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Maybe this is how Col Waldren (witness for Sidney Powell / Lin Wood lawsuits) got the information about the Scytl servers in Germany communicating with foreign countries during the election. Perhaps the server "raid" was a cyber raid, rather than an actual physical raid.
I feel like a war has been going on in the shadows and we see only a fraction of it, and much of the time that fraction is misinformation of some sort. Regarding Solar Winds, this was obviously a huge hack, but who did it? The MSM wants to blame Russia, but maybe it was the good guys. But if it was Trump, why is all this taking so long? Why not blow the whistle on at least some of it before the election? Or immediately after? I want the trap to be sprung, damn it! I can't stand the suspense....
I really, really don't want to get to that stage. And not just because I live in a very blue city. What I think is happening is that Trump is ratcheting up the suspense and the tension for a number of reasons: catching all the bad guys, doing psychological warfare on the bad guys, and creating a situation that will convince the normies that he was right to do what he will have to do. But it has to happen before inauguration day.
This is really not very special information, and the security implication is exaggerated. A. Yes, Orion is one of the most popular network management software, and almost every corporation uses it to some extent. It does have access, but it's hardly the keys to the kingdom. Generally every PC has the same connectivity. B. Netflow traffic analyzer is definitely a powerful tool which could potentially be used for ill purpose. However, it's optional, expensive, and not nearly as popular. Larger corporations are likely to use other tools. It's also a very low level tool to be used as implicated. It likely would require a lot of detailed inside knowledge. The implication is likely very exaggerated. C. Network Performance Monitor - this is really the guts of the Orion product. It polls all the network/server devices, and then bubbles up aggregate statistics to highlight performance issues across the network. From there, analysts can drill down to detailed statistics. Again, the security implication is exaggerated. It requires a lot of detailed targeted inside information to even make sense of what is reported. It's not clear to me how that could even be used for a security related issue.
Bottom line, Solarwinds is a popular distributed application embedded into the networks of most corporations. If that application, like almost any other, were compromised by a hack, it could be a serious security threat. However, I would be surprised if the networking nature of Solarwinds made it a uniquely grave threat. More likely, it's just a popular application that got hacked, and the interesting part of the hack may turn out to be the internal corporate corruption that was involved in the hack.
Maybe this is how Col Waldren (witness for Sidney Powell / Lin Wood lawsuits) got the information about the Scytl servers in Germany communicating with foreign countries during the election. Perhaps the server "raid" was a cyber raid, rather than an actual physical raid.
Very unlikely. All that info came from security analysis and tools. Solarwinds wouldn't be used like that.
Didn't waldron say Gina haspel was at the Frankfurt server warehouse and was shot by us military?
This is what sun tzu would have done.
This might explain her “we don’t know if the good guys or the bad guys got it” because they just knew it got hacked at the time
Interesting
I feel like a war has been going on in the shadows and we see only a fraction of it, and much of the time that fraction is misinformation of some sort. Regarding Solar Winds, this was obviously a huge hack, but who did it? The MSM wants to blame Russia, but maybe it was the good guys. But if it was Trump, why is all this taking so long? Why not blow the whistle on at least some of it before the election? Or immediately after? I want the trap to be sprung, damn it! I can't stand the suspense....
Patience.
I've tried to be patient, but I am losing it. I've been waiting for the Storm for over two years now.
You won't have to wait much longer. Either Trump delivers or we go to box three.
I really, really don't want to get to that stage. And not just because I live in a very blue city. What I think is happening is that Trump is ratcheting up the suspense and the tension for a number of reasons: catching all the bad guys, doing psychological warfare on the bad guys, and creating a situation that will convince the normies that he was right to do what he will have to do. But it has to happen before inauguration day.
Don't worry man. Trump hasn't come this far because he doesn't know how to play the game.
The storm IS upon us. Look around.
I like it! Hopefully we find out!
This is really not very special information, and the security implication is exaggerated. A. Yes, Orion is one of the most popular network management software, and almost every corporation uses it to some extent. It does have access, but it's hardly the keys to the kingdom. Generally every PC has the same connectivity. B. Netflow traffic analyzer is definitely a powerful tool which could potentially be used for ill purpose. However, it's optional, expensive, and not nearly as popular. Larger corporations are likely to use other tools. It's also a very low level tool to be used as implicated. It likely would require a lot of detailed inside knowledge. The implication is likely very exaggerated. C. Network Performance Monitor - this is really the guts of the Orion product. It polls all the network/server devices, and then bubbles up aggregate statistics to highlight performance issues across the network. From there, analysts can drill down to detailed statistics. Again, the security implication is exaggerated. It requires a lot of detailed targeted inside information to even make sense of what is reported. It's not clear to me how that could even be used for a security related issue.
Bottom line, Solarwinds is a popular distributed application embedded into the networks of most corporations. If that application, like almost any other, were compromised by a hack, it could be a serious security threat. However, I would be surprised if the networking nature of Solarwinds made it a uniquely grave threat. More likely, it's just a popular application that got hacked, and the interesting part of the hack may turn out to be the internal corporate corruption that was involved in the hack.
We don't know what the hack is though. The hack could be almost anything within the app. It might not have anything to do with the networked nature.