The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Tue Jun 25, 2013 4:40 pm

stickdog99 » Tue Jun 25, 2013 3:09 pm wrote:But 100 years in jail for posting a link? Come on.


Wholly agreed!

Just wanted to point out that tilting against these windmills isn't a death sentence.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Hunter » Wed Jun 26, 2013 10:00 am

The fact that he is looking at life in prison is absolutely one of the biggest miscarriage of justice I have ever encountered, do you all know what they got him for.

He had started a WIKI page called Project PM to post various documents and leaked stuff that that other journalists could have access to it and peruse it, he was in an IRC chat where someone had passed the STRATFOR HACK data dump to him, hundreds of thousands of internal Stratfor emails and there was no way he could go through it all by himself so he pasted the link in an IRC CHAT for others to get the dump so everyone could go through it together because he had started going through it and was seeing evidence of large scale corruption in these emails and documents, so he pasted the link in an IRC chat, the chat happened to be a chat set up by the FBI and SABU the lulzsec leader who was working for the FBI and so the FBI was in the chat with Brown when he pasted that link, basically what they got him for was trafficking in stolen creditc ard info because there just happened to be a couple of Startfor credit card numbers in this dump with hundreds of thousands of documents, nobody cared about the CC stuff in fact they didnt even know those CC numbers were in there but once he pasted that link in to the IRC he was guilty of trafficking stolen credit card information and that is essentially, among a few other things, what they got him for. Also he made a youtube video threatening an FBI officer, when they raided his apartment he got tip just before they got there, someone tipped him off that the FBI was on their way so he took off and took his laptops to his moms house and hid them, so the FBI then went to his moms house, for a new warrant for her house and found the laptops and then charged his mom with obstruction of justice, because the laptops were in her house, Brown says she didnt even know about it but they leaned on her to get him to talk basically put more pressure on him. At this time Brown was on Suboxone for opiate addiction and had run out of his meds and was in the middle of heroin withdrawl and basically lost his cool and made a youtube video saying that he was going to destroy the life of the FBI agent who was threatening his mother and that is another one of the things they got him on, admittedly it was a stupid move on his part but he said he totally melted down and lost it and wasnt thinking clearly when he did it and was very upset what they were doing to his mother when she had done nothing wrong at all.


Basically we can thank that fucker Sabu for all of it, when he turned rat for the fbi that is what brought Brown and several others down, that was the main reason.

Does anyone know where Barret Brown is imprisoned? I was thinking of writing him a letter, first to let him know we here at RI are talking about his case and supporting him in any way we can and also to ask him if he has any ideas about what may have happened to Hastings. I will google around and see if I can find him, I am sure he has to be in a federal pen since it was the FBI that went after him and hacking generally is a federal offense, and if he is in a federal prison he is allowed access to a computer but it only has an email client on it and they have to pay 25 cents a minute out of their prison account to use it to send emails. So if you contact a federal prisoner you can ask them to add you to their email list and then they would be able to get your emails but they can use the computer everyday I think its a once a week thing and like I said, it isnt cheap them for at 25 cents a minute when most of them dont even make 25 cents a day at their prison jobs. But my understanding is that all federal prisoners are allowed to send emails, even ones that are convicted of computer crimes. So if anyone has this information about Barret Brown or finds it before I do, please post it, I think I would like to make contact with him and perhaps find a journalist that would be willing to pick up where Hastings left off wrt the story he was working on about Brown before he did, my understanding is that Hastings met with Brown at the prison, on June 3rd.

