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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 12:45 AM)Samseau Wrote:  

Quote: (03-08-2017 03:45 PM)AnonymousBosch Wrote:  

So, have any of the major Feminists Typists tweeted that it's now obvious who the source of #theFappening was?

If not, they should be informed. After all, they love fighting the patriarchy... don't they?

Surprised no one else has said the obvious. The CIA must have the biggest nude collection in the world.

RELEASE THE NUDES, JULIAN
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Alright, serious question to you all:

How is this a surprise to anyone?

We've been discussing and acknowledging the spying potential of all of these products and technologies for years in the tech circles I frequent.

Now after this and the Snowden revelations the common reply I see is, "Well yeah, how could you be so naive?"

Google does half of the work for the CIA by advertising and collecting all of that free data (email). The intelligence communities don't need to put much effort into anything these days. People willingly give away their info for free.

And all of us tech nerds decrying the collapse of privacy? We'd go on about our lives concerned but unable to stem the problem because the general public quite frankly didn't understand.

Go and read the comments of a Slashdot article about Smart TVs with built in cameras and microphones. They were all called spy machines when they were released years ago. Why would you willingly put something like that into the most private areas of your life and not be able to inspect the software on it!

I find it troubling it too everyone this long to figure it out. These fears started taking flight as far back as 2001.

If it's electronic, connects to the internet, and has a mic and/or camera it's spying on you and there are backdoors somewhere that will expose them.

Same goes for cell phones. They're never truly off unless you remove the battery. How convenient that batteries are all soldered inside the phones these days too!

Now of course everyone wants privacy again. Good luck with that! Nothing stored on a connected device is truly secure.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 02:21 AM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:  

These CIA retards really have some chutzpah to think that the public is going to accept their weak "oh but we have to be ruthless in order to protect you" defense. Here's a list of their amazing protective achievements in the last few years:

- having their "moderate rebel" trainees in Libya join ISIS
- having their "moderate rebel" trainees in Syria join ISIS
- failing to prevent a dozen major terrorist attacks in USA & Europe
- getting caught spying on numerous world leaders and being the #1 reason why most of the world hates USA
- attempting to influence elections around the world and leading a coup attempt against the president of USA on top of that

And then they have the audacity to blame it on us! We never asked for them to stir up shit anywhere! We're sick of it!

I propose that Obama and John Brennan write a book together. They can call it "The audacity of surveillance".

The NSA/CIA has not stopped even one terrorist attack since 9/11.

The FBI has stopped several terrorist attacks.... that they were instrumental in starting, planning, and providing material for.

The purpose of mass surveillance is not to stop terrorism, which it clearly doesn't, but to increase power for the spy agencies that have the tools to spy, and on that respect it's working bigly.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 06:01 AM)The Beast1 Wrote:  

Now of course everyone wants privacy again. Good luck with that! Nothing stored on a connected device is truly secure.

The only way to get privacy is to go off-grid. Unplug everything. However we are moving towards "luddite" as defined: "You dont have apple pay" or "You dont have facebook". Just participating minimally in society (no phone, no internet) will get you tracked.

We don't realize the scope of how much data can be gathered, stored, and search quickly if needed.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote:Quote:

There has been a big increase in spending related to the War on Terror, but the pattern has been different. “Intelligence” spending is now up to something like $80 billion, largely focused on Moslem terrorism, whose objective military strength is something like 10-100 thousand times less than that of the old Soviet Union. A conservative estimate is that we’re spending a million dollars per year per terrorist, maybe more – that’s not even counting Iraq and Afghanistan.

There hasn’t been much associated blue-collar employment – partly because of factory automation, partly because we’re not fielding mass armies or building lots of of weapons.

Nevertheless, I think that the Washington players have stumbled [and I do mean stumbled, because I’ve never seen these guys do anything else] upon a pattern that is likely to be more effective at gathering and sustaining political support than that seen in Cold War. You see, a really big fraction of that intelligence money (about half) is spent in and around Washington. Little is spent on blue-collar workers, except for construction. A lot is funneled through private contractors and they pay well, much better than civil service. There are loads of extremely cushy jobs that are ideal for high-level double dippers, ex-generals, people from the Congressional staffs, their spouses and kids, etc.. You can work at the State Department and find a good job for your technically illiterate wife at the CIA, fighting nuclear proliferation.

[...]

Cold War aerospace was especially politically impotent, because its high-paid jobs were (outside management and sometimes even there) taken by engineers, who are not, cannot become, and have never even met anyone with any political juice. Not in this country.

In Washington today, the benefits of intelligence spending are flowing much more directly to people in the same class [and often closely connected, by blood and marriage] as those who actually run the the country. Cuts out the middleman.

"The great secret of happiness in love is to be glad that the other fellow married her." – H.L. Mencken
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 06:01 AM)The Beast1 Wrote:  

Alright, serious question to you all:

How is this a surprise to anyone?

We've been discussing and acknowledging the spying potential of all of these products and technologies for years in the tech circles I frequent.

Now after this and the Snowden revelations the common reply I see is, "Well yeah, how could you be so naive?"

Google does half of the work for the CIA by advertising and collecting all of that free data (email). The intelligence communities don't need to put much effort into anything these days. People willingly give away their info for free.

And all of us tech nerds decrying the collapse of privacy? We'd go on about our lives concerned but unable to stem the problem because the general public quite frankly didn't understand.

Go and read the comments of a Slashdot article about Smart TVs with built in cameras and microphones. They were all called spy machines when they were released years ago. Why would you willingly put something like that into the most private areas of your life and not be able to inspect the software on it!

I find it troubling it too everyone this long to figure it out. These fears started taking flight as far back as 2001.

If it's electronic, connects to the internet, and has a mic and/or camera it's spying on you and there are backdoors somewhere that will expose them.

Same goes for cell phones. They're never truly off unless you remove the battery. How convenient that batteries are all soldered inside the phones these days too!

Now of course everyone wants privacy again. Good luck with that! Nothing stored on a connected device is truly secure.

No surprise to me, a lot of people just refuse to believe the government is their enemy not their friend.

Try pointing your average joe to the secret societies and how all of this is connected to that and the elites trying to shore up their position in society while returning us to a feudal system where they rule in perpetuity.

I have tried on many occasions to discuss these things with people but try as I may, they read the information, see the evidence and then think that its too far of a stretch as it comes across like a dystopian movie, but thats exactly what has happened, we are living the nightmare.

CIA's greatest accomplishment was coining the term Conspiracy Theorist, most people equate it to paranoid nut, which has the effect of people making up their minds before they have even taken a look at what you are presenting to them. Source:

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-02-23...-challenge

The CIA is our biggest problem right now, we need that neutralised, followed by Federal Reserve, that my friend is the rats nest from which these bastards exercise their power, all roads lead there since 1913.

Take away their printing press and we have a chance to see America become free again which benefits us all.

[Image: 6092556_f520.jpg]

He who dares wins - Del Boy
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Interesting segment from Hannity last night:

this links directly to the best part: http://youtu.be/376u0n7lE3M?t=28m21s

I love the looks on both faces of the people who have experience in that world, when Hannity asks "does the CIA really have that capability" and they both look amused, like they are thinking "dude, you have no idea".

Then Shaffer says that the hacking of the DNC was not done by the Russians, "we did it".




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Wikileaks Vault7 release

We are probably the last generation to experience anything called privacy. Just like I was the last generation to experience when men were men and women were women. It is only going to get worse. With nanotechnology they will be able to put electronic bugs in your cereal as well as everywhere else. I am hoping that the Tower of Babel was true and that somehow the system will blow itself up.

Rico... Sauve....
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Julian is holding a live press conference:

https://www.periscope.tv/w/1ZkKzEqeDMZxv
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

[Image: attachment.jpg35952]   

Trump sending in his British mate Farage to speak to Assange? 'Full immunity' if he stops the leaks? Asking for any intel on Trump's wiretap perhaps?

Obviously some big stuff is yet to come.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Why hasn't Trump commented on #Vault7 yet? The (((CIA)) is his #1 enemy, he should be out for blood while this scandal is still fresh!

"Imagine" by HCE | Hitler reacts to Battle of Montreal | An alternative use for squid that has never crossed your mind before
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 10:29 AM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:  

Why hasn't Trump commented on #Vault7 yet? The (((CIA)) is his #1 enemy, he should be out for blood while this scandal is still fresh!

If I were him I would hold off for as long as possible. Healthcare and other things do not need to get railroaded right now.

He also needs to finish finding the mole and continue to clean house there as much as possible. Too many loyal Obama and Hillary people in there, that need to come out.

The only reason why he found out about how he was spied on is because after his CIA leadership got in, they got access to all the top level shit. No doubt he saw even more than that, he probably cannot discuss.

They should say no comment, until something atrocious comes out (eg. Extreme misconduct, like a trove of celebrity nudes or nudes of politicians, etc.) Then when that happens have the situation/communications/Press Secretary team prepare a statement that they will work with congressional oversight and remove all those involved, etc. Always gauge the outrage first. Talk on Hannity if there is a need to clear the air. Pick the questions beforehand with him as usual.

Trump still needs these various branches of government. Talking like he wants to shut them down is completely ridiculous. Don't throw the baby out with the bath water. Just fix the problems and move on. The last president was there 8 years. Trump has been in what? Three months? Give him more time than this. He cannot fire them all for no reason, he needs to find the evil and the incompetent ones and have them removed legally.

Dating Guide for Mainland China Datasheet
TravelerKai's Martial Arts Datasheet
1 John 4:20 - If anyone says, I love God, and hates (detests, abominates) his brother [in Christ], he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, Whom he has not seen.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 12:45 AM)Samseau Wrote:  

Quote: (03-08-2017 03:45 PM)AnonymousBosch Wrote:  

So, have any of the major Feminists Typists tweeted that it's now obvious who the source of #theFappening was?

If not, they should be informed. After all, they love fighting the patriarchy... don't they?

Surprised no one else has said the obvious. The CIA must have the biggest nude collection in the world.

Where do you think The Fappening came from? And Snowden said passing around nudes of your acquaintances was commonplace.
Reply

Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 10:22 AM)Nineteen84 Wrote:  

Trump sending in his British mate Farage to speak to Assange? 'Full immunity' if he stops the leaks?

You mean continuing? The leaks have helped Trump immensely. He's leaking more on the organs of the Deep State than the real American government. And with all the leftists psyops against Trump, he's actually got more credibility with the opposition than the POTUS.

Half the reason the CIA/Deep State "lost" their weapons to "independent contractors" is that they didn't feel like being hunted by the democratically elected government with their own weapons. Now the holes are being patched, and they still get to use the arsenal against America as long as it works. The cancer is metastasizing outside the state.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 11:22 AM)DarkTriad Wrote:  

Quote: (03-09-2017 12:45 AM)Samseau Wrote:  

Quote: (03-08-2017 03:45 PM)AnonymousBosch Wrote:  

So, have any of the major Feminists Typists tweeted that it's now obvious who the source of #theFappening was?

If not, they should be informed. After all, they love fighting the patriarchy... don't they?

Surprised no one else has said the obvious. The CIA must have the biggest nude collection in the world.

Where do you think The Fappening came from? And Snowden said passing around nudes of your acquaintances was commonplace.

[Image: mindblown.gif]

The alleged hackers that broke into the Apple icloud were Russians too!!!

Wow.... tsk tsk...

Dating Guide for Mainland China Datasheet
TravelerKai's Martial Arts Datasheet
1 John 4:20 - If anyone says, I love God, and hates (detests, abominates) his brother [in Christ], he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother, whom he has seen, cannot love God, Whom he has not seen.
Reply

Wikileaks Vault7 release




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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 11:57 AM)Nineteen84 Wrote:  




Creepy as hell

He who dares wins - Del Boy
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 11:57 AM)Nineteen84 Wrote:  




Alexa takes the Fifth!
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-08-2017 07:45 PM)Roosh Wrote:  

Quote: (03-08-2017 06:23 PM)Handsome Creepy Eel Wrote:  

What do you mean Gawker was going after the Clinton pedo ring? These people absolutely adored both pedos and Clintons (but I repeat myself). That doesn't make sense.

