about other things and whatnot But i would argue that if you keep looking into that. All roads lead back to the corn. So i look at it. As a technology that is disruptive to gold in on top of gold. We have the monopoly of the central bank. That's a currency monopoly texted in each jurisdiction worldwide. I think will also fall into bitcoin And with that goes the syrup tissues funding mechanism of government right today. They steal from people through inflation and taxation. So i think the world will moving into is going to force governments to compete for citizens and therefore be accountable to our preferences versus just sending us a tax bill for forty percent or telling us how much money they printed. So i hold great..

forty percent Today five properties twenty one million today each jurisdiction bank two thousand nine one forty bitcoin zero
"syrup tissue" Discussed on Deleuze and Guattari Quarantine Collective

Deleuze and Guattari Quarantine Collective

03:41 min | 2 years ago

"syrup tissue" Discussed on Deleuze and Guattari Quarantine Collective

"Playing in the and as things are sort of aligned on this grid. I did up in this process of desire against the body without organs repulsed. The they're posing the question in opposition to the classic free idea and one that even laekan played with which is it. Oedipus is ultimately this or triangulation of how we really or more selves in how we exist that might relationship with my mother. My father and myself is how i am good or bad paranoiac schizo. And their argument here is the first time they formed. It's not going to be the last time where they well. What if. Hey what if. Oedipus is actually just like that w. oh shit and his triangulating. Things were forcing people to basically put themselves inside of this system side of these coordinates and pretend that's where desire comes from when really it's much beyond that skit so their example of malloy is great and let me example. Malloy is great because this is the scene. Where he's he's being arrested sergeants yelling at him and he has no no clue. Basically your name is malloy. What's your mother's name. He's like my mom got to do with. This is kind of the entire point. There is like what why. Why are you trying to force me. You triangulate myself. In terms of the oedipus entered the apple. And that's really what they're trying to get at here. We cannot say that. Psychoanalysis is very innovative. In this respect it continues to ask questions and develop its interpretations from the depths of the ethical triangle is basic perspective. Even though today it is acutely aware that this frame of reference is not at all adequate to explain so-called psychotic phenomena the psychoanalyst says we must necessarily discover schreiber's daddy beneath the superior. God doubtless also his elder brother beneath his inferior god at times the schizophrenic loses his patience and demands to be left alone other times along with the whole game and even invents a few tricks of his own introducing reference points in the model put before him undermining it from within. Yes i know. That's my mother but my mother's a virgin mary. No one can easily imagine trevor answering fraud. Yes i quite agree. Naturally the talking birds are young girls. The superior god is my daddy. The inferior god my brother but little by little he will syrup tissue. Asli re impregnate the series of young girls with all talking birds. His father with the superior god and his brother with the inferior god all of them divine forms that become complicated or rather the simplified as they break through the simplistic terms and functions. Audible triangle are so puts it. I don't believe in father. Mother got no pappy mummy. Desiring is that the end of the paragraph that looks cracked excellent buried short and than anyone can give their commentary on this this again. This is a very timely piece. We have to think back a number of years. But it's still very prevalent today in classic therapy psychoanalytic sessions. I've had to go through a decent amount of therapy myself. I the relationship with your parents is the number one thing and they talk about this diamond even not even psycho analysis. Freud ended really a shocking thing. Everyone has this conversation. It's very much the way we talk about things.

Freud today first time malloy Malloy schreiber Asli one
Russian Tries to Hack Tesla