Brown, like Hastings is an incredibly talented young man who likely had a very bright future as a journalist and writer, he is super intelligent and really writes exceptionally well. It is a real shame that he likely will never be free again, I surely hope he gets a fair trial and a good jury sees through this BS because he doesnt belong in prison the rest of his life for what he did, he didnt hurt anyone and he is basically a political prisoner.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Hunter » Wed Jun 26, 2013 10:18 am

If I am actually able to get ahold of Brown and anyone would be interested in sending him a buck or two, that can be done through his prison account and it would go a long way in allowing him more money to spend towards paper, pencils and being able to afford to use the prison email client more often which I am sure for a guy like Barret Brown would be a wonderful thing now that he is locked up, it may give him some limited ability to carry on some of his work if he can afford to email a little more often, a buck would get him 4 minutes on the computer at the 25 cents per minute rate they charge the inmates, that would at least allow him to write a nice long email to the outside world if I do get ahold of him I am going to at least deposit 20 bucks in his account to help the guy out a little. Whatever it takes to help him I am all for it, the guy is not a criminal and he doesnt deserve to be locked up like an animal or some sort of menace to society, he is a true asset to this world and everything but a menace to it.


Its crazy to think about as we all sit here on our computers but a few pencils and a pad of paper is hard to come by for those guys in prison and it is a real gift that they appreciate VERY VERY MUCH so keep that in mind!
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jun 26, 2013 10:47 am

Barrett Brown #45047177
Mansfield Law Enforcement Center
1601 Heritage Parkway
Mansfield, TX 76063
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby MinM » Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:01 am

Alchemy » Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:00 am wrote:Does anyone know where Barret Brown is imprisoned?

During this Scott Horton podcast with Peter Ludlow they refer to Barrett Brown being held in Texas (where Scott Horton works from)...

http://dissentradio.com/radio/13_06_21_ludlow.mp3

BTW, towards the end of the podcast Ludlow adds that, "It's like the DoJ is working for Stratfor..."
@peterjludlow: Discussion of #BarrettBrown on the @scotthortonshow http://bit.ly/1a0ROWN

viewtopic.php?p=509622#p509622

Here it is...
Barrett has pleaded not guilty in all three cases. He is currently incarcerated while awaiting trial in Mansfield, TX. ...

http://freebarrettbrown.org/

Thanks to WR for posting the pertinent info...
Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:47 am wrote:Barrett Brown #45047177
Mansfield Law Enforcement Center
1601 Heritage Parkway
Mansfield, TX 76063
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Hunter » Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:27 am

MinM » Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:01 am wrote:
Alchemy » Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:00 am wrote:Does anyone know where Barret Brown is imprisoned?

During this Scott Horton podcast with Peter Ludlow they refer to Barrett Brown being held in Texas (where Scott Horton works from)...

http://dissentradio.com/radio/13_06_21_ludlow.mp3

BTW, towards the end of the podcast Ludlow adds that, "It's like the DoJ is working for Stratfor..."
@peterjludlow: Discussion of #BarrettBrown on the @scotthortonshow http://bit.ly/1a0ROWN

http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/ ... 9622/quote]
Here it is...
Barrett has pleaded not guilty in all three cases. He is currently incarcerated while awaiting trial in Mansfield, TX. ...

http://freebarrettbrown.org/
Thanks to WR for posting the pertinent info...
Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jun 26, 2013 9:47 am wrote:Barrett Brown #45047177
Mansfield Law Enforcement Center
1601 Heritage Parkway
Mansfield, TX 76063

Thank you for that and yep Stratfor is some SERIOUS SHIT, they have their hands in everything and here is the problem with outsourcing all these intelligence and security services to private corporations: who are the employees going to be loyal to, the USA/THE PEOPLE -----OR-----the company they work for and who writes and signs their paychecks? The answer to that is obvious, their loyalty is going to be to Stratfor and it doesnt take a whole lot of imagination to see how THAT could pose major problems on all sorts of fronts. And to make matters worse, recent investigations have suggested that up to 70% of our intelligence and security budgets/jobs are now outsourced to these private corporations like Stratfor, Booze Allen Hamilton, Blackwater et al. So yea, it is a big problem and one that is getting bigger and bigger every day. And I think it is obvious why the right wants to privatize all these services, think about it, when the govt does these jobs they are subject to oversight and all sorts of laws and rules but when they outsource it to a private corporation that corporation isnt subject to that same sort of congressional oversite, ergo, they can get away with a lot more shit than the govt can. This is disturbingly true when it comes to private security/mercenary/armies/military type corporations, they can work in the war theater and get away with A LOT more shit than the US military itself can, they are not subject to things like Geneva and other international laws that govern war crimes etc, so that obviously is a great reason to contract a lot of those security/military type jobs because they can simply get away with things that the US military cannot and that is precisely why there is such a push for privatization.


