Mass surveillance leak

Say hello goys, they have been watching for awhile.

foxnews.com/tech/2017/11/20/pentagon-accidentally-exposes-web-monitoring-operation.html

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You are a dumb nigger. I knew this six years ago when the FBI knocked on my front door with a file thicker than a bible with everything I'd done online. People have been saying this for years and you're just now getting around to it. You're the goyim.

meh. I like the idea of some hot marine being forced to watch me fapping to porn.

fixed archive.is/v5Qnx

please don't be a leaf. please don't be a leaf. please don't be a leaf.

FUCK

i never noticed how awesome the actual pentagon building looks. its prob cool as hell inside

>tfw all your shitposting past will survive as long as america still exists
When do we nuke Amazon servers?

SPY ON MY INTERNETS FAGGOTS AHAHAHA

Im not proud of it all but i wouldnt be me without it

Id like to reread my shitposting with an FBI agent. Could be fun.

Id like to hear him read to me all my teenage sex chats from when I was a young boy on AOL

I think some girl said she wanted to put me inside her

>tfw ive been trying to score craigslist pussy for at least 5 years now.

im not happy about this

Why, though? What did you do?

That was me pretending to be a girl. :^)

i'm curious as to why they thought you were important enough to print all that shit out and confront you about it

Durrrr he was being a bad goy.

>Implying 12 year old me gave a fuck
I could jack off to a magazine photo back then and barely even hated existing

...

i used to roleplay with grown men as a 14/f/cali when i was really a 12/m/va. maybe this is why i'm so fucked up now

You'd have better lucking taping a $50 bill to a small rock, attaching it to a fishing line, and casting into a trailer park than searching on Craigslist.

Who didn't?

This.

"HuhDuh intelligence agencies are storing data lf the internet"

Oh what a surprise I wasn't expecting it.

Im behind 50 proxies and wrapped in tin foil good luck fbi niggers

That was the best source of (You)s on AOL

MY SIDES IN ORBIT!!!!

I used to have sex with my hand like it was a vagina

oldie but still relevant

in the shower with conditioner, right. i bet we would eventually find out everyone on pol is spiritually linked or something weird since we are all basically the same

>in the shower with conditioner, right
you learn real quick that soap and shampoo burns the peehole

I enjoy the sounds females make when they are super horny/orgasming

It makes my penis want to ejaculate

>flag
>complete retard
pottery

considering there's only 5 people on pol, no shit we're all the same

This

pol had like 127 million visitors last month buddy. you're wrong as hell. more people go on pol than people go on cnn, msnbc, cbs, fox news combined

hes lying thats why he didnt answer

I like how the shills have to pretend that they like being watched.

Fucking perverts.

>You are a dumb nigger. I knew this six years ago when the FBI knocked on my front door with a file thicker than a bible with everything I'd done online
fucking christ lmao if this happened to me i'd invite them in, grab a beer, and ask them to read random excerpts from my posting history while i have myself a giggle

>>”accidentally”

isn't it completely possible though

I thought there were 8 or 9 of us fatfaggots all shitposting together now

Lol what on earth did you do? Please continue
>>straps in

>127 million visits
I like to be extra extra secure with my proxies

you would have to be saying stuff like you will bomb a school or something to have them knock on your door

Why are we all so alike!?!?!

Of course everything we do online is being monitored and archived.
They might say they don't but c'mon plsss why wouldn't they.

Misconfigured amazon buckets is an endless stream of lulz. And apparently peoples private data.

And don't even LOOK AT head and shoulders or you'll have a real bad time

>"so here at the start of page 2 you're telling this person he's a faggot and he should kill himself?"
"that is correct"
>"why?"
"his waifu is trash"

Well by my count, there were 9 when I showed up, so it's 10 of us now.

Yall are fuckin busy, Cuz I only make like 4 or 5 posts a day.

>goys
Dummy.

even then, they still dont have legal rights to the data mined. it is still illegal to gather information on citizens. its just swept under the rug until a willing congress passes a law that allows them to use such evidence

The burn is part of the experience. If you do it enough it starts to feel good.

>pentagon spying on Internet

Is there really anyone who doesn't think this is going on? I'd be surprised if we weren't being spied on by at least a dozen agencies right now

Tfw no acid-bucket vagina gf...

Why live?

126 million bots and paid shills. Less than a million real shitposters

>goys

It's "goyim" you dumb fucking newfag

>roleplay as cali when you're really virginia
That's pretty fucked up.