Security Now

07:20 min | 2 years ago

Russian Tries to Hack Tesla

"Almost A. state-sponsored spy story we have something that really happened. And I tease this by quoting our friend Marcus hutchins twitter reaction upon learning of it just to remind everyone marcus is the well known security researcher and reformed cybercrime hacker. You know he actually reformed in his teenage years, but the FBI didn't forgive him for that and of course, as we know his future became uncertain when the FBI grabbed him. In Las Vegas is Logan Airport as he was departing or a preparing to depart for from the US for his home in the UK, following the annual black hat and DEFCON conferences. Well last Thursday. Reacting on twitter to the news of this story which had just broken marcus quite correctly observed he tweeted quote one of the benefits of cybercrime. Is Criminals don't have to expose themselves to unnecessary risk by conducting business in person. Flying into the US Jewish diction to have mel wear manually installed on a company's network is absolutely insane. Unquote. Okay. So what was all that about? A TWENTY-SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RUSSIAN NATIONAL By the name of or. Igla, rich. Crutch. Nikolov. Traveled to the US an attempted to subvert and bribe an employee working at Tesla corporations massive Nevada based gigafactory. Eager. Ultimately agreed to pay the employees one million dollars to plant malware inside Tesla's. Internal Network. The. Good news is the employees reported the offer. To his employer Tesla and then worked with the FBI to build an airtight case and to set up a sting which included having him covertly record face to face meetings. Discussing this, Russian the twenty-seven-year-old Russians proposal in their complaint which followed Egos, arrest and arraignment wit last Tuesday the prosecutors wrote. The purpose of the conspiracy was to recruit an employee of a company to Syrup Tissue, transmit malware provided by the CO conspirators into the company's computer system. EXFILTRATION data from the company's network and threatened to disclose the data online unless the company paid the CO conspirators ransom demand. The complaint said that the malware would be custom developed. Propagate through the company's network. For it to work the group said, it needed the employees to provide information about the employers, network authorizations and network procedures. Correct correct Yakubov said, the malware would be transmitted either by inserting a usb drive into a company computer or clicking on an email attachment containing malware. Ebor explained the infecting computer would have to run continuously for six to eight hours for the malware to move fully through the network. To distract network personnel, a first stage of the malware would perform a denial of service attack while a second stage performed the data exfiltration. When the complaint was initially unsealed last Tuesday the identities of all parties was still confidential being identified only as company A, and C H s one which is their abbreviation for confidential human source number one that is the employees. But last Thursday Elon Musk confirmed that yes. Indeed it was his company that was the target of this whole operation. The charging document with was filed in federal court in Nevada detailed and extensive end determined attempt to infect. Tesla's network the defendant again twenty-seven-year-old Eager E- Gore Vich. Crush Cov allegedly traveled from Russia to Nevada and then met with the unnamed employees on multiple occasions. When Eagles initial five hundred thousand dollar bid failed to clinch the deal. The defendant doubled the offer to one million dollars according to the complaint Crutch Kav wined and dined and boozed up the employees and when discussing especially sensitive details conducted conversations in cars. When FBI agents couldn't conduct physical surveillance in restaurants or bars, the employees recorded them. One meeting occurred on August seventh in a car crutch Cov had rented referring to the employees again as C. H. S. One, the prosecutors described that. Seventh meeting as follows they said during this meeting which the FBI had consensually recorded. Crutch Cov reiterated some of the details of the criminal activity previously proposed to. C.. H.. S. One. Credit Yakubov described the malware attack as he did before. Adding that the first part of the attack, a De dos would be successful for the group in quotes but the victim companies security officers would think the attack had failed. Crutch COBB A and here's some news again listed prior companies this group had targeted. Crutch. Cobb stated each of these targeted companies had a person working at those companies who installed malware on behalf of the group. To ease, C.. H. S ones concerns about getting caught. Crutch Cov claimed the oldest project the group had worked on took place three and a half years ago and the group's Co op de still worked for the company.

Crutch Cov FBI Tesla Marcus Hutchins United States Nevada Crutch Kav Yakubov Twitter Las Vegas Logan Airport Elon Musk Researcher UK Cobb Syrup Tissue Ebor
Sara Blakely of Spanx: Ideas are Most Vulnerable When They're Brand New