This is a big part of what Barret Brown was uncovering in that Strafor data dump and only a very small portion of that entire dump has been read there is just so much there it will take years to get through it all but from what I have seen there is evidence of hard core corruption.


Here is one such example and keep in mind Stratfor specializes in INTELLIGENCE, they know their shit, the company is 100% former CIA guys who quit CIA to work for Stratfor and make a helluva lot more money just like Blackwater guys are all former special forces US military getting paid 6 figures for doing what they did in the US military for pennies.

So check THIS email out that was part of the Stratfor dump, its an email between the top two Stratfor company execs saying that BIB LADENS BODY WAS NOT DUMPED AT SEA and was in fact enroute to DOVER AFB to be examined and studied by govt pathologists. I dont have the entire the email handy but it is on google and pretty easy to find if you look around but here is part of it I was able to pull up quickly:


Stratfor analysts did not believe that Osama bin Laden was buried at sea, according to Stratfor emails.

At 5:26 a.m. on May 2…Stratfor CEO George Friedman sent an email with the subject “[alpha] OBL” that said: “Reportedly, we took the body with us. Thank goodness.”

Fred Burton, Stratfor’s vice president for intelligence, followed that up at 5:51 a.m. with an email titled “[alpha] Body bound for Dover, DE on CIA plane.”



So there you have it, they never dumped him at sea that was a big show for nothing, they likely still have his body somewhere in some embalming fluid and they all fap to it since the whole OBL 9-11 myth has made them all FILTHY RICH and POWERFUL.


This is just one small thing, there is a TON more in those emails that I have seen that would be jaw dropping shocking to even the hardest of us RIers.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Hunter » Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:29 am

Thanks the both of you MM and WR very much, much appreciated, if it is NOT a fed pen then he wont have any email access, they only get that in federal prisons, no state prisons allow it that I know of but every federal prison allows their prisoners some email access at a price but it is limited they can only use occasionally.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Hunter » Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:32 am

Wombaticus Rex » Wed Jun 26, 2013 10:47 am wrote:Barrett Brown #45047177
Mansfield Law Enforcement Center
1601 Heritage Parkway
Mansfield, TX 76063

Yea this is probably like JAIL since he has not been convicted yet, I didnt consider that, he wouldnt be in a federal prison yet, not until after trial and conviction, but he can still recieve letters and write letters back, unlikely he would have the kind of email access I speak of upthread, but once convicted he will serve his time in a federal prison and then he would have email access on occasion.

I think I will write him a letter and also call them and see how I can send him a few bucks or some paper, envelops and stamps at the very least, to help him out, I am certain such would be very appreciated.
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Barrett Brown, Brynaert, Breitbart, HBGary, Hastings...

Postby MinM » Mon Jul 22, 2013 1:02 pm

Joseph Cannon tries to connect some dots...
Just before he died, Hastings offered this tweet:

@ronbryn @BarrettBrownLOL working on it. there was an election, and still a few wars going on. but get ready for your mind to be blown.
— Michael Hastings (@mmhastings) January 24, 2013

The tag "ronbryn" refers to former Raw Story editor Ron Brynaert, who used to contribute the occasional friendly comment to this very blog. He was a very good journalist. Then he got involved with the Anthony Weiner story and...

Months later, Michael Hastings had latched onto what he claimed was the big story of his career. It seems to have involved Endgame and HBGary. And who were his ultimate confidantes? Barrett Brown and Ron Brynaert.

Frankly, I was surprised to learn that a heavy hitter like Hastings took Brynaert seriously.

And now I'm thinking: Maybe Brynaert was really on to something... The Breitbarters seemed to consider him a genuine threat. Maybe he had retained enough of his old journalistic skills to dredge up something truly important...

http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2013/07/ ... death.html
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Re: Barrett Brown, Brynaert, Breitbart, HBGary, Hastings...