Yeah if that's what Nick Denton was really doing he would have reminded us dozens of times as the lawsuit with Hulk Hogan was going on. I think they had one article that detailed the accusations against the X Men producer, like many other outlets had, but no sustained reporting.


The Gawker Shutdown
Contents [hide]
1Summary
2Generally accepted facts
3Reviewing the official story
3.1Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com as revenge
3.2Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com for litigation profit
4Alternative theory: Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com as part of Clinton Foundation favor
4.1Background on Palantir Technologies
4.1.1Palantir asked to spy on WikiLeaks
4.1.2The Clinton Global Initiative provided mutual favors to Palantir
4.2Gawker's negative coverage of the Clinton Foundation
4.2.1Gawker covers Clinton and Clinton's allies' ties to Jeffrey Epstein
4.2.2Gawker covers Clinton and Clinton's allies' ties to Ronald Burkle
4.2.3Gawker covers Hillary Clinton's secret email server
4.3Victor Vekselberg, Clinton ally, buys a minority share
4.4Univision, Clinton Ally, purchases Gawker Media
4.5Why would Peter Thiel care about Clinton coverage?
4.6Discussing the primary counterpoint: Peter Thiel's endorsement of Donald Trump
5Relationship to #Pizzagate
5.1Connection to convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein
5.2Connection to alleged statutory rapist, Ronald Burkle
5.3Connection to Hillary Clinton
5.4Connection to the Clinton Foundation
6Themes
6.1Purchase the Press
7Additional Links
8See also
Summary
Based on all available evidence, it appears Silicon Valley investor, Peter Thiel, used litigation to attack Gawker.com, not to exact revenge or for litigation profit, but to protect his business interests in Palantir Technologies from negative publications involving their client and partner, the Clintons. While often considered left-leaning, Gawker.com was a leader in investigative articles on the Clintons' various indiscretions, including Bill's ties to sex offender and Clinton Global Initiative co-founder, Jeffrey Epstein, and on Hillary Clinton's secret email server.

Generally accepted facts
Bollea v. Gawker is a Florida lawsuit in which Terry Gene Bollea, known professionally as Hulk Hogan, sued Gawker Media, publisher of the Gawker website, and several Gawker employees and Gawker-affiliated entities, for posting portions of a sex tape of Bollea with Heather Clem, at that time the wife of radio personality Bubba the Love Sponge.

Hogan sought $100 million in damages. In March 2016, the jury found Gawker Media liable and awarded Hogan $115 million in compensatory damages and $25 million in punitive damages. Gawker CEO Nick Denton said the company would appeal the verdict. Three months after the verdict, Gawker filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and put itself up for sale.

Billionaire Peter Thiel, a co-founder of Paypal and current Facebook board member, is helping Hulk Hogan finance his lawsuit against Gawker Media. Gawker had published an article on Thiel, outing him in 2007.

Information from Wikipedia

Reviewing the official story
Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com as revenge
Peter Thiel has never been explicit in why he funded Hulk Hogan's $10 Million lawsuit against Gawker Media.[1] Many presume it was because Gawker.com (now defunct) outed Peter Thiel as a homosexual in 2007.[2] As the official story goes, Thiel, supposedly angered by being outed, funded Hogan's lawsuit as revenge. As the Guardian stated:[3]

[B]y publicly outing him as gay in 2007, Gawker founder Nick Denton shattered the privacy of Thiel’s fiercely guarded personal life and techno-libertarian vision. And Thiel, it turns out, can hold a grudge.
However, that begs the question as to whether Thiel actually worked to keep his sexual orientation a secret. Going by the unsourced quote in the Gawker article which said "Of course he's gay. Why would you mention that?," the answer is a firm no.[4] In fact, Forbes wasn't even sure if the article even outed Thiel:[5]

...[S]ome dispute whether the article actually outed the billionaire (Thiel said in past interviews that his friends had known since at least 2003)...
However, when Thiel intends to keep a part of his personal life a secret, he does so extremely carefully. As the Guardian stated, "When reporters contacted people in Thiel’s orbit, it’s not uncommon to have basic facts questioned."[6] For Thiel to be so careless with hiding the truth of his sexuality, even around his close friends, does not match his character, assuming it was something he truly intended to keep a secret.

