In the age of the cloud, there are backups to backups. Unless you physically drill the drives, making it nearly unrecoverable, the data still remains even after it was deleted.
My reference to ECHELON was an old, dated SIGINT tech where we (NSA) placed "collars" on submarine copper and even fiber cables that was able to capture all data being pushed through it. The same can be done for anything which traverses via SAT.
If the Plan involves USSF and/or NSA and/or Unknown Agency, then anything traversing Twitter networks is effectively being siphoned off and stored in Bluffdale.
The other anon probably sold AOL 2.0 CDs door-to-door.
FWIW, the tech in the mid 1980's was good enough to recover data from mag tape and floppy disks that had been erased / over-written 7 times.
One guy I worked with had a project that was going to create a product that could read mag tape codes (like CC strips) from a distance - dozens of feet away. Imagine putting a code on a car, and reading it as the car drove by on the highway. To test the concept, they loaded him up with test gear and batteries to run the gear, and sent him out into the parking lot to read all the codes hidden on the cars. He had no idea where they were, but he found them. Then the project got shut down. It would have been quite profitable, lots of applications, and the company he worked for liked making profits.
In the age of the cloud, there are backups to backups. Unless you physically drill the drives, making it nearly unrecoverable, the data still remains even after it was deleted.
My reference to ECHELON was an old, dated SIGINT tech where we (NSA) placed "collars" on submarine copper and even fiber cables that was able to capture all data being pushed through it. The same can be done for anything which traverses via SAT.
If the Plan involves USSF and/or NSA and/or Unknown Agency, then anything traversing Twitter networks is effectively being siphoned off and stored in Bluffdale.
The other anon probably sold AOL 2.0 CDs door-to-door.
Good info.
FWIW, the tech in the mid 1980's was good enough to recover data from mag tape and floppy disks that had been erased / over-written 7 times.
One guy I worked with had a project that was going to create a product that could read mag tape codes (like CC strips) from a distance - dozens of feet away. Imagine putting a code on a car, and reading it as the car drove by on the highway. To test the concept, they loaded him up with test gear and batteries to run the gear, and sent him out into the parking lot to read all the codes hidden on the cars. He had no idea where they were, but he found them. Then the project got shut down. It would have been quite profitable, lots of applications, and the company he worked for liked making profits.
Yep and then gov comes in, classifies the tech and takes it from there.