Yep.
Good talk.
About you crying rather than clarifying your nothing point.
Yep.
Good talk.
Like I didn't see that simple-minded summation coming a mile away.
Chump's forum view: Narrative > Clear intelligible point
X posts, Y hours, Z Blather. Par.
Yep.
Good talk.
Sounds like you got a nothing W to go along with your nothing point.
X posts, Y hours, Z Blather. Par.
X posts, Y hours
What's that about?
It's what you do in pursuit of nothing W's.
Ellen Ratner has some explaining to do
FOX NEWS ANALYST WAS THE POINT OF THE SPEAR FOR A VAST LEFT WING CONSPIRACY TO DISCREDIT A PRIVATE EYE.
(Sounds like Butowski has a vast left wing conspiracy to substantiate in court -- good luck!)
Assange says he never reveals sources, so he immediately revealed his source to Fox News?
You get stupider every day, TSA.
lol Butowski melted down when Isikoff asked him simple questions for the Conspiracyland podcast. The Rich family, Hersch and Ratner all say he's lying, and Butowski helps out by lying to Isikoff.
![]()
I didn't watch the video TSA posted but I assume it clearly shows Ellen Ratner saying this, because otherwise TSA would just be admitting to believe hearsay and he's much more of a skeptic than that.
Guccifer got out of prison.
https://theintercept.com/2023/01/15/...linton-emails/Lazar is not a household name by unauthorized access standards — no Edward Snowden or Chelsea Manning — but people will be familiar with his work. Throughout 2013, Lazar stole the private correspondence of everyone from a former member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to “Sex and the City” author Candace Bushnell.
CrowdStrike back in the news for the biggest IT outage in history on July 19th. Apparently, CrowdStrike released a global update without testing it first.
In the background, the Anti-Malware Testing Standards Organization (AMTSO) seems to have hamstrung the third-party testing companies.
CrowdSuck - The American ProspectDuring the 14 months after the start of the pandemic, Kurtz sold $250 million worth of shares and turned much of his attention to his second career racing exotic cars. Over the past five years, the CEO has sold stock 49 times, with his last sale on June 21 netting him more than $20 million. Chief Security Officer Shawn Henry, too, has made roughly $30 million selling more than 85,000 shares over the past year, the last 4,000 of which he disposed of in a planned transaction on Monday, July 15.
Four days later, just before 1:00 a.m. Eastern, the company sent out a faulty “sensor configuration update” to tens of thousands of clients that caused millions of computer screens to flash an error message apparently known as the “blue screen of death.” The buggy update grounded thousands of planes, suspended patient care at hundreds of hospitals and doctors’ offices, trapped millions of emails, and disrupted access to millions of consumer bank accounts. It wasn’t, Kurtz was quick to insist, the result of a cyberattack; the bug in the update was homemade, likely the result of shoddy testing protocols. An (ultimatelyvindicated) user on a subreddit for system administrators claimed CrowdStrike had been sending out updates without testing them for some time; another claimed CrowdStrike had laid off hundreds of engineers and quality inspectors the year earlier.
CrowdStrike, for its part, says it is still conducting “root cause analysis” of the up and will report back soon; two House Republicans wrote a not-angry-just-disappointed letter to the company demanding Kurtz report back with his availability for the obligatory congressional flogging by Wednesday.
“The thing I found most absurd was the way they kept insisting it ‘wasn’t a hack.’ As though that would matter to anyone who had to postpone emergency surgery or who couldn’t access their bank account because of what may be the biggest IT disruption in recorded history,” mused the cybersecurity expert.
“These software companies ascend and once they’re ascendant, they spend more money on race cars and action figures and advertisements at airports as opposed to the people and processes that are going to keep those airports operating smoothly and securely …” he paused. “It’s like the fall of Rome, every time.”
Mornin', fart-face.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)