How I Built This

07:48 min | 3 years ago

Sara Blakely of Spanx: Ideas are Most Vulnerable When They're Brand New

"Today. They of course. Thanks is an international brand and Sarah is a billionaire and you'll discover here is that she's also super open about the strategies. Used to stay stay confident and optimistic. When she was just getting started? I WANNA go back to one thousand nine hundred eight when I experimented when you cut the feet the legs of pantyhose any hose and began to design. What would become eventually spanks pockets? You said something to me that I've I've never forgotten and I'm going to quote here. You said ideas Are At their most vulnerable. When their brand new yes in other words that's when people say oh it's GonNa work socks is stupid? Forget it so great. Why didn't other people do it? You decided not to pretty much not to tell anybody to keep it a secret and it was for that reason because you knew that you would be discouraged. Yes now I shared my idea with people who could help me move it. Forward like a patent attorney the people in the manufacturing plants but I decided. I wasn't going to tell anybody just to say. Hey what do you think of this for awhile. Ideas are the most vulnerable in their infancy and we all have amazing ideas. I'm a believer. That everybody in their lifetime has has at least one million dollar idea maybe even a billion dollar idea but as our inclination as humans to immediately turn to our right or left and say to our friend or coworker husband and wife and say hey I have this idea what do you think and out of love and concern. They'll say well you know if it's such a great idea. Why isn't anybody done on it or things like that and then you end up spending all of your time defending it and explaining it rather than pursuing it? And so I pursued the I dea spanks for one year before I told anybody. I sat my family down. I said guys you ready. All they knew was Sara's working on some crazy idea they they didn't know what it was and I sat down and I said Okay Ready. It's footloose pantyhose right. You can imagine the response and they were like what what. And then I got all the out of total love. If it's such a good idea Sara why does it already exist and honey even if this is a a good idea you're going to spend your five thousand dollars in savings and within six months the big guys could just knock you right out of the water and I think I really believe that had I heard with that in the minute that I had the idea and cut the feet out of my pantyhose. I really think I would not have started spanks. You think if you would've told people or your family and friends or the people who sort of judgment you know could have affected. You would have given up or I just would have been easily. Let that one fly fly right out the window and just been like. Yeah okay. Maybe you're right but I also I had set intention for an idea two years before this and that also helped me so I sold fax machines door to door for seven years and I was always kicked out of buildings. PEOPLE WOULD RIP UP MY BUSINESS CARD in my face all the time and one day I had had such a particularly bad day I pulled off the side of the road and that's when I thought I'm in the wrong movie like call the director or call the producer. Call the writer later. This is not my life and I wrote down what I was good at in my apartment. I'm like what are you good at Erin in my good column was sales and I started asking myself. What is it about sales that I liked? Mike and I realized I really liked selling somebody something that they needed or would improve their live and I wrote down. I'm going to invent something that I can sell to millions of people that that will make them feel good and then I looked up and I said I need the idea and so two years later when I cut the feet out of my pantyhose to go to a party I had never worked in fashion or retail but I cut the feet out and I solved this undergarment issue kind of because they rolled up my legs all night but but I you know I looked smooth. I had no lines and I thought this should exist for women but because I had said that intention and been so clear what the universe two years prior and said please give me the idea. I believe ideas are gifts from the universe and I think they're very precious and I think the minute we get them. We should write them down. Instantly I think carrying the same style notebook with me for twenty years and now mostly used my phone but I keep a log of every thought an idea that I think could potentially be something thing you know. I think about your story a lot because in those early days where you're going door to door selling fax machines getting doors slammed in your face at wonder group that built resiliency. Did you have to be exposed to that kind of rejection. In order to be able to start this company one hundred percent. I believe that cold calling rolling is one of life's greatest trainings. I had to learn how to be quick on my feet. I had to learn how to win somebody over quickly I had to learn to get to the heart the matter in a sales scenario very quickly which is when I learned. What's in it for them and get to the point very quickly and don't sell the product? Sell the problem you're solving. I learned all this through massive mega trial and error and door after door. Slamming in my face and that helped me so much respect because for the first two years I was working on spanks spanks at night and on the weekends while I was still selling fax machines by day and that I got told no for those basically no which I just want to point out if you invent something or if you're an innovator it means you're doing something that's different than how everybody else is doing it. You're going to hear the word now. That's cool if I mean if you say you had told people about this idea people who loved and cared about you maybe some with them would've said Hey. Why don't you go work for Fashion Company for a couple of years and get experience in the industry and learn about it and learn the INS and outs and then you know you? You'll know what to do. You'll have connections and so on breath wonder if you in some ways you had a sort of an intuitive advantage given that you you told me on the show. Oh you didn't know anything about the industry right. I mean that's really logical advice. Get right especially as a parent to a child like go get experience before you go. I do this. So there's a very high likelihood I would have heard that right away and you know one of the things. My life was so bad when I was selling fax machines door to door and I had this conversation one time with my dad and he said honey you live in Atlanta now go get a job at CNN. or go work at coke and this voice inside of me said but then I might be content. And and I thought I need to be miserable right now like I need to stay miserable because if I stay in rock bottom and I'm this unhappy. I'm going to ensure that I am willing to take some sort of a leap that terrifies me but I mean even early on. You didn't ask for permission. I mean didn't ask for permission when you went to Neiman and Marcus I mean your products display in the back of the hosiery section syrup tissue next to the cash register so people would notice them. And you didn't ask for permission and you almost like you were fearless you. Wouldn't you weren't worried about the consequences of doing those kinds of things. Yeah I'm definitely not fearless. I'm courageous -rageous and there's a big difference. I'm afraid of so many things like those days that I moved the stand when no one gave me permission to I was shaking but I believe the differences that courage is doing things despite fear and we build our courage muscle by continuing to just face it and do it but I was terrified. Fight during all of those steps I will say that. I think being an entrepreneur and charting your own course especially if we're going to be doing things different than how everybody else does it which is where real change and innovation for society

Sara Sarah Attorney Atlanta Marcus Erin Writer Mike Fashion Company Director Cnn. Producer Two Years Five Thousand Dollars One Hundred Percent One Million Dollar Billion Dollar Twenty Years Seven Years Six Months
Andrew McCabe, Rod Rosenstein and New York Times discussed on Sean Hannity

Sean Hannity

01:50 min | 4 years ago

Andrew McCabe, Rod Rosenstein and New York Times discussed on Sean Hannity

"Interesting development is relates to this New York Times bombshell rod Rosenstein, suggesting he secretly record Trump and discussing the twenty fifth amendment media put out a piece today, and they found a statement released today by Andrew McCabe. It didn't deny the New York Times report on rod Rosenstein that he allegedly considered syrup tissue Asli recording conversations with the president in an attempt to remove him. From office allegation were revealed in a memo written by McCabe, quote, Andrew McCabe, drafted memos to memorialize significant discussions, he had with some high level of fficials and preserve them. So he would have an accurate contemporaneous. Record of those discussions read the letter from canes from caves attorney Michael Bromwich when he was interviewed by the special counsel more than a year ago. He gave all of his memos classified. And unclassified to the special counsel's office a set of those memos remained at the FBI at the time of his departure. He has no knowledge of how any mention of the media obtained in those memos and Rosenstein who is saying it's inaccurate incorrect. I don't believe rod Rosenstein in this case, you gotta remember Andrew McCabe is facing a grand jury and possible indictment, and I bet that he's pretty pissed off that he feels he was singled out when he has the knowledge that rod and others McCabe and struck that they were all involved in this scam with him. All part of the insurance policy. All part of the media leaks strategy all part of the effort to undermine a duly elected.

Andrew Mccabe Rod Rosenstein New York Times Michael Bromwich Special Counsel FBI Donald Trump President Trump Attorney Twenty Fifth
Eric Schmidt, ex-Google CEO, sees US, China internet split

Phil Valentine

00:21 sec | 4 years ago

Eric Schmidt, ex-Google CEO, sees US, China internet split

"The New York Times reporter wrote this rod Rosenstein, bombshell says he stands by it. And this wasn't a flippant remark. He says Adam Goldman referring to rod Rosenstein saying that he was going to syrup. Tissues taped the president and then tried to evoke the twenty fifth amendment to get him out of the

Rod Rosenstein Adam Goldman The New York Times Reporter President Trump Twenty Fifth
Twitter, Facebook head to Washington to testify before the Senate