Postby elfismiles » Mon Jul 22, 2013 2:58 pm

Yeah MinM ... that's some of what I was drooling over in this other Cannonfire post that chump linked to (see below) and which I've alluded to in other threads about sock-puppetry software and the whole WeinerGate/RonBrynaert (not to mention other troll-brigades / cyberstalkers & SWATters):

SockPuppet/AstroTurf Alerts
by elfismiles » 18 Feb 2011 16:04
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31261


elfismiles » 17 Jul 2013 20:31 wrote:Damn chump - lotta great info. Thanks.

And thank you for THIS link at CannonFire which is another treasure trove of info...

Saturday, June 22, 2013
Endgame: The death of Michael Hastings
http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2013/06/ ... tings.html





MinM » 22 Jul 2013 17:02 wrote:Joseph Cannon tries to connect some dots...
Just before he died, Hastings offered this tweet:

@ronbryn @BarrettBrownLOL working on it. there was an election, and still a few wars going on. but get ready for your mind to be blown.
— Michael Hastings (@mmhastings) January 24, 2013

The tag "ronbryn" refers to former Raw Story editor Ron Brynaert, who used to contribute the occasional friendly comment to this very blog. He was a very good journalist. Then he got involved with the Anthony Weiner story and...

Months later, Michael Hastings had latched onto what he claimed was the big story of his career. It seems to have involved Endgame and HBGary. And who were his ultimate confidantes? Barrett Brown and Ron Brynaert.

Frankly, I was surprised to learn that a heavy hitter like Hastings took Brynaert seriously.

And now I'm thinking: Maybe Brynaert was really on to something... The Breitbarters seemed to consider him a genuine threat. Maybe he had retained enough of his old journalistic skills to dredge up something truly important...

http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2013/07/ ... death.html




Saturday, June 22, 2013

Endgame: The death of Michael Hastings

A couple of posts down, I showed you video of a DARPA expert explaining one way to engineer an automotive accident like that which took the life of journalist Michael Hastings. Beyond that, I've avoided writing anything about him that might carry that familiar conspiratorial reek, since all of those recent NSA pieces have probably left many of you feeling reeked out.

But now...

Well, let's just say that things have happened, and I don't see how we can avoid this mysterious morass any longer. So once more into the reek, dear friends...

From Business Insider:

About 15 hours before dying in a fiery car crash at about 4:30 a.m. in L.A. on June 17, journalist Michael Hastings sent an email to several colleagues that said the FBI was investigating him and he was "onto a big story."


The subject line of the email, obtained by Los Angeles news station KTLA, was "FBI investigation, re: NSA."

Here's the full text:

Hey [words blurred out] — the Feds are interviewing my "close friends and associates." Perhaps if the authorities arrive "BuzzFeed GQ", er HQ, may be wise to immediately request legal counsel before any conversations or interviews about our news-gathering practices or related journalism issues.

Also: I'm onto a big story, and need to go off the [radar] for a bit.

All the best, and hope to see you all soon.


Staff Sgt. Joseph Biggs, who met Hastings when he was embedded in Biggs' unit in Afghanistan, described the email as "very panicked."

"It alarmed me very much," Biggs told KTLA. "I just said it doesn’t seem like him. I don’t know, I just had this gut feeling and it just really bothered me."


It's not clear what "big story" Hastings was referring to in his email, but he reportedly had been talking to his boss, BuzzFeed editor Ben Smith, about a story on Barrett Brown.

Brown, a journalist affiliated with the amorphous hacker collective Anonymous, was arrested for threatening an FBI officer and sharing a link to stolen credit card information taken from Stratfor. The 31-year-old, who faces up to 100 years in prison, is in jail awaiting a September trial.

The LA Times notes that Hastings was also researching a story about a privacy lawsuit brought by Florida socialite Jill Kelley against the Defense Department and the FBI.

And the subject line mentions the NSA, which has been in the news all month.That gives us three possibilities (Brown, the NSA and Kelley), although the three may not be mutually exclusive.