Based on search engine results limited to that time period (the months after December 2007), it doesn't even seem the news that Thiel was gay mattered enough to elicit another article on the subject from any other publication. Thiel went on to embrace his public homosexuality (as noted here), without any seeming public denial of the Gawker article. In fact, Peter Thiel has expressed the importance for individuals in the tech industry to ignore social conventions, which one would presume includes conventions regarding sexuality.[7]

Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com for litigation profit
Other outlets promote a competing theory that Thiel financed Hogan's litigation because he foresaw a profit opportunity.[8] However, at the outset of the case, many individuals felt Hogan would likely lose his case against Gawker Media, including a Federal Judge.[9] That does not even take into account whether there would be a profit over the cost of "reasonable" attorneys fees and how much the final judgement would be. Even if Hogan won and the judgement stood, Forbes admitted it was not clear if Thiel would receive any portion of the award from Hogan's trial.[10]

For Thiel - someone known for fairly shrewd investments - this case would not be considered a good investment. If there was a profit motive, that motive lies elsewhere.

Alternative theory: Peter Thiel brought down Gawker.com as part of Clinton Foundation favor
Background on Palantir Technologies
Peter Thiel is a co-founder and the current chairman of Palantir Technologies, a private American software and services company, specializing in big data analysis.[11] Thiel is the company's largest shareholder and is estimated to own roughly 10% of the company valued at $20 Billion, making his ownership value likely $2 Billion.[12] Thiel's total net worth is only thought to be somewhere between $2 and $3 Billion, so it is safe to assume that his ownership in Palantir is a large portion of his net worth.[13]

The CIA's venture capital arm, In-Q-Tel, provided much of the initial funding for Palantir Technologies[14], and for much of its life and at least until 2013, the heart of Palantir was in contracts that it possessed with agencies within the US government.[15]

Alex Karp is the current CEO of Palantir Technologies.[16]

Palantir asked to spy on WikiLeaks
From Wikipedia:

In 2010, Hunton & Williams LLP allegedly asked Palantir, Berico Technologies, and HBGary Federal to draft a response plan to “the WikiLeaks Threat.” In early 2011, Anonymous publicly released HBGary-internal documents, including the plan. The plan proposed Palantir software would “serve as the foundation for all the data collection, integration, analysis, and production efforts.” The plan also included slides, allegedly authored by HBGary CEO Aaron Barr, which suggested “[spreading] disinformation” and “disrupting” Glenn Greenwald’s support for WikiLeaks.

Palantir CEO Karp ended all ties to HBGary and issued a statement apologizing to “progressive organizations… and Greenwald … for any involvement that we may have had in these matters." Palantir placed an employee on leave pending a review by a third-party law firm. The employee, Matthew Steckman, was later reinstated.
The Clinton Global Initiative provided mutual favors to Palantir
The Clinton Global Initiative, part of the Clinton Foundation partnered with Palantir Technologies, to review the foundation records in order to make the foundation look more legitimate.[17] Palantir would declare the partnership in 2013.[18] As a partner, it seems Palantir offered their review of the Clinton Global Initiative for free.[19] The lack of a price tag may be because Palantir was feeling charitable, or that Palantir saw it as a way to help ensure the flow of their overwhelmingly lucrative federal government contracts from the Clintons and their allies in the federal government.

From The National Memo:[20]

Ten years after its founding, Palantir’s chief executive Alex Karp — one of the firm’s co-founders with Thiel — agreed to perform a highly sophisticated and costly feat of data analysis for the Clinton Global Initiative, at no charge.

The task was to evaluate over 3,000 “commitments to action” made by nonprofits, corporations, unions, and other organizations at CGI’s annual meetings in New York City, hosted by its founder, former President Bill Clinton. Those commitments represent CGI’s central purpose, by transforming the typical conference on global problems, which usually began and ended with talk, into an opportunity for participants to act. To remain active in Clinton Global Initiative (CGI), every member must make a commitment, and those commitments must be “new, specific, and measurable” in their positive impact on a global problem.
Ironically, not only did Palantir offer its services for free, it paid Bill Clinton a total of $240,000 for just two meetings, presumably around December 2012.[21] Again, one would assume these meetings were to ensure ongoing lucrative federal government contracts. "Pay-to-play," so to speak.

Palantir would also come up in the Podesta Wikileaks emails. In an email from July 2015, Haim Saban, owner of Univision and now Gawker Media, recommended that John Podesta reach out to Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir, saying Palantir does not get involved in political campaigns, with one exception - Hillary Clinton. Podesta responded that he knows Alex Karp very well and would reach out.[22]

It should be noted that the Clinton Foundation is currently under FBI investigation, presumably for having received political bribes and engaging in money laundering, which Palantir's audit clearly missed.[23] It should also be noted that sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, claimed to be the founder of the Clinton Global Initiative.

Gawker's negative coverage of the Clinton Foundation
Gawker covers Clinton and Clinton's allies' ties to Jeffrey Epstein
Gawker.com (now defunct) was doing some of the hardest-hitting coverage of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, particularly as Epstein linked to others in his international sex trafficking ring. In total, Gawker published over 60 articles on Jeffrey Epstein and his personal ties - likely far more than any other reputable national online publication - and with far more salacious details. Gawker was the first news organization to publish Epstein's flight logs which put Bill Clinton on Epstein's infamous "Lolita Express" airplane.[24] Gawker also was seemingly the first news organization to publish Epstein's "Little Black Book" and describe the meaning behind house butler Alfredo Rodriguez's notations within that book.[25] For more on who Rodriguez identified, visit the Jeffrey Epstein page.

Many would say Bill Clinton's ties to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein posed the greatest risk to the political (and financial) future of the Clintons.[26] Epstein's "Little Black Book," with Rodriguez's notations, would identify several individuals with close Clinton ties or ties to Clinton's key donors, from Epstein's "madam" Ghislaine Maxwell to George Soros' nephew Peter. After January 2016, when Gawker acquired a new minority shareholder (discussed further below), only three articles would be published by a Gawker Media company (Jezebel), and all related only to the admittedly fake rape accuser[27], Katie Johnson, who accused Donald Trump of rape in conjunction with Epstein. None of the articles would mention Epstein's closer ties to Bill Clinton or other individuals Rodriguez identified.

Gawker covers Clinton and Clinton's allies' ties to Ronald Burkle
Gawker also spared no punches when it came to reporting on Bill Clinton's best buddy, Ron Burkle. Gawker cited Burkle more than 53 times in 2006.[28] Most notable, Gawker would refer to the numerous debaucheries in Jared Paul Stern's defamation complaint [29] - though even Gawker did not mention the specific allegations of Clinton and Burkle having sex with minors, which appeared in the original complaint. For more, see the wiki page on Ronald Burkle.

Gawker covers Hillary Clinton's secret email server
Gawker's founder, Nick Denton, credits his company with driving the story on Hillary Clinton's secret email server:[30]

In a statement, Nick Denton, the founder of Gawker Media, who was also personally named in the Hogan suit, said: “Just because Peter Thiel is a Silicon Valley billionaire, his opinion does not trump our millions of readers who know us for routinely driving big news stories including Hillary Clinton’s secret email account..."
Gawker would continue to cover Hillary's FBI email investigation on occasion, but after acquiring a minority shareholder (discussed further below), the coverage was far more pro-Clinton or, at least, disinterested, as the first headline after the minority shareholder purchase would indicate: Hillary Clinton Is In Some Kind of Email Shit Again.[31]

Victor Vekselberg, Clinton ally, buys a minority share
To finance the continued Hogan lawsuit, Gawker was forced to begin selling ownership shares. In January 2016, Gawker sold a minority share to Russian oligarch, Victor Vekselberg, via his company, Columbus Nova.[32] The investment granted Columbus Nova a seat on Gawker Media's board.[33] Viktor Vekselberg has a history of ties to corruption.[34] Not surprisingly, Vekselberg's investment in Gawker puzzled many observers.

Vekselberg is, to put it mildly, not the man you’d expect to save Denton’s website. In a parallel universe, he’s likely the frequent target of a Moscow-based cousin of Gawker. In fact, the site once wrote a brief post on him in 2008, describing him as an "ultra-rich" "Soviet oligarch."
In hindsight, with the knowledge gleaned from various leaks, the transaction would make more sense. As it turns out, Viktor Vekselberg was a Clinton ally. One leak showed in 2012, Vekselberg was interested in meeting with Bill Clinton in the U.S. regarding the Clinton Global Initiative, part of the Clinton Foundation.[35] Another leak showed Vekselberg's Renova Group donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Clinton Foundation as well.[36] Essentially, the Gawker transaction makes it appear a Clinton ally was beginning the Clinton takeover of Gawker Media, in what one could see as an attempt to have a check over the organization's coverage. In particular, the Clinton ally would have a check if the coverage swung dangerously negative for the Clintons.

Univision, Clinton Ally, purchases Gawker Media
After a disastrous financial result in the legal proceedings, which put Gawker Media into bankruptcy, the bankruptcy court put Gawker Media up for bidding in August of 2016.[37] The "suitor" that was perhaps most expected, including by Gawker itself, was fellow American publisher and online company, Ziff Davis.[38] However, to many people's surprise, it would be the media company, Univision, which typically catered only to a Latin American audience, that outbid everyone else.[39] While Univision intended to support all sister sites, it did not want Gawker itself - the heart of Gawker Media.[40] Gawker.com, the gossipy section of the Gawker Media website group which would publish articles on the scandalous Jeffrey Epstein, or Hillary Clinton's ongoing email woes, was effectively shutdown as part of the Univision purchase.[41]

Denton, founder of Gawker, admitted that the Gawker sites owned by Univision "all will be held to standards shared by Univision properties generally."[42] Thus, it would seem Univision has final say over what the Gawker sites publish. Indeed, Univision even put their own man in place to oversee editorial operations of the remaining sister sites.[43] Not surprisingly, Univision's ownership reportedly began with an internal culture clash with Gawker Media writers.[44]

Many found Univision's purchase of Gawker Media confusing because Gawker's sites did not fit with Univision's brand image.[45] However, the puzzling purchase makes more sense when one looks at who made it. Haim Saban, majority shareholder of Univision, has old, deep ties with the Clintons and their foundation, according to Wikipedia:[46]

Saban has been a generous and consistent donor to the United States Democratic Party according to his mandatory Federal Election Commission filings. Mother Jones, in an analysis of the major donors to the campaigns of 1998 election cycle, ranked Saban 155th among individual donors. Amy Paris noted that Saban's Clinton-era "generosity did not go unrewarded. During the Clinton administration, the entertainment executive served on the President's Export Council, advising the White House on trade issues." The New York Times reported that Haim and his wife "slept in the White House several times during President Clinton's two terms." Saban remains close friends with the former President. Clinton described Saban as a "very good friend and supporter." Saban contributed between $5 million to $10 million to the William J. Clinton Foundation.

During the 2000 presidential election, Saban increased his rank to 5th among individual donors with a combined contribution of $1,250,500. Matthew Yglesias wrote that "Saban was the largest overall contributor to the Democratic National Committee during the 2001–2002 cycle." Saban's donations during that 2001–2002 period exceeded $10 million, the largest donation the DNC has received from a single source up to that time.

In September 2004, Hillary Clinton described Saban as a very good friend, supporter and adviser...
While it may seem that all of Haim Saban's donations to the Clintons are above board, some believe Saban engaged in pay-to-play practices with the Clinton Foundation when Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State.[47] Thus Saban himself may have a vested interested in preventing any possible corrupt practices of the Clinton Foundation from coming to light.

