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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sense who wrote (172875)6/6/2021 8:41:42 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
sense

  Respond to of 217920
 
I suppose it can be the case that voter-fraud is a feature and not a bug?

:0)

In any case, shall happen again, 2022 and 2024, and ...



To: sense who wrote (172875)6/7/2021 1:48:23 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217920
 
In the meantime the proto-culture-revolution continues, w/ mobilization of the people, by the people, against other people

bloomberg.com

The Sedition Hunters
¦ 7 June 2021, 00:01
? Images from seditionhunters.org. (individuals shown are not confirmed to have taken part in the riot.)

Amateur internet sleuths have turned the Washington D.C. insurrection on Jan. 6 into the ultimate online manhunt.

By David Yaffe-Bellany
Photo Illustration by Adam Ferriss

As he watched footage of the Jan. 6 siege of the U.S. Capitol, Chris Sigurdson, an out-of-work actor in Canada, found himself drawn to a disturbing image: a man in an olive sweatshirt spraying chemicals at the police. On the man’s face, Sigurdson says, was a look of “demented glee.”

Sigurdson, 58, had been growing obsessed with the riot, spending 40 hours a week poring over photographs and videos. He noticed a resemblance between the man in the sweatshirt and a rioter who bragged about attacking police officers in a different video recorded at a hotel in Virginia. When he looked closely, he could see that they were the same person, carrying the same backpack.

Sigurdson posted his findings on Twitter at the end of January. Two weeks later, the FBI arrested Daniel Ray Caldwell of The Colony, Texas. An affidavit cited Sigurdson’s tweet as evidence. (Caldwell has pleaded not guilty to the seven federal crimes he’s charged with.)


? A sedition hunter in California built a facial recognition database and identified a man who was later charged for his role in the Jan. 6 siege.

Photographer: Cayce Clifford for Bloomberg Businessweek

The arrest was an early triumph for the growing community of self-proclaimed sedition hunters—a motley assortment of internet sleuths who have spent hundreds of hours analyzing the reams of footage that emerged from the insurrection. Over the past few months, the sleuths have coalesced into an expansive network that shares and cross-references videos and social media posts, dissecting the material on Twitter or in private group chats on platforms like Discord.

“Every person brings a piece of the puzzle together,” Sigurdson says. “People are only able to really hone in on somebody based on the work that everyone else is doing.”

Senate Republicans recently blocked a billin Congress to create an independent, Sept. 11-style commission to investigate the riot, making it increasingly unlikely that the U.S. government will ever produce a comprehensive and impartial accounting of the attack. On the internet, however, ordinary people are conducting investigations of their own, bolstering the FBI’s official inquiry while raising concerns that untrained vigilantes might broadcast the personal information of innocent people.

? A person wanted by the FBI for assaulting a federal officer on Jan. 6.

Five months on from Jan. 6, the authorities have brought charges against more than 400 rioters, often using the traditional tools of law enforcement, such as search warrants and confidential informants. But they’ve also relied on the crowdsourcing efforts of sedition hunters. In the days after the riot, the FBI saw a 750% increase in daily calls and electronic tips to its main hotline. The bureau still receives twice the normal volume of alerts. Such tips have proved helpful in “dozens of cases,” says Samantha Shero, an FBI spokeswoman. “The public has provided tremendous assistance to this investigation, and we are asking for continued help to identify other individuals.”

Some sedition hunters are now trying to identify people who stormed the Capitol but haven’t been apprehended—the FBI’s official wanted list still features hundreds of photos. Others have moved on to more sophisticated projects, looking for evidence of additional crimes by people who have already been charged, or tracing clues that could shed light on whether far-right groups plotted the riot in advance.

“There’s a sense that this stuff still has to come out and be in the public domain, otherwise we risk being in a situation where the history gets missed,” says John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, which focuses on digital threats to civil society. “The fact these groups still exist shows just how much people care.”

Despite the hundreds of arrests, there remain significant unanswered questions about the riot, from the extent to which Donald Trump’s allies aided the protesters to the level of coordination among far-right groups. Those mysteries have helped turn sedition hunting from a crowdsourcing project into a kind of internet subculture. Amateur historians of the Kennedy assassination could rewind the Zapruder film only so many times; Capitol riot obsessives have a seemingly infinite amount of footage to examine. Websites have popped up with titles like jan6evidence.com or seditionhunters.org, featuring research tools assembled by the sleuths: a gallery of hundreds of rioters, each identified by a hashtag such as #Tweedledumb or #camocrazyeyes; a map connecting videos of the siege to specific locations around the Capitol; and a set of links to annotated videos. In the online community, the release of an important new court document is eagerly anticipated, “like it’s the next hot bestseller,” as one sedition hunter puts it.

Many sedition hunters share their best information with FBI agents or investigative journalists. But as with previous online crowdsourcing initiatives, the effort has had some high-profile misfires. A retired Chicago firefighter was falsely accused of participating in the riot after footage surfaced showing a lookalike hitting police with a fire extinguisher. So was the actor and martial artist Chuck Norris.

Even accurate identifications can set a dangerous precedent and may embolden far-right groups to employ similar tactics against their own targets, says Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism. “As soon as you put someone’s personal information out there, you just don’t know what’s going to happen,” Segal says. “When you do it publicly, there’s just a lot more that can go wrong.”

Still, the online sleuths appear to have learned from past mistakes, like Reddit users’ misidentification of a suspect in the Boston marathon bombing in 2013. Several Twitter accounts that have helped mobilize Jan. 6 research efforts explicitly warn their followers to avoid naming suspects, urging them to report personal information to the FBI. In the weeks after the riot, established open source researchers sought to channel the intense interest in the siege toward less risky tasks—logging material into Google forms, for example, or making copies of photos to preserve evidence.

“There’s a way to harness it,” says Eliot Higgins, the founder of Bellingcat, an open source research organization. “If you can give them a useful outlet for their energy, then it’s more productive. … Because they don’t know what they’re doing.”

Most sedition hunters contacted by Bloomberg Businessweek were reluctant to speak on the record for fear of retaliation from internet trolls. One expressed concern that the “layers between those we work on and the former administration are paper thin.” Another declined to be interviewed but offered to provide the names of rioters who haven’t been arrested.

Many of the sleuths have treated the project as a full-time job, creating infrastructure to help fellow investigators sort through the footage. A sedition hunter in California built a facial recognition database that the community has used to identify rioters. (The site’s tagline: “They should have worn some f#$!ng masks.”) Such tactics have sparked concern among civil liberties advocates, who argue that the proliferation of facial recognition technology has eroded privacy. The database’s creator, who works in the health-care industry, defended the tool, saying it simply automated the time-consuming process of cross-referencing Jan. 6 images. He used the technology to identify Taylor Johnatakis, a podcaster from Washington state who was later charged for his role in the siege. (Johnatakis pleaded not guilty.) The creator says he felt a civic obligation to alert the FBI but took no joy in Johnatakis’s arrest. “He’s an honest-to-God good guy, completely brainwashed by Trump,” he says. “I hope the justice system is forgiving.”

The sleuths’ stated motivations range from righteous outrage to a nerdy fascination with the technical challenges of identifying suspects. “We want these people brought to justice,” says Forrest Rogers, a German-American business consultant who helps run a sedition-hunting group called Deep State Dogs. “And we don’t want a random sampling of them, a token group.”

? Images from seditionhunters.org. (Individuals shown are not confirmed to have taken part in the riot.)

Sigurdson says his interest stemmed from a combination of curiosity and pandemic-induced boredom. (“I’d mastered sourdough bread.”) He wanted to understand why seemingly normal people had converged on the Capitol to attempt to overthrow American democracy. “I don’t think anger would’ve sustained me through this whole process,” he says. “It’s more of a deep quest for comprehension.” He still spends hours a day researching the attack.

For some, watching all that riot footage has exacted a mental toll. Several sedition hunters noted that the audio is especially disturbing—an angry cacophony of screaming and swearing. At a certain point, Rogers turned down the volume on the videos and started listening to classical music; he’s become accustomed to watching the Proud Boys march on the Capitol with Tchaikovsky playing in the background. Rogers has discussed the issue of burnout with others in the community. “You see them drop off for a month,” he says. “And we’d DM each other, and they’d say, ‘I have to take a break, it was doing my head in.’”

Another sedition hunter, a stay-at-home mom in the Pacific Northwest, annotated nearly 100 hours of video, which she compiled in a spreadsheet that’s been widely shared. She recently began an even more ambitious project: tracking a Proud Boy leader who she believes may have mobilized a group of rioters to block exits around the Capitol, a possible sign of coordination and planning.

? A person wanted by the FBI for assaulting a federal officer on Jan. 6.

Like Rogers, she usually keeps the video on mute. But the images are searing. After watching all the footage, she says, she’s formed a three-dimensional map of the Capitol in her mind, built around images of violence and mayhem. She’s never seen the complex in person.

“I do want to visit,” she says, “and maybe purge some of those images from my head.”

Sent from my iPhone



To: sense who wrote (172875)6/7/2021 6:48:09 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217920
 
should we believe the below cited take?

that the FBI was able to identify the wallet I am sure because that is what blockchain is all about

that the hackers were not astute enough to hide their trails w/ peer-to-peer distributions, and not take their take into cold wallets, I find astounding

that the hackers did not break the trail w/ any number of mixer / laundry services, I find unbelievable

... but, as in however, let us see if 'they' attempt to blame anything happening in the future on DarkSide now that DarkSide is supposedly dark-ed in the bright light.

bloomberg.com

Colonial Pipeline’s Bitcoin Ransom Mostly Recouped by U.S.
Chris Strohm
8 June 2021, 06:30 GMT+8
The U.S. recovered almost all the Bitcoin ransom paid to the perpetrators of the cyber attack on Colonial Pipeline Co. last month in a sign that law enforcement is capable of pursuing online criminals even when they operate outside the nation’s borders.

U.S. officials said Monday that they captured about 63.7 Bitcoin traced to recipients of a 75-Bitcoin ransom paid by Colonial soon after the early May attack that resulted in a shutdown of the nation’s largest gas pipeline, resulting in fuel shortages across the east coast just ahead of the Memorial Day weekend.

Because of the declining value of Bitcoin since the ransom was paid, the U.S. seizure in late May amounted to $2.3 million, just over half the $4.4 million paid weeks earlier after the ransom was demanded.

Deputy FBI Director Paul Abbate said at a Justice Department briefing announcing the seizure that law enforcement identified a virtual wallet used in the ransom payment and then recovered the funds. He said investigators found more than 90 companies victimized by DarkSide, a Russia-linked cybercrime group blamed in the pipeline attack.

“Today we turned the tables on DarkSide,” Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said, as she called on companies to invest more to protect their critical infrastructure and intellectual property. “DarkSide and its affiliates have been digitally stalking U.S. companies for the better part of last year.”

How a Key U.S. Pipeline Got Knocked Out by Hackers: QuickTake

The action signals U.S. law enforcement’s ability, in some cases at least, to track cryptocurrency, identify digital wallets and seize funds, a potentially powerful tool in combating ransomware attacks in particular. The operation also reveals how quickly hacking operations can be identified by the FBI, which Abbate said has been investigating DarkSide since last year.

The FBI was able to find the Bitcoin by uncovering the digital addresses the hackers used to transfer the funds, according to an eight-page seizure warrant released by the Justice Department on Monday.

“New financial technologies that attempt to anonymize payments will not provide a curtain from behind which criminals will be permitted to pick the pockets of hard-working Americans,” Stephanie Hinds, acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, said at the news conference alongside Monaco and Abbate.

While the government’s efforts were significant, they also underscored the difficulty in going after the perpetrators of ransomware attacks. To date, no one behind the Colonial Pipeline attack has been publicly indicted, and the hackers still made off with a small portion of the ransom. Even if the people behind the attack are charged, they probably will remain out of reach of U.S. law enforcement agencies.

The ransomware attack in May caused fuel shortages at gasoline stations in several states and even affected operations by some airlines and airports. It was part of an increasing trend of such acts against critical infrastructure that is posing an early test of President Joe Biden’s administration.

