Pic related. Lawfag here, but I must credit this to FOOL NELSON on Twitter. If you don’t follow him, you sound.
QRD - The same Georgia Tech analysts that worked with Joffre to mine DNS data elude to working on the DNC data that allegedly concluded that Russians hacked DNC. Put differently - it’s possible the same group that fabricated data to suggest Trump / Russian collusion did the same thing with DNC data. apt28/sofacy refers to FancyBear, the alleged Russian hackers for DNC
Source: New FOIA drop. I can find link if you shills spaz out enough.
what kind of lawyer? im a trial lawyer, lost faith in any other type of attorney when they refused to publish my note on government spying. instead they published some retarded shit about how many black attorneys there are or some shit, i talked to the girl who wrote it and she said she put like zero effort into it, even felt bad they picked her over me. but of course they were just looking out for their future careers as corporate servants.
Nolan Wright
Where does Crowdstrike fit into this? Help me build the connection web.
Correct. Same Georgia Tech researcher who cooked up DNS data with Joffre is describing his work on the alleged FancyBear hack:
The indictment’s “Researcher-1” was identified as Manos Antonakakis, a computer scientist at Georgia Tech. “Researcher-2” is David Dagon, a data scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology.“Originator-1” is April Lorenzen, the chief data scientist at the Zetalytics information services firm.
CrowdStrike / Possibly Manos -> hands data to Sussman on DNC / FancyBear hack -> hands off data to FBI
Joffre / Manos -> hands off DNS data to Sussman -> hands off data to CIA (after FBI rejected),
Charles Barnes
Hmmmmmmm, very very interesting indeed.
Christian Cooper
It's bedtime for me, but have another bump.
Nathaniel Wood
Louise Mensch already debunked this.
Liam Rodriguez
Does APT28 exist?
John Diaz
Guccifer 2.0 was supposedly part of APT28 right? And that's definitely bullshit.
Isaiah Sullivan
the interesting thing about crowdstrike is that they do endpoint detection, not network. they have no network sensors so all they would have is the dns request which is not enough to make a legit attribution.