Friday, August 07, 2015

Vladimir, Really? Good bye, F35.

There are two resolutions to this. The first get rid of all the cyber anything in the military or use the military capacity to launch false information to international hackers. 

The USA national defense is completely compromised if there is more and more investment into cyber anything. The reason Russia and China have a strong cyber capacity when it comes to the USA Infrastructure is because of the plans for widespread drone warfare. Just that simple. If the USA launched a mission into Russia with cyber capacity, the jets would fall into the oceans and never be found. It's a perfect crime. There would be no detection of the reasons the USA's national defense failed. And then it would be all over. No need for bombs, foreign troops would land and take over DC. 


August 6, 2015
By Jacob Brogan
According to NBC News, hackers (click here)—allegedly from Russia— compromised an unclassified email system used by more than 4,000 employees of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The attack apparently began on or about July 25 and was “coordinated  … via social media accounts.”
CBS News reports that classified elements of the network were not affected. Nevertheless, the unclassified servers remain offline, “and senior members of the Joint Staff were provided with an alternative means of exchanging unclassified e-mail.”
While NBC News suggests that Russia is the primary suspect, the actual source of the attack is not yet absolutely clear. CNBC says “a state actor” is responsible, but it does not say whether the attack “was sanctioned by the Russian government or conducted by individuals.” The “attribution problem”—the difficulty of determining who is responsible for an attack—is increasingly part of cybersecurity discussions....

Russian celebrated the first anniversary with sanctions. That is what that was all about.

August 6, 2015
By Andrew L. Kramer

...Following an order by President  Vladimir V. Putin, (click here) officials threw huge piles of pork, tomatoes, peaches and cheese into landfills and garbage incinerators.

The frenzy, remarkable even by the standards of Russia’s recent politicization of food supplies, was gleefully reported by Russian state television.

“You can see behind me cheese that was made nobody knows where, without labels,” Yekaterina Mironova, a journalist on Rossiya 24 television, standing before a gigantic mound of orange cheese rounds, as a bulldozer revved its engine in the background.

The offending cheese, she said, would be plowed into a landfill in the Belgorod region of western Russia....