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


To: ggersh who wrote (199519)6/15/2023 11:11:02 AM
From: maceng2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217734
 
<<"Linus Torvalds will switch to Windows.">>


That is like the rumour in WW1 that


" the Russians are arriving with snow on their boots"


It's meaningless. It was said to distract the public from the real news of the day.


Doesn't the snow on the boots of the Russians ever melt?


Like why would Linus Torvalds do something like that?






To: ggersh who wrote (199519)6/15/2023 6:34:07 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217734
 
Re <<very interesting ... EU banking system being taken down>>

I think the EU banking system can be taken down a lot of different ways, with varying degree of thoroughness. I hope I get to see Istanbul, and the kids get done with checking out France before the EU is taken down when if its banking system is seriously downed.

There are only so very few data centres, and internet trunks and nodes to take down before the banking system becomes useless.

Recommendation to EU: line up and subscribe to China's quantum satellite-based and last-mile 5G-facilitated communication system, and adopt the HK-traded digital-CNY as currency, before it is too late, and ease into BRICS+ currency when issued.

Alternatively, duke it out.

ask-socrates.com

US & Nato to Give Zelensky Nukes
MONDAY, JUNE 12, 2023 BY: MARTIN ARMSTRONG



Despite being Sunday, it seems like our Neocons never stop conniving. This Great Spring Offensive on the part of Ukraine is a failure. Ukraine lacks professional soldiers and has been throwing old men, women, and youth to the front line to be slaughtered at the behest of people like Lindsey Grahm. The Ukraine army is on the verge of collapse. Already plane B is to provide Ukraine now with F16s and NUCLEAR WEAPONS. The Neocons have lost every war they have created since Vietnam. They are losing this one as well.

It is hard to imagine how our Neocons seem to hate Russians as much as the Ukrainian Neo-Nazis. They are perfectly willing to throw the entire world into chaos so they can defeat Russia. Handing nukes to Kiev they are now claiming will force Putin to negotiate which means accepting their terms with no negotiation. They lied about creating the Mink Agreement and have publically admitted doing so to allow Ukraine to build the biggest army in Europe for this proxy war and they have lost.



I do not know what to say. This is why the Neocons had to get rid of Trump and it is why the DOJ has been so corrupt and desperate to tie Trump up to prevent him from ever getting close to the White House. I do not like what the computer is showing for July. These nut jobs will deliver these F16s ASAP and they now think putting nukes in the hands of Neo-Nazis is the only way to save yet another failed Neocon war.

I wish we could purge Washington of all Neocons. But that would not fulfill the cycle. I have spent my life trying to defeat my own model. I can't. So, be prepared for more insanity. Our Neocons are in full control of NATO and as I have said, NATO only wants war - never peace. So the collapse of the Ukraine army will now lead to Plan B - the West arms what is left of this dancing head of state in his high heels to play with nuclear weapons after he just blew up the damn to try to get even more money and blame Russia.



To: ggersh who wrote (199519)6/15/2023 6:45:56 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217734
 
Re <<very interesting as this tweet warns of
EU banking system being taken down>>

below featured events are coincidences am sure, for now, for awhile, or are probing operations, to be tagged by shaping then fixing protocols, and if successful-enough to try, an attack surge. Let's watch.

Recommendation: check and tally coin bags, is what the Jack shall do this day

edition.cnn.com

Exclusive: US government agencies hit in global cyberattack
Sean Lyngaas

CNN — none
Several US federal government agencies have been hit in a global cyberattack by Russian cybercriminals that exploits a vulnerability in widely used software, according to a top US cybersecurity agency.

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency “is providing support to several federal agencies that have experienced intrusions affecting their MOVEit applications,” Eric Goldstein, the agency’s executive assistant director for cybersecurity, said in a statement on Thursday to CNN, referring to the software impacted. “We are working urgently to understand impacts and ensure timely remediation.”

Aside from US government agencies, “several hundred” companies and organizations in the US could be affected by the hacking spree, a senior CISA official told reporters later Thursday, citing estimates from private experts.

Clop, the ransomware gang allegedly responsible, is known to demand multimillion-dollar ransoms. But no ransom demands have been made of federal agencies, the senior official told reporters in a background briefing.

CISA’s response comes as Progress Software, the US firm that makes the software exploited by the hackers, said it had discovered a second vulnerability in the code that the company was working to fix.

The Department of Energy is among multiple federal agencies breached in the ongoing global hacking campaign, a department spokesperson confirmed to CNN.

The hacks have not had any “significant impacts” on federal civilian agencies, CISA Director Jen Easterly told reporters, adding that the hackers have been “largely opportunistic” in using the software flaw to break into networks.

The news adds to a growing tally of victims of a sprawling hacking campaign that began two weeks ago and has hit major US universities and state governments. The hacking spree mounts pressure on federal officials who have pledged to put a dent in the scourge of ransomware attacks that have hobbled schools, hospitals and local governments across the US.

Since late last month, the hackers have been exploiting a flaw in widely used software known as MOVEit that companies and agencies use to transfer data. Progress Software, the US firm that makes the software, told CNN Thursday that a new vulnerability in the software had been discovered “that could be exploited by a bad actor.”

“We have communicated with customers on the steps they need to take to further secure their environments and we have also taken MOVEit Cloud offline as we urgently work to patch the issue,” the company said in a statement.

Agencies were much quicker Thursday to deny they’d been affected by the hacking than to confirm they were. The Transportation Security Administration and the State Department said they were not victims of the hack.