It occurs to me that Hastings is precisely the kind of journalist that Ed Snowden might have contacted. Hastings and Greenwald may not have been as close as peas in a pod, but they were certainly peas of adjacent pods. We should note that Greenwald has writtenin defense of Barrett Brown.

The "Young Turks" segment above shows Hastings expressing his concerns about the surveillance state. At the end of the clip, Hastings reveals that people in the special forces community told him that he himself had long been the subject of surveillance.

Barrett Brown and Hastings were quite close, as this piece by Brown -- published in Vanity Fair three years ago -- testifies. Like Hastings, Brown (author of Flock of Dodos) has focused his investigative efforts on this country's increasingly oppressive cyber-surveillance systems.

For a good look at Brown's legal troubles, see the Greenwald piece above and this profile by Patrick Mcguire. Mcguire is especially good:

It’s obvious by looking at the most recent posts on Barrett Brown’s blog that while he is highly interested in Stratfor, it wasn’t the credit card information that motivated him. When those five million emails leaked, a product called TrapWire, which was created by a company called Abraxas, was revealed to the public at large. And it caused a media shitstorm. In 2005, the founder of Abraxas and former head of the CIA’s European division, Richard Helms, described TrapWire as software that is installed inside of surveillance camera systems that is, “more accurate than facial recognition” with the ability to “draw patterns, and do threat assessments of areas that may be under observation from terrorists.” As Russia Today reported, one of the leaked emails, allegedly written by Stratfor’s VP of Intelligence, Fred Burton, stated that TrapWire was at “high-value targets” in “the UK, Canada, Vegas, Los Angeles, NYC.”


Barrett Brown was doing some very serious investigating into a company called Cubic from San Diego, that was alleged to own TrapWire as a subsidiary of their firm. This is an allegation that they officially denied. However, these tax filings from 2010 that Barrett uncovered clearly state that Cubic had in fact merged with Abraxas Corporation. If you click through and take a look, you can see that Richard Helms’s name is right there on the top of the first page.


Helms, of course, was the quasi-legendary former CIA Director who played important -- and sadly under-recognized -- roles in MKULTRA, Watergate, and the Iranian hostage crisis. One of these days, if you promise to behave, I'll tell you a fun story about Helms and Lee Harvey Oswald.

Right now, though, let's bring it all home -- and by "home," I mean this very blog:

Alongside Abraxas and Cubic on those tax filings is another company called Ntrepid. According to Florida State’s records of corporations, Richard Helms is the director of that company. In 2011, Barrett’s work helped lead the Guardian to their report that Ntrepid won a $2.76 million-dollar contract from Centcom (U.S. Central Command), to create “online persona management” software, also known as “sockpuppetry.” To break it down in plain English, online persona management was created to populate social networks with a bunch of fake and believable social media personas to “influence internet conversations and spread pro-American propaganda.”


Oh ho.

We saw a lot of sock puppetry (in these pages and on many other websites) throughout 2008. We also saw a fair amount of the stuff during the Weiner scandal. Hell, I suspect that much of the Breitbart empire was built on sockpuppetry. How else can you explain the fact that some Breitbart-related bloggers -- with audiences notably smaller than that of a C-list blog like Cannonfire -- can nevertheless attract dozens or hundreds of comments on any given post?

Sockpuppets are important. They can help drive the national conversation. They can make a fast-spreading rumor seem to have the solidity of fact. They can transform a not-terribly-popular view -- or presidential candidate -- into the mainstream choice. And if you insist on saying things that the Powers That Be don't want you to say (such as "Hillary for President in 2008!"), sockpuppets will work tirelessly to make your life miserable. They will do their damnedest to drive you off the internet.

Incidentally, many of the responses to my piece on Progressive Insurance's "Snapshot" device have been obvious examples of sockpuppetry in action. See for yourself.

Brown also wrote about another Ntrepid product called Tartan, designed to uncover the true identity of anyone who posts online under an assumed name. Call it the anti-whistleblower app.