Colonial Pipeline said Monday that it quickly contacted the FBI and federal prosecutors after it was attacked and praised the government for recovering much of the ransom.

“Holding cyber criminals accountable and disrupting the ecosystem that allows them to operate is the best way to deter and defend against future attacks of this nature,” Joseph Blount, chief executive officer of the Alpharetta, Georgia-based company, said in a statement. “We we must continue to take cyber threats seriously and invest accordingly to harden our defenses”

U.S. intelligence and law enforcement officials say stopping hacking attacks has become a national security priority, and the issue has raised tensions between the U.S. and Russia. Biden plans to bring up hacking attacks when he meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin next week, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki has said.

The message at the one-on-one meeting in Geneva on June 16 will be that “responsible states do not harbor ransomware criminals, and responsible countries must take decisive action against those ransomware networks,” Psaki said. Putin has denied knowing about or being involved in ransomware attacks.

In another episode, Brazilian-based JBS SA, the world’s largest meat processor, restarted beef production last week after a ransomware attack forced it to halt operations across the globe.

“Ransomware attacks are always unacceptable, but when they target critical infrastructure we will spare no effort in our response,” Monaco said.

— With assistance by Malathi Nayak, and Gerson Freitas Jr

(Adds details on FBI’s investigation in seventh paragraph. An earlier version of this story corrected the spelling of Georgia and removed outdated information on the value of the bitcoin not seized by the U.S.)

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To: sense who wrote (172875)6/8/2021 8:37:20 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217920
 
inflation incoming, definitely would be socialist act is actualised

zerohedge.com

Socialist Candidate Who Vows To Nationalize Mineral Resources Pulls Ahead In Peru Presidential ElectionIn a continuing trend in Latin American politics of Left-wing political movements on the ascendancy which has seen successful attempts to roll back free market friendly policies in favor of "starting from scratch" toward erecting more interventionist socialist states, the next political and electoral earthquake is set to hit Peru, where socialist candidate Pedro Castillo is maintaining a narrow lead over right-wing rival Keiko Fujimori as votes are still being counted and increasingly contested from Sunday's run-off election.

As of early Tuesday it's still being deemed "too close to call", but with Castillo pulling away Fujimori is now alleging election "irregularities". Son of peasant famers and an outspoken union leader, Castillo has "vowed to nationalize Peru's vast mineral resources, to expel foreigners who commit crimes in the country, and to move towards reinstating the death penalty," accordingto one profile.

AFP via Getty Images: Pedro Castillo, center, with his familyWhile widely seen as far left, he doesn't exactly fit standard partisan molds given he's also been described as a Marxist socialist who rejects Communism, works with right-wing populists on labor rights and pension benefits, and is opposed to same-sex marriage, abortion & "gender ideology."

Well over 95% of the vote has been counted, but it remains that remote rural areas are continuing to be tallied, and this is expected to favor Castillo; however, there are expectations of a prolonged contested outcome which could lead to further political instability after a years-long crisis in government.

The Guardian this week quoted one voter who summarized what's at issue for many on the right, who fear Castillo government would only emulate failed policies elsewhere in the region...

Roxana Araníbal Fernandez, 56, an insurance company worker, who voted for Fujimori in the middle-class Miraflores neighborhood in Lima, said: "We want the country to keep progressing. We don’t want to copy models which we have seen don’t work from Venezuela or Cuba."

But the legacy of Fujimori’s father – who is serving a 25-year sentence over corruption and death squad murders – and her own record as a politician play against her.

Responding to such widespread accusations, during a recent stump speech Castillo sought to assure, "We have just sat down and clarified that we are not communists, we are not Chavistas, we are not terrorists. We are workers like any of you; we have met in the streets; within that framework, we ask you for tranquility," he expressed.

Some of the headlines are capturing a general sense of "panic" among Peru's wealthy and elite class amid fears that a Castillo victory could lead to capital flight from Lima...

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Meanwhile Reuters noted that Peru's sol has continued plummeting to new lows, falling another 1% Tuesday after plunging 2.5% on Monday.