on March 25, 2025, 1:43 pm, in reply to "I have no idea what you mean by your last sentence."
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Question is very much about OPSEC. You don't EVER send stuff like that with a regular phone. Never ever. And you particularly don't send it using a third-party app.
I'm absolutely flabbergasted as someone who has some experience secure mobile communication. We made a phone that at the time (around 2017) was the most secure phone in the world (we got the certificate to prove it), and that was far from being used for info with this level classification. Not only was the hardware designed in-house (with special chips for security) it also used our own communication software & Android was stripped down, for instance it had no Google services. Plus device had tamper protection and other stuff.
And as I said, that was nowhere near the level of security to send war plans on.
Main problem here is not this one event but question if this is common-place among this administration? How much secret information do they spread in the same channels?
And how could other NATO countries trust USA to not treat any secrets they share to US in the same careless manner? Or even worse, as we can see how hostile some of the people at the top in US are towards Europe? Previous Message
plus I think they were more concerned about la Clinton's rather suspicious wiping of these messages rather than the security concerns per se.*
One can draw one's conclusions about the contents of the administration's messages in a way with which one cannot with Hillary's.
*On the other hand, it appears to be the leak rather than the Houthi-flattening discussed within it that appears to be exciting the bien pensanterie - perhaps this represents the opposing sides' differing thinking around state power in both the domestic and international arena.
The most delicious of moral treats.
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