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You are at:Home»Security»Government officials are somewhat bad on the internet
Security

Government officials are somewhat bad on the internet

techtost.comBy techtost.com27 April 202505 Mins Read
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Government Officials Are Somewhat Bad On The Internet
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Perhaps no one in the world has done such devastating technology technologies this year as US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

The epic started when the Atlantic editor -in -chief Jeffrey Goldberg, referenced that they were Was added incorrectly In an unauthorized conversation with US National Security Advisor Michael Waltz, where numerous high -ranking government officials discussed detailed plans to attack Houthis in Yemen, including the Times and places where such attacks will be made.

To be fair, we have all made some annoying technical mistakes. But for most people, it means accidental to like the former Instagram position five years ago-not sharing top government military plans in a commercial messaging application with unauthorized recipients.

This mistreatment of massive sensitive information was already quite annoying but this week, The New York Times referenced That Hegseth shared information on the attacks against Yemen in another signal, which included his lawyer, his wife and brother, who had no reason to receive such sensitive information. Hegseth’s wife doesn’t even work for the Pentagon.

These security failures are particularly intense – how do you manage to randomly sink into a journalist in your military plans? But this is far from the first time modern technology has landed on world governments in difficult situations – and we are not just talking watergate.

Where is in the army? Do not use Strava

The Fitness/Social Media tracking application Post It can be a privacy nightmare, even for your average athlete. The application allows people to share exercise logs – often run, hiking or bike rides – in a public account with their friends, who can like and comment on their morning jogs in the park.

But Strava accounts are public by default, which means that if you are not enough I understand to check your privacy settings, you will unintentionally transfer to the world exactly where you work. Strava is default to hide the first and last 200 meters of a run as a means to cover the point where one lives, as people are likely to start and end their routes near their home.

For anyone on the internet, it is still dangerous to transmit a 200 -mile radius where you live, but it is even more dangerous if you are Army member on a secret basisfor example.

In 2018, Strava presented a global heat map, showing where the world user has recorded activities. This doesn’t matter if you look at a New York map, but in places like Afghanistan and Iraq, few people use Strava except foreigners, so one can assume that hot spots on or around military bases may appear.

Okay here is where things get problematic: through Strava, using the predetermined sections that we can scrape user data especially from basic public profiles (and yes they exist with bases and lead us directly social media profiles). https://t.co/vdnbgckviy

– Tobias Schneider (@tobiaschneider) January 29, 2018

To make things worse, users could consider some routes running to Strava to see the public profiles of users who record the activities there. So it would be possible for a bad actor to find a list of US soldiers parked on a particular basis in Iraq, for example.

Joe Biden’s not so secret Venmo

Benzene It is a peer payment application, but for some reason, it prepares to share your transactions publicly. So, just by opening my Venmo app – which synchronized my Facebook friends on my account at some point, probably 10 years ago – I can see that two girls went to high school with dinner together last night. Good for them.

The information we share in Venmo can be quite boring and benign, but dedicated fans of real broadcasts such as “Love Is Blind” will look for the contestants’ accounts to predict who the show is still dated (if the couple sends each other).

So if you can find reality stars in Venmo, why not look for the president?

In 2021, some BuzzFeed news journalists decided to look for Joe Biden’s Venmo. Within 10 minutes, they found his account.

From Biden’s account, journalists could easily find other members of the Biden family and his administration and map their wider social circles. Even if a user makes his account at Venmo Private, their friends list will remain public. When Buzzfeed News contacted the White House, Biden’s profile was clean, but the White House did not comment.

So yes, the journalists actually did Locate Venmo accounts by Pete Hegseth, Mike Waltz and other government officials. Some things never change.

Encrypted messages cannot protect you from cameras

You can take all the precautions you want to protect your messages, but nothing can save you from the impending feature of human error.

Carles Puigdemont, a former president of Catalonia, led a 2017 movement to achieve independence from Spain and become his own country. But the Spanish government is blocking this effort and removed the puigdemont from the leadership. When the Spanish government issued a warrant for the arrest of Puigdemont and its allies, they left Belgium.

A few months later, Spanish media attended an event in Belgium, where Puigdemont was expected to speak – sent a video speech instead, but as the clip was playing, a Spanish broadcasting body noticed that he was a former minister Sending messages with its screen is fully visible.

The camera operator was magnified on the phone of COMín, exhibiting texts from Puigdemont, where he had resigned to defeat his efforts to bring Catalan independence.

Puigdemont later tweeted That he expressed himself in a moment of doubt, but that he did not intend to retreat.

Regardless of the steps you take to encrypt your private messages, you may want to look over your shoulder before reading sensitive information to the public-especially when sending messages with a former president.

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