>The information includes content relating to Iraqi and Pakistani politics and ISIS, but also social media posts made by Americans.

and then they call us Russians

holy shit i cant believe the gov is monitoring the internets

>8 years worth of shitposts
just imagine this for a second

you think they like the milkers too?

>fag
It's faggot you fucking dumb ass.

Thank you user
OP is the blackest nigger

>tfw made an assassination joke about Obama in 2008 on Sup Forums
>picked up by local cops the very next day, with US embassy guy present during interrogation
>found out last year, after ordering tickets, that I'm barred from entering the US for life

That's what you get for being an edgy teen. I even knew the feds were all over Sup Forums because of the CP.

The niggest?

Is that how to do it?

I really hope this is true.

thats what you get for that CP faggot

>foxnews.com/tech/2017/11/20/pentagon-accidentally-exposes-web-monitoring-operation.html
>accidentally

127 gorillion visitors?

Ooooh sure mr government kike, you're all-powerful and see everything so we better pls stop ruining our plans /cry

Fuck off ya gay kike

>Pentagon is behind the pepe market crash

That number should at least be cut in half from all the ban evaders/phone posters.

I knew but you can actually see what they have. I find it fucking hilarious the government did this then fucked up the storage so it's publicly available. And imagine normies and nogs and everyone else who thought we were crazy for saying they did this to us.

Fuck you how did you know what shampoo I use? Is that notated in my fucking file or something?

>not having a sticker over your webcam
congratulations you played yourself
I've been here for a year and a half but the sticker been there for at least 5 years

>Implying Im stupid enough to have a webcam

I didn't want to type that out and get put on another list leaf. I got fambly and shit. Just trying to make it until the weekend.

This isn't norway¿

>webcams in 2017

Checked. Search key words like nigger or kike and I bet they show up a couple hundred times. Need to look at the list when I get time. Has to be funny shit for days.

Fear tactic. Proof or gtfo

State intelligence analysts and FBI investigators say they use Suspicious Activity Reports to determine, for example, whether a person is buying fertilizer to make a bomb or to plant tomatoes; whether she is plotting to poison a city’s drinking water or studying for a metallurgy test; whether, as happened on a Sunday morning in late September, the man snapping a picture of a ferry in the Newport Beach harbor in Southern California simply liked the way it looked or was plotting to blow it up.
Photographing the ferry had turned up in Suspicious Activity Report N03821, a local law enforcement officer noting that he had observed “a suspicious subject… taking photographs of the Orange County Sheriff Department Fire Boat and the Balboa Ferry with a cellular phone camera.” The confidential report, marked “For Official Use Only,” noted that the subject next made a phone call, walked to his car, and returned five minutes later to take more pictures. He was then met by another person, both of whom stood and “observed the boat traffic in the harbor.” Next, another adult with two small children joined them, and then they all boarded the ferry and crossed the channel.
All of this information was forwarded to the Los Angeles fusion center for further investigation after the local officer ran information about the vehicle and its owner through several crime databases and found nothing.

Authorities would not say what happened from there, but there are several paths a Suspicious Activity Report can take. At the fusion center, an officer would decide either to dismiss the suspicious activity as harmless or to forward the report to the nearest FBI terrorism unit for further investigation. At that unit, the information would immediately be entered into the Guardian database, at which point one of three things could happen. The FBI could collect more information, find no connection to terrorism, and mark the file closed but leave it in the database. It could find a possible connection and turn it into a full-fledged case. Or, as most often happens, it could make no specific determination, which would mean that Suspicious Activity Report N03821 would sit in limbo for as long as five years, during which time many other pieces of information about the man photographing a boat on a Sunday morning could be added to his file: employment, financial, and residential histories; multiple phone numbers; audio files; video from the dashboard-mounted camera in the police cruiser at the harbor where he took pictures; and anything else in government or commercial databases “that adds value,” as the FBI agent in charge of the database described it. The FBI is even working on a way to attach biometric data, such as iris scans and facial images, to files. Meanwhile, the bureau will also soon have software that allows local agencies to map all suspicious incidents in their jurisdiction.
Traditional law enforcement channels are not the only ones taking advantage of Guardian. The Defense Department recently transferred one hundred reports of suspicious behavior into the system. Over time it expects to add thousands more as it connects eight thousand military law enforcement personnel to an FBI portal that will allow them to send and review Suspicious Activity Reports about people suspected of casing U.S. bases or targeting American military personnel.