If you're an Occupy Wall Street admirer, you'll appreciate another service provided by Tartan:

In another document on Ntrepid letterhead, titled “Tartan Influence Model: Anarchist Groups,” Tartan is positioned as a software tool that can help combat domestic protestors who operate in “an amorphous network of anarchist and protest groups” and suggests that these groups are prone to violence. They name Occupy Wall Street and Occupy D.C. as part of the problem, and have “built Occupy networks through online communication with anarchists.” By identifying the threat of anarchistic, supposedly violent protestors, Tartan sells its services by saying their software “identifies the hidden relationships among organizers of seemingly unrelated movements… To mitigate the ability of anarchists to incite violence… Law enforcement must identify the complex network of relationships among anarchist leaders.” So, beyond taking apart movements that exist solely online, Tartan is looking to come out and crush real world protest movements as well.


Besides a few journalists, not many people have been looking into this information. The one other group that does is called Telecomix, the guys who are famous for supplying dial-up internet lines to areas of the world with oppressive dictatorships, and who I interviewed about the Gaza conflict here. They operate the Bluecabinet Wiki, and they worked very closely with Barrett Brown to uncover more information about the network of cybersecurity firms.

I talked to one of the volunteers at Telecomix, who strongly believes in the work that Barrett did to connect all of these very confusing dots: “I haven't seen reporters really taking a hard look at what Barrett Brown, the investigative journalist, was researching and where it leads to. His discovery that TrapWire = Abraxas and that there is CIA involvement is very important.Do you know in Berlin right now a game was started to destroy surveillance cameras in public places? Barrett apparently was reading through the emails of HBGary and Stratfor, linking the data to the specific surveillance companies and contractors… It is an extremely time consuming task.”


Some of you will recall Brown's involvement with the HBGary hack, as summarized in The Nation:

In February 2011, a year after Brown penned his defense of Anonymous, and against the background of its actions during the Arab Spring, Aaron Barr, CEO of the private intelligence company HBGary, claimed to have identified the leadership of the hacktivist collective. (In fact, he only had screen names of a few members).


I should interrupt here to note that alleged computer security "genius" Aaron Barr seems to be an incredible blowhard. In previous posts, we noted that his much-touted background information on fellow blogger Brad Friedman was hilariously, ludicrously wrong. Barr also sold an ultra-expensive anti-virus system to big corporations, even though his own company relied on AVG, which is free.

(Rich people often don't feel comfortable with a purchase unless they overpay. That mentality has transformed the art market into what it is today.)

HBGary is now run by a "former" CIA guy named Dean May. That has been the case ever since the company was purchased by ManTech, which has ties to Mitchell Wade, best known for his part in the Duke Cunningham bribery scandal. (You may recall Cunningham's letter from prison, which spoke of Wade as though he were Darth Vader.)

Let's get back to McGuire's piece:

Barr’s boasting provoked a brutal hack of HBGary by a related group called Internet Feds (it would soon change its name to “LulzSec”). Splashy enough to attract the attention of The Colbert Report, the hack defaced and destroyed servers and websites belonging to HBGary. Some 70,000 company e-mails were downloaded and posted online. As a final insult to injury, even the contents of Aaron Barr’s iPad were remotely wiped.

The HBGary hack may have been designed to humiliate the company, but it had the collateral effect of dropping a gold mine of information into Brown’s lap. One of the first things he discovered was a plan to neutralize Glenn Greenwald’s defense of Wikileaks by undermining them both. (“Without the support of people like Glenn, wikileaks would fold,” read one slide.) The plan called for “disinformation,” exploiting strife within the organization and fomenting external rivalries—“creating messages around actions to sabotage or discredit the opposing organization,” as well as a plan to submit fake documents and then call out the error.” Greenwald, it was argued, “if pushed,” would “choose professional preservation over cause.”


Although I remain a (cautious) supporter of Ed Snowden, one can't help but wonder if the recent Snowden controversy has any relationship to this alleged plan to lure Greenwald into a disinfo trap. We shall see.

Other plans targeted social organizations and advocacy groups. Separate from the plan to target Greenwald and WikiLeaks, HBGary was part of a consortia that submitted a proposal to develop a “persona management” system for the United States Air Force, that would allow one user to control multiple online identities for commenting in social media spaces, thus giving the appearance of grassroots support or opposition to certain policies.