60 Minutes

03:52 min | 4 years ago

Twitter, Facebook head to Washington to testify before the Senate

"Twitter and Google are due to testify again on Capitol Hill on the subject of foreign. Countries using their platforms To interfere with US elections It's been a tough few. Months for Facebook and, CEO Mark Zuckerberg in July the company's valuation dropped one hundred twenty four billion dollars the largest single. Day plunge in US history this in the wake of, a cascade of disturbing revelations as, we first reported in April we now know that during, years of, essentially policing itself Facebook alab Russian trolls, to by US election ads, advertisers to, discriminate by race hate. Groups to spread fake news and because Facebook shirked privacy concerns a company called Cambridge Analytica was, able to syrup tissue sleep gain access to personal data mined. From as many as eighty seven million Facebook users The, man who mind that data for Cambridge Analytica is a, scientist named, Alexander Kogan he's at the center of, the Facebook controversy because he, developed an, app that harvested data. From tens of millions of unwitting Facebook users the main infraction the main charge is that you, sold the data so at the time I thought we're doing. Everything that was correct I was kind of, acting honestly quite naively thought we. Were doing everything okay. Facebook says that you lie to them that's frustrating to hear to be honest if I had any inkling that what we. Were gonna do was gonna destroy a relationship with Facebook I? Would have never done it if I had any inkling that I was going to cause people to be upset I would. Have never done it this is the blind we have back that for someone implicated. In the biggest privacy scandal on earth Cogan seems incongruously guileless before all this happened what was your job and what was your field. Of study so, I was a social psychologist who was working as. A university lecturer at the university of Cambridge in England and England And I ran this lab that studied happiness and kindness and happiness and kindness Yeah. That's a far cry. From the adjectives lobbed at him now sinister in unethical here's what he did he ask Facebook users to take a. Survey he designed from which he built psychological profiles meant, to predict their behavior He failed. To disclose one that. What he was really after was access to their friends tens of millions of people he could not otherwise reach easily And to that he was doing the survey for Cambridge Analytica a political consulting firm that use the material to influence people, on how to vote the companies then CEO bragged about their prediction models on stage by having hundreds and hundreds of. Thousands of Americans undertake the survey we were able to form a mobile to predict the, personality of every single adult. In the United States of America Did you get to the point where you were predicting personalities And you gave that to Cambridge analytic? Contract what did you think they were gonna, use it for I knew it was gonna be for elections and I had a understanding or feeling that. Was going to be for the Republican side as political consultants Cambridge analytical was. Hired by campaigns to analyze voters and target them with ads

Facebook United States Cambridge Analytica University Of Cambridge Taco Bell Cambridge Lindbergh Field CEO America Rick Williams Mark Zuckerberg K. Fm Twitter Cogan Alexander Kogan England Google Lecturer Scientist
Aleksandr Kogan: The link between Cambridge Analytica and Facebook

CBS 60 Minutes

02:34 min | 5 years ago

Aleksandr Kogan: The link between Cambridge Analytica and Facebook

"And seven fifty a m kfqd spark and had ceo mark zuckerberg are in a whaler trouble and not just because the company has lost tens of billions of dollars in market value in recent weeks we now know that during years of essentially policing itself facebook allowed russian trolls to by us election ads advertisers to discriminate by race hate groups to spread fake news and because facebook's shirked privacy concerns a company called cambridge analytica was able to syrup tissue gain access to personal data mined from as many as eighty seven million facebook users the man who mind that data for cambridge politica is a scientist named alexander kogan he's at the center of the facebook controversy because he developed an app that harvested data from tens of millions of unwitting facebook users the main infraction the main charge is that you sold the data so it'd be the at the time i thought we're doing everything that was correct you know i was kind of acting honestly quite naively thought we were doing if they okay facebook says that you lie to them that's frustrating to hear to be honest if i had any inkling that what we were gonna do was gonna destroy a relationship with facebook i would have never done it if i had any inkling that i was going to cause people to be upset i would have never done it this is the blindness we had back then for someone implicated in the biggest privacy scandal on earth cogan seems incongruously guy os before all this happened what was your job and what was your field of study so i was a social psychologist was working as a university lecturer at the university of cambridge in england and england and i ran this lab that studied happiness and kindness and happiness and kindness yup that's a far cry from the adjectives lobbed at him now sinister an unethical here's what he did he asks facebook users to take a survey he designed from which he built psychological profiles meant to predict their behavior he failed to disclose one that what he was really after was access to their friends tens of millions of people he could not otherwise reach easily and to that he was doing the survey for cambridge analytica a political consulting firm that use the material to influence people on how to vote the.

Mark Zuckerberg Facebook Cambridge Analytica Cambridge Politica Scientist Alexander Kogan Lecturer England CEO University Of Cambridge