The Department of Energy “took immediate steps” to mitigate the impact of the hack after learning that records from two department “entities” had been compromised, the department spokesperson said.

“The Department has notified Congress and is working with law enforcement, CISA, and the affected entities to investigate the incident and mitigate impacts from the breach,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

A source familiar with the investigation told CNN that one of the Department of Energy victims is a contractor for Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which was first reported by Federal News Network.

Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and the university’s renowned health system said in a statement this week that “sensitive personal and financial information,” including health billing records may have been stolen in the hack.

Meanwhile, Georgia’s state-wide university system – which spans the 40,000-student University of Georgia along with over a dozen other state colleges and universities – confirmed it was investigating the “scope and severity” of the hack.

CLOP last week claimed credit for some of the hacks, which have also affected employees of the BBC, British Airways, oil giant Shell, and state governments in Minnesota and Illinois, among others.

The Russian hackers were the first to exploit the MOVEit vulnerability, but experts say other groups may now have access to software code needed to conduct attacks.
The ransomware group had given victims until Wednesday to contact them about paying a ransom, after which they began listing more alleged victims from the hack on their extortion site on the dark web. As of Thursday morning, the dark website did not list any US federal agencies. Instead, the hackers wrote in all caps, “If you are a government, city or police service do not worry, we erased all your data. You do not need to contact us. We have no interest to expose such information.”

The CLOP ransomware group is one of numerous gangs in Eastern Europe and Russia that are almost exclusively focused on wringing their victims for as much money as possible.

“The activity we’re seeing at the moment, adding company names to their leak site, is a tactic to scare victims, both listed and unlisted, into paying,” Rafe Pilling, director of threat research at Dell-owned Secureworks, told CNN.

This story has been updated with additional developments.



To: ggersh who wrote (199519)6/15/2023 11:47:44 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217734
 
Re <<___ banking system>>

... it is likely the case that they world's banking systems going through a one-way-only entry way to the next phase, per 2026 / 2032 TeoTwawKi / Darkest Interregnum, and am unsure which politician mostly responsible for such shift

Recommendation: ... (well, you know) ...

Let's see how much Yuan the Japanese keep as walk around money

asia.nikkei.com

Russia pays Sakhalin dividends in Chinese yuan

Western sanctions on Moscow cast shadow on dollar hegemony


LONDON/WASHINGTON -- Russia has paid dividends from the Sakhalin 1 and 2 oil development projects in Chinese yuan, Nikkei has learned, a move necessitated by Western sanctions on Moscow that have kept financial institutions from accepting dollars related to Russian business.

After Moscow last year established new companies to manage its interests in the projects, located in the country's far east, Russian entities said they would change their dividend payment methods but did not specify which currencies they would use.

Before the sanctions, Sakhalin project dividends had been transferred in dollars about twice a year through a bank account in Singapore. However, with the sanctions essentially barring Russia from the dollar settlement network, financial institutions are now reluctant to conduct Russia-related dollar transactions.

Early this year, the Russian entities created a new remittance route to pay dividends from the Sakhalin projects.

Russian entities recently used yuan to pay dividends to Japanese trading companies that have stakes in the projects. The related transactions are believed to have been handled by Gazprombank, a subsidiary of state oil and gas company Gazprom.

Japan's Sakhalin Oil and Gas Development Co. -- in which the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry and Japanese trading companies have equity stakes -- holds a 30% interest in Sakhalin 1. As for Sakhalin 2, Mitsui & Co. has a 12.5% stake and Mitsubishi Corp. 10%. Japanese companies maintained their stakes even after their U.S. and European partners withdrew.



The yuan is not a favored settlement currency for Japanese recipients as it is subject to certain restrictions on cross-border remittances.

Yet yuan-denominated transactions are on the rise around the world. In March, China National Offshore Oil Co. (CNOOC), China's state-owned oil giant, and Total Energies of France settled LNG transactions in yuan. Brazil has introduced a system in which yuan can be used to settle trade and financial transactions with China. Middle Eastern countries are also said to be positive about settling transactions in currencies other than the dollar.

Yuan transactions are increasing particularly in Russia, owing to the sanctions. According to the Central Bank of Russian Federation, the yuan's share of foreign exchange transactions rose to a record high of 39% in March, while the dollar's share fell to 34%.

Sanctions that keep Russia out of the dollar settlement network are jeopardizing the dollar's reserve currency status and favoring China.

According to Stephen Jen and Joana Freire of Eurizon SLJ Capital, the share of the dollar in global foreign exchange reserves fell 10 times faster in 2022 compared to the average rate over the past 20 years.

After adjusting for the fluctuation in exchange rates, the company estimates that the dollar has lost about 11% of its market share since 2016. The dollar's share of official reserves worldwide has fallen from 70% in 2001 to around 58%. Jen and Freire noted that the dollar was the undisputed hegemonic reserve currency until around 2000, but its share has been steadily declining.

The U.S. was able to establish a hegemonic "petrodollar" by instilling a dollar settlement system for oil and other resources. The system is said to have been introduced by Richard Nixon when he was president in the 1970s in an effort to gain global economic influence.

This hegemonic power, however, could be threatened further as Western sanctions on Russia raise concerns about dollar holdings by countries that may potentially fall into conflict with the U.S.

In a speech in May at the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin said: "Sweeping changes are underway in international finance as well. ... We are pursuing a policy of reducing the share of unfriendly countries' currencies in mutual transactions and planning to expand our activities with our partners around the world, including the EAEU, in order to complete the transition to national currencies."