Once again, we see the importance of sockpuppetry.

The data dump from the HBGary hack was so vast that no one person could sort through it alone. So Brown decided to crowdsource the effort. He created a wiki page, called it ProjectPM, and invited other investigative journalists to join in. Under Brown’s leadership, the initiative began to slowly untangle a web of connections between the US government, corporations, lobbyists and a shadowy group of private military and information security consultants.


And now we come to Endgame:

Brown began looking into Endgame Systems, an information security firm that seemed particularly concerned about staying in the shadows. “Please let HBGary know we don’t ever want to see our name in a press release,” one leaked e-mail read. One of its products, available for a $2.5 million annual subscription, gave customers access to “zero-day exploits”—security vulnerabilities unknown to software companies—for computer systems all over the world. Business Week published a story on Endgame in 2011, reporting that “Endgame executives will bring up maps of airports, parliament buildings, and corporate offices. The executives then create a list of the computers running inside the facilities, including what software the computers run, and a menu of attacks that could work against those particular systems.” For Brown, this raised the question of whether Endgame was selling these exploits to foreign actors and whether they would be used against computer systems in the United States. Shortly thereafter, the hammer came down.


For more on Endgame, see this piece in Defense News:

Endgame Systems is a secretive cyber company with an intriguing specialty. The firm’s chief product, software called Bonesaw, is a “cyber targeting application” that tracks servers and routers worldwide, mapping the hardware attached to the Web.

These are the access points through which the National Security Agency, Cyber Command and other U.S. agencies, could launch operations against adversaries and threats.


The head of Endgame is a young fellow named Nathaniel Fick, whose service as a Marine in Iraq was dramatized in the HBO series Generation Kill. Fick seems to be one of those Special Chosen Ones. You know the kind. From an early age, the fates select these rare individuals for great things; before a single grey hair has sprouted on their heads, they get tapped to run intelligence agencies or spy-tech private firms.

We've been seeing a lot of Special Chosen Ones lately.

So that's what Brown was poking into, and that's why the feds got him out of the way by tossing him into the pokey on bullshit charges. It's a pretty fair bet that his buddy Hastings decided to pick up where Brown left off.

That's when he got slammed in the face by the mailed fist of Pure Coincidence.


http://cannonfire.blogspot.com/2013/06/ ... tings.html
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Mon Jul 22, 2013 3:05 pm

A small but very important detail: DCIA Richard Helms is dead. The Richard Helms who works for Cubic is not the same guy.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby elfismiles » Mon Jul 22, 2013 3:22 pm

Wombaticus Rex » 22 Jul 2013 19:05 wrote:A small but very important detail: DCIA Richard Helms is dead. The Richard Helms who works for Cubic is not the same guy.


Right. Did you also make that correction/observation in the other thread? I still wanna hear Jo Cannon's story about Helms and Oswald ... or have I already read of it in Albarelli's A SECRET ORDER???

I think this is the first time / first place I've seen someone spell out the dots I'd been reading hither and dither RE: WeinerGate and Ron Brynaert's obsession over it.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Mon Jul 22, 2013 3:32 pm

Heh, I probably did, I probably did.

Yup:

Wombaticus Rex » Mon Jun 24, 2013 8:45 am wrote:Thank you for pointing that strange gnostic connection out!

However, I am pretty positive that the CEO of Abraxas, while a long-time CIA veteran, is not the same Richard Helms who directed Langley under Nixon.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Helms

http://www.nvtc.org/tec/RichardHelms.php

Boy, it sure would be handy to work with a few other cats who have the same name as me. In fact, I'd hire people just for that.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Mon Jul 22, 2013 4:04 pm

How insane would it be to find out the majority of the Breitbart/Beck audience is not even there? I don't think the Online Left would take that very well! I know I'd be more than a smidgen deflated if I found out the "idiots" I'd been raging against were just trolling algorithms from the Pentagon.

I don't find it hard to believe that right wing political operatives would be interested in this -- in fact, I find it far harder to believe they're not already out on the cutting edge of massive persona management implementation. For a movement that candidly admits there's "not enough angry white guys" to sustain their operation, this technology would be nothing less than a strategic imperative.

The network of cut-outs involved, and the pantomime games of "we don't really own that!" also fit with this model, because that's the kind of plausible deniability that OpSec requires. (Not that turds like O'Keefe are OpSec literate! ...but their employers sure are.)

Then again...are they? NatSec has been pretty Keystone Kops since those private sector clowns got brought in...

Air Force Seeks Fake Online Social Media Personas

The United States Air Force is taking an unusual approach to cyber-security with a request for bids for "Persona Management Software," which would let someone command an online unit of non-existent identities on social media sites. The move became a major topic last week following the release of emails from private security firm HBGary, which were disclosed after an attack by Wikileaks competitor and collaborator Cryptome.org.

According to Solicitation Number: RTB220610 , the armed services division sought a software program that could manage 10 personas per user, including background; history; supporting details, and cyber presences that are " technically, culturally and geographacilly [sic] consistent. Individual applications will enable an operator to exercise a number of different online persons from the same workstation and without fear of being discovered by sophisticated adversaries. Personas must be able to appear to originate in nearly any part of the world and can interact through conventional online services and social media platforms. The service includes a user friendly application environment to maximize the user's situational awareness by displaying real-time local information."

The request, made in June 2010, was for 50 licenses, for a total of 500 fake Internet identities, which the Air Force planned to deploy in Iraq and Afghanistan. The software would protect government agencies' identities by using several false signals to convince other users that the poster was a real person, according to the contract. For example, each persona could receive its own IP address, making it appear to post from a different location around the world.

At least one individual was surprised that the proposal was published openly.

"This is posted on open source. Are you ****ing serious?" wrote Greg Hoglund, owner of HBGary, in an email leaked by a group of hackers that broke into the security firm's network earlier this month. "Just curious, this particular one is pretty sensitive and I'm wondering why it was in the public domain," he added, in a separate email.
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Re: The Strange Case of Barrett Brown

Postby MinM » Tue Jul 23, 2013 1:33 pm

8bitagent » Mon Jul 22, 2013 9:59 pm wrote:From the Cannonfire article
Long after the rest of the world stopped caring about Anthony Weiner and his famous peepee, a small group of right-wingers and left-wingers remained fixated on certain unsolved aspects of that scandal. We've talked about this group in previous posts. The die-hard "Weinergaters" engaged in a very weird twilight war, forever accusing each other of hacking and identity theft and impersonation and sockpuppetry and worse sins. They often claimed that the FBI was going to arrest their enemies any day now -- on God-only-knows what charge.


It's interesting, the Breitbart crowd. Breitbart seemed so full of hate on a Rush on steroids level, yet he had a devoted following. Even people opposed to Breitbart's politics claimed he was "assassinated".
I've heard of the Anthony Weiner thing, but why was that scandal so important to people? I mean compared to anti gay Republicans trying to hide gay sex stuff, I don't get the big deal.
I mean shit, it's nothing compared to the few researchers (deep 9/11 researchers) following up on the Ptech stuff and all the other hidden gems of nine eleven.

Its possible, that if Hastings was killed in a cyber car attack, it is part of a larger cyber shadow war.

I still maintain that there is a cyber element to the 9/11 operation http://911blogger.com/node/20677
(angel is next, ptech/mitre backdoors, phantom injects, flight controls, etc)
viewtopic.php?p=514899#p514899

elfismiles » Mon Jul 22, 2013 2:22 pm wrote:
Wombaticus Rex » 22 Jul 2013 19:05 wrote:A small but very important detail: DCIA Richard Helms is dead. The Richard Helms who works for Cubic is not the same guy.


Right. Did you also make that correction/observation in the other thread? I still wanna hear Jo Cannon's story about Helms and Oswald ... or have I already read of it in Albarelli's A SECRET ORDER???

I think this is the first time / first place I've seen someone spell out the dots I'd been reading hither and dither RE: WeinerGate and Ron Brynaert's obsession over it.

Everything is starting to come together.
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