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Post by TheGlove on Feb 15, 2021 7:41:58 GMT -8
United Nations Department Program (UNDP) UK, is giving the sum of £1 Million GBP to 20 lucky recipients round the world as Covid-19 Financial Relief Donation. Send this references number (COVID-19-1023SA/-01/12/2020 ) to us.
Regards Mr. Zhang Feng
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Post by Henry Skrimshander on Feb 15, 2021 10:20:51 GMT -8
Maybe we have an alum who is a Nigerian prince.
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Post by shelby on Feb 15, 2021 10:46:05 GMT -8
One of those Nigerian Princes just phoned, apparently if I send him $2,000, there is a locker at the airport, in my name, that has $20 million in it just for me ! I will sign it over to OSU as soon as In am back from the airport run ! Oh boy 🤑
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Post by mbabeav on Feb 15, 2021 11:36:25 GMT -8
One of those Nigerian Princes just phoned, apparently if I send him $2,000, there is a locker at the airport, in my name, that has $20 million in it just for me ! I will sign it over to OSU as soon as In am back from the airport run ! Oh boy 🤑 At least then you will be able to afford the extended warranty available on your car - for some reason they hang up on me when I say my car is a 63 VW Bug.....
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Post by beaverdude on Feb 15, 2021 13:49:51 GMT -8
At least then you will be able to afford the extended warranty available on your car - for some reason they hang up on me when I say my car is a 63 VW Bug..... I don't know why that would be an issue. They never break down.
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Post by billthebeav on Feb 15, 2021 16:27:17 GMT -8
One of those Nigerian Princes just phoned, apparently if I send him $2,000, there is a locker at the airport, in my name, that has $20 million in it just for me ! I will sign it over to OSU as soon as In am back from the airport run ! Oh boy 🤑 At least then you will be able to afford the extended warranty available on your car - for some reason they hang up on me when I say my car is a 63 VW Bug..... Apparently they don’t cover Yugo’s either, weird.
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Post by spudbeaver on Feb 15, 2021 18:28:40 GMT -8
Hey, it worked on the head of the Washington State unemployment agency to the tune of $600 mil! But don’t worry, they got a couple hundred mil back and she got appointed to the Federal level in charge of 9 Bil. It’s all good!
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 16, 2021 13:19:06 GMT -8
Hey, it worked on the head of the Washington State unemployment agency to the tune of $600 mil! But don’t worry, they got a couple hundred mil back and she got appointed to the Federal level in charge of 9 Bil. It’s all good! Lol. A big Democratic fundraiser gets put in charge of a $13.5 billion state fund, "loses" $600 million of it in a lead-up to the election and fails her way up to a Federal job? Nothing to see there, obviously........... The Swamp always protects the Swamp Monsters.
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Post by beaverdude on Feb 17, 2021 6:28:11 GMT -8
Lol. A big Democratic fundraiser gets put in charge of a $13.5 billion state fund, "loses" $600 million of it in a lead-up to the election and fails her way up to a Federal job? Nothing to see there, obviously........... The Swamp always protects the Swamp Monsters. It get's better.... The State Auditor just announced that the data it collected to investigate the loss was stolen from them in a hack. So far the State's only response to those 1.1 million people: Here's a link to the 3 major credit bureaus, have them put a freeze on your account. Have a nice day!
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 17, 2021 14:10:15 GMT -8
Lol. A big Democratic fundraiser gets put in charge of a $13.5 billion state fund, "loses" $600 million of it in a lead-up to the election and fails her way up to a Federal job? Nothing to see there, obviously........... The Swamp always protects the Swamp Monsters. It get's better.... The State Auditor just announced that the data it collected to investigate the loss was stolen from them in a hack. So far the State's only response to those 1.1 million people: Here's a link to the 3 major credit bureaus, have them put a freeze on your account. Have a nice day! That is so reprehensible. You potentially ruined 1.1 million people's lives. Your credit is one of the most important things that you have to build a better life in today's day and age.
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Post by mbabeav on Feb 17, 2021 15:04:50 GMT -8
It get's better.... The State Auditor just announced that the data it collected to investigate the loss was stolen from them in a hack. So far the State's only response to those 1.1 million people: Here's a link to the 3 major credit bureaus, have them put a freeze on your account. Have a nice day! That is so reprehensible. You potentially ruined 1.1 million people's lives. Your credit is one of the most important things that you have to build a better life in today's day and age. Well let's not forget the leak from the State of Oregon Employment Department in 2014 that exposed just about the same number of people or the Federal Personnel Department's (lets give all our secret security clearances and information on CIA assets), where 22.1 million people's information were stolen. Had a background security check for the military, NSA or CIA? No problem! Meanwhile the SolarWinds hack of this year that basically exposed everyone in the world - but that is no problem!
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 17, 2021 15:22:18 GMT -8
That is so reprehensible. You potentially ruined 1.1 million people's lives. Your credit is one of the most important things that you have to build a better life in today's day and age. Well let's not forget the leak from the State of Oregon Employment Department in 2014 that exposed just about the same number of people or the Federal Personnel Department's (lets give all our secret security clearances and information on CIA assets), where 22.1 million people's information were stolen. Had a background security check for the military, NSA or CIA? No problem! Meanwhile the SolarWinds hack of this year that basically exposed everyone in the world - but that is no problem! The SolarWinds attack included attacks on both Equifax and Microsoft, which are both huge in everyone's day and life. It was through Microsoft that they were able to backdoor certain sectors of the Federal government and the related attacks on Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom. It is a problem, especially the attack on Equifax. But what data are you worried about in the rest of the attack?
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Post by mbabeav on Feb 17, 2021 18:58:56 GMT -8
Well let's not forget the leak from the State of Oregon Employment Department in 2014 that exposed just about the same number of people or the Federal Personnel Department's (lets give all our secret security clearances and information on CIA assets), where 22.1 million people's information were stolen. Had a background security check for the military, NSA or CIA? No problem! Meanwhile the SolarWinds hack of this year that basically exposed everyone in the world - but that is no problem! The SolarWinds attack included attacks on both Equifax and Microsoft, which are both huge in everyone's day and life. It was through Microsoft that they were able to backdoor certain sectors of the Federal government and the related attacks on Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom. It is a problem, especially the attack on Equifax. But what data are you worried about in the rest of the attack? most of the world's largest corporations were exposed, nice thick data bases and well it's why I watch my own stuff very carefully, and take heart in the law of large numbers, being a very small fishie in a pond this size.
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Post by beaverdude on Feb 18, 2021 7:07:56 GMT -8
The SolarWinds attack included attacks on both Equifax and Microsoft, which are both huge in everyone's day and life. It was through Microsoft that they were able to backdoor certain sectors of the Federal government and the related attacks on Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom. It is a problem, especially the attack on Equifax. But what data are you worried about in the rest of the attack? Why was the SolarWinds hack so successful? Networks rely on the tootsie pop approach to security. They rely on the hard candy shell to protect the chocolate center. Security is difficult to get right. The Zero Trust approach to security would have significantly reduced the ability for the hackers to invade interior networks but adoption is difficult for a variety of reasons, the basics being time, money, and lack of regulatory requirements. The most frequent business pushback I get is we don't collect data that hackers would want (surprise, your employees don't know that!). In the end the vast majority of hacks can be traced back to PEBKAC
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