As of December 2010, there were 161,948 suspicious activity files in the classified Guardian database, according to the FBI. These were mainly leads from FBI headquarters and state field offices. Back in 2008, the FBI also set up an unclassified section of the Guardian database so that state and local agencies could send in suspicious incident reports and review those submitted by their counterparts in other states. Some 890 state and local agencies have sent in 7,197 reports so that far; the FBI has turned 103 of those into full investigations. From those investigations have come five arrests, the FBI said. There have been no convictions yet, but FBI agents point out it can take years for an arrest to come to trial. An additional 365 reports, explained the FBI’s database manager, have added information to ongoing cases.

Timeless
Respect the classics newfags

Born of the blank check that Congress first gave national security agencies in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Top Secret America’s wasteful duplication was cultivated by the bureaucratic instinct that bigger is always better, and by the speed at which big departments like defense allowed their subagencies to grow. This included the National Security Agency.
Retired air force general Michael Hayden was in charge of NSA on 9/11. A personable, articulate intelligence officer whom many people easily call “Mike” despite his four stars, he oversaw its subsequent expansion. Under him, NSA had grown larger and more powerful than any other single intelligence-collecting organization. “Doubling down”—doubling the number of employees—“was the rule of thumb,” Hayden recalled, and he’d doubled down like no other previous NSA director. Under Hayden, NSA expanded its work into new parts of the world against new targets, requiring new language skills and technologies. It was the NSA’s responsibility to probe certain parts of the Internet too. But quality did not necessarily follow quantity, Hayden admitted. “Effective we were. Efficient we were not,” he said.
“The redundancy,” he added, “is a truth.”
Arkin and I wanted to see if we could calculate the growth in agencies after 9/11 and then count how many were doing the same work as each other and/or preexisting agencies. The results were stunning.

Looking at only government organizations working at the top secret level on counterterrorism and intelligence, Arkin counted twenty-one new organizations created in just the last three months of 2001, among them the Office of Homeland Security and the FBI’s Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force. In 2002, thirty-four more organizations were created. Some tracked weapons of mass destruction, others joined the cyberwar and collected threat tips. Still others coordinated counterterrorism among different agencies, attempting to tame the growing information load. Those were followed the next year by thirty-nine new organizations, from the formidable Department of Homeland Security to Deep Red, a small naval intelligence cell working on the most difficult terrorism problems.
In 2004, yet another thirty organizations were created or redirected toward the terrorism mission. That was followed by thirty-four more the next year and twenty-seven more the year after that; twenty-four or more each were added in 2007, 2008, and 2009. After two years of investigating, Arkin had come up with a jaw-dropping 1,074 federal government organizations and nearly two thousand private companies involved with programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security, and intelligence in at least 17,000 locations across the United States—all of them working at the top secret classification level.

With more work, he discovered that 263 of these organizations had been established or refashioned in the wake of 9/11. But the biggest growth had come within the many agencies and large corporations that had existed before the attacks and had since inflated to historic proportions. For example, the Pentagon’s large Defense Intelligence Agency, which collects and analyzes defense-related intelligence from countries around the world, had grown from 7,500 employees in 2002 to 16,500 at the end of 2010, DIA officials told me. Thirty-five FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces—“joint” because they included representatives from law enforcement, the military, intelligence, and the private sector—ballooned to 106 total, with over 5,000 agents and analysts involved daily.
As we learned more about Top Secret America, we sometimes thought Osama bin Laden must have been gloating. There was so much for him to take satisfaction from: the chronic elevation of Homeland Security’s color-coded threat warning, the anxious mood and culture of fear that had taken hold of public discussions about al-Qaeda, the complete contortions the government and media went through every time there was a terrorist bombing overseas or a near-miss at home. We imagined bin Laden and his sidekick, Ayman Zawahiri, pleased most by this uncontrollable American spending spree in the midst of an economic downturn. It was evident from the audiotapes secretly released after 9/11 that they both followed the news and would have known that thousands of people had lost their homes, that many more had lost their jobs, that states were cutting back on health care for poor children and on education just to stay afloat and to allow state fusion centers and mini-homeland security offices everywhere to stay open.

Uh, that sounds fucking scary, thanks.

Here take this. Also any of you fags know how to set up a proxy?

Would be a good tutorial if you mean well.

Fire at pentagon?

Why dont you do something about it then pussy.

All the pain of an sti without the sex.
Also there are lotions made for use in the shower.

Lets hope they get whats coming to them for turning our country into a police state.
hang em all

Were people really under the impression that the government wasn't monitoring public posts? Facebook, google, twitter, and all the large tech giants definitely are. I'd be surprised if the credit reporting agencies aren't as well.

Fagit
Ftfy