Haim Saban would also come up in the Podesta Wikileaks emails, showing a personal connection to Palantir, by way of its CEO, Alex Karp. In an email dated July 2015, Haban recommended that John Podesta reach out to Alex Karp saying Palantir does not get involved in political campaigns, with one exception - Hillary Clinton - based on a conversation Saban had with Karp the day before. Podesta responded that he knows Alex Karp very well and would reach out.[48]

The Clinton piece helps to explain part of Univision's motive in the purchase. However, it should be noted that Univision purchased other online publications that often influenced politically-minded millennials, such as the Onion and the Root, so it is possible Univision was looking to make a larger play to consolidate and enhance its political power and control in the press.[49] This would be in line with Univision's desire to host its own Presidential Debate, which it did for the first time this year.[50] However, it is safe to say that when all was said and done, giving control of Gawker to Saban put it in safe hands for the Clintons.

Why would Peter Thiel care about Clinton coverage?
Peter Thiel would have a personal interest in preventing negative information about the Clinton Global Initiative's corruption from coming to light. First, it would seriously damage Palantir as they supposedly audited the organization, and could thereby hurt one of Thiel's biggest financial investments (think Arthur Andersen and Enron). In particular, many believe Hillary's emails provide the key to exposing corruption within the Clinton Global Initiative.[51]

Further information about Jeffrey Epstein could also be problematic. For one thing, some of Rodriguez's "material witnesses" have key ties to Thiel or his business partners. For example, Peter Soros is the nephew of George Soros, the latter of which Thiel made a joint investment with in October 2015.[52] And while it is unclear what Epstein's ties may be, a greater focus on how Jeffrey Epstein was involved with the Clinton Global Initiative and participation in any of the organization's corrupt practices, could also have been potentially damaging to Palantir as they vouched for the Clinton organization.

Overall, Thiel likely possessed an interest in protecting the people Palantir had connections with in the various government agencies that Palantir worked with - many of which would have ties to the Clintons or their allies. For the protection Thiel provided, there would likely be future rewards as well for Palantir, particularly in the form of new government contracts.

From the pizzagate wiki
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Is it just me that I noticed irony in the name of Palantir Technologies? Palantir is precious stone ball from the lord of the rings universe that is used for wait for it... spying!

That is like naming your company iSpy.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-09-2017 07:34 AM)Roosh Wrote:  

The purpose of mass surveillance is not to stop terrorism, which it clearly doesn't, but to increase power for the spy agencies that have the tools to spy, and on that respect it's working bigly.

Replace 'terrorism' with 'crazed lone gunmen', and this was the generally-held Conspiracy Theorist opinion back in the late 80's / early 90's.

After 9/11, Islam was a much more effective boogeyman to use.

It's funny how accurate most of those books I had from the early 90's have turned out to be.
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Quote: (03-08-2017 09:07 AM)SamuelBRoberts Wrote:  

Part of me wants to get rid of my smart TV, because of this data. And obviously I'm not getting an Alexa.

But my laptop has a microphone too, which I need for work. And my laptop's a lot easier to hack than a smart TV.

So it's not like I can go without it... Is there anything I can do about this? I can't really quit my job and move to a cabin in the woods.

Quote:[url=https://twitter.com/RonFutrell/status/839260375518326784][/url]
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

waitaminute.....

If all these massive tech companies were complicit in spying and breaking laws and etc etc....

Aren't we all looking at a huge payday with a class action lawsuit?
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

Here's an interesting quote from Peter Thiel, good insight into his mindset:

[Image: quote-the-best-entrepreneurs-know-this-e...-91-09.jpg]

Quote: (03-09-2017 05:58 PM)AnonymousBosch Wrote:  

Quote: (03-09-2017 07:34 AM)Roosh Wrote:  

The purpose of mass surveillance is not to stop terrorism, which it clearly doesn't, but to increase power for the spy agencies that have the tools to spy, and on that respect it's working bigly.

Replace 'terrorism' with 'crazed lone gunmen', and this was the generally-held Conspiracy Theorist opinion back in the late 80's / early 90's.

After 9/11, Islam was a much more effective boogeyman to use.

It's funny how accurate most of those books I had from the early 90's have turned out to be.

Two words for you: predictive programming.

“Nothing is more useful than to look upon the world as it really is.”
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Wikileaks Vault7 release

For the people that are concerned about the microphones inside laptops, wouldn't it be relatively easy on a lot of non unibody types to physically remove or destroy it?

I've had my laptop for almost 3 years and have used the microphone maybe once.
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