DOGE worker’s code supports NLRB whistleblower
843 points
13 hours ago
| 33 comments
| krebsonsecurity.com
| HN
progbits
12 hours ago
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> Ge0rg3’s code is “open source,” in that anyone can copy it and reuse it non-commercially. As it happens, there is a newer version of this project that was derived or “forked” from Ge0rg3’s code — called “async-ip-rotator” — and it was committed to GitHub in January 2025 by DOGE captain Marko Elez.

Original code: https://github.com/Ge0rg3/requests-ip-rotator

Forked: https://github.com/markoelez/async-ip-rotator

Code is pretty much the same, with comments removed, some `async` sprinkled in and minor changes (I bet this was just pasted into LLM with prompt to make it async, but if that worked why not).

Except... Original GPL3 license is gone. Obviously not something you would expect DOGE people to understand or respect.

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0x_rs
10 hours ago
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The repository has been deleted. In addition, 26 other repos have been removed from the account. This is in line with DOGE members' quick response scrubbing data whenever put into spotlight, as previously seen with another "teen hacker". [0]

Archived repo page: https://archive.ph/LI7tt; archived previous repo count: https://archive.ph/tgkg5

0. https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/04/i-no-longer-hack...

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progval
4 hours ago
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jychang
1 hour ago
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Legally, they're allowed to modify and use GPL code internally without redistributing the source. The only mistake was publishing the source code to a public git repo without the LICENSE file, which may be a GPL violation.

I say "may", because I'm not sure if you have internal code on a public git or FTP server, is that consider "distributing"?

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grandempire
9 hours ago
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I think one reason to hide/delete is so speculative articles like this don’t get written.

The mistake was ever having them public.

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JumpCrisscross
2 hours ago
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> speculative articles like this... speculative articles like this

But we know it isn't speculative based on these public data. You're arguing they should have covered up better. I agree. But that doesn't make (a) it okay or (b) this article speculative.

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LiquidSky
8 hours ago
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These are government employees, you don't get to do that.
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grandempire
8 hours ago
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You have to keep git repos public as a government employee?
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zeckalpha
7 hours ago
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Would be a good trial of the GPL.
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grandempire
7 hours ago
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You only have to give GPL source to the people who you distribute software to.

You can fork anything privately for yourself.

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spauldo
8 hours ago
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Government software can't be copywrited, but the government is under no compulsion to share it. That's what FOIA requests are for.
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godelski
6 hours ago
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Actually, they are. It's really more a question of with who and of course don't apply to classified material.

But the SHARE IT act really helps formalize what was already happening. Most code is shared and made public. It's paid for by the public. Though it's usually not easily searchable as it's distributed via different platforms, means, and may even require submitting a freedom of information request first. But in more cases than not, there is obligation to share when requested.

https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/9566

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spauldo
5 hours ago
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The "when requested" is the point I was making. FOIA is how you request such software. If you want a copy of the elisp libraries I wrote to automate creation of field devices on military fuel farm SCADA systems, you'll have to submit an FOIA request. Unless someone at the DoD decides to share it out of the goodness of their hearts, you have to ask for it.
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herewulf
4 hours ago
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Sounds fascinating! Other than the FOIA bit. Do you have a blog post or something with more detail about this work?
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spauldo
2 hours ago
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Naw, it's not really all that interesting. A SCADA system has a bunch of field devices it needs to talk to. Most SCADA software has some method of importing lists of device information and creating objects from it.

My engineer gives me a list of (for example) valve actuators on a site. I open that list in Emacs, manipulate it a bit, and then use it as input to a function I've written. That function generates a CSV file with things like tag name, Modbus ID, polling method, etc. that I can import into Wonderware. It's considerably faster and less error prone than manually creating and configuring hundreds of instances.

I say it's not interesting because most people in my position write little bits of code like this to automate the repetitive parts of our jobs. I just do it with elisp instead of Excel or Python.

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spauldo
5 hours ago
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I guess I should have been clearer - the "private repository" mentioned in that bill only has to be available for government employees, and even then only on request. Public repositories are an option, but the government doesn't have to choose that option. The main point is to encourage reuse within the government, not to be a source of free public domain software for the public.
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santoshalper
4 hours ago
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Almost everything the government makes IS public domain, including the software.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_status_of_works_by_t...

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spauldo
2 hours ago
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Just because it's public domain doesn't mean they are obliged to make it available to the public. As noted above, they do have to make it available to other government agencies, but it's the government's choice to place it in a public repository. All public domain means is that if you happen to acquire a copy of it, you can do whatever you like with it.
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nativeit
12 hours ago
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> On February 6, someone posted a lengthy and detailed critique of Elez’s code on the GitHub “issues” page for async-ip-rotator, calling it “insecure, unscalable and a fundamental engineering failure.”

“If this were a side project, it would just be bad code,” the reviewer wrote. “But if this is representative of how you build production systems, then there are much larger concerns. This implementation is fundamentally broken, and if anything similar to this is deployed in an environment handling sensitive data, it should be audited immediately.”

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deepfriedrice
7 hours ago
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The "critique" is nuts. Surely AI generated. If I didn't trust the domain, I'd assume the author to be incredible for seriously referencing something like this.

Look at the critique [0] and then look at the code [1].

[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20250423135719/https://github.co...

[1] https://github.com/ricci/async-ip-rotator/blob/master/src/as...

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captainkrtek
5 hours ago
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Yea clearly AI with the keyword bolding, numbered arguments, and so on. Feel like lots of AI produced content follow this structured response pattern.
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dragonwriter
5 hours ago
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It's uses a simple, purpose-focused template of a type that is a common recommendation for clear communication, outline numbering, and highlights keywords using monospaced text, as is common practice in technical writing. None of that is unusual for a human, especially writing something that they know is going to be high visibility, to do.

Modestly competent presentation is now getting portrayed as an "AI tell".

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odo1242
25 minutes ago
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The format doesn’t itself indicate AI, but when combined with the fact that the critique is mostly nonsense it does appear to strongly suggest it.
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captainkrtek
4 hours ago
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I’m not arguing that it’s unusual for humans to write in this manner, but when you use something like chatgpt with some frequency and see that as a common response template it’s an obvious pattern..
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drusepth
3 hours ago
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People say emdashes are a signal that something's from chatgpt also — yet people forget that the cliches or patterns of LLMs are learned from real-world patterns. What is common in something like ChatGPT has a good chance to also be common outside of it, and _lots_ of false positives (and false negatives) are bound to creep up frequently when trying to do any sort of pattern-based "detection" here.
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chongli
18 minutes ago
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Yes, emdashes are inserted automatically by iOS when a user inputs a double dash: —
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somenameforme
3 hours ago
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It has excellent presentation, excess verbosity, and is wholly nonsensical. Read the code. It uