1

If the link is borking, you can check it out in the original link - the archived link is with no paywall while Washington Post limits how many you can read for free (archive.org does not archive Washington Post)

For this story, Washington Post reporters interviewed more than 30 current and former federal employees. To confirm those workers’ stories, they reviewed agency badge credentials, layoff notices and internal agency emails. Sources who spoke to The Post anonymously did so to avoid retribution from their agency or the Trump administration.

38
submitted 3 days ago by deinu@sh.itjust.works to c/usa@lemmy.ml

If the link is borking, you can check it out in the original link - the archived link is with no paywall while Washington Post limits how many you can read for free (archive.org does not archive Washington Post)

For this story, Washington Post reporters interviewed more than 30 current and former federal employees. To confirm those workers’ stories, they reviewed agency badge credentials, layoff notices and internal agency emails. Sources who spoke to The Post anonymously did so to avoid retribution from their agency or the Trump administration.

[-] deinu@sh.itjust.works 11 points 3 days ago

"We should sanction non-approved messaging services because they are open to abuse by foreign governments." Sure. What about USA putting backdoors into things and the backdoors being used by said foreign governmemts? What a terrible argument.

Chinese Hackers Used U.S. Government-Mandated Wiretap Systems

27
[-] deinu@sh.itjust.works 23 points 3 days ago

"We should sanction non-approved messaging services because they are open to abuse by foreign governments." Sure. What about USA putting backdoors into things and the backdoors being used by said foreign governmemts? What a terrible argument.

Chinese Hackers Used U.S. Government-Mandated Wiretap Systems

78
submitted 3 days ago by deinu@sh.itjust.works to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

deinu

joined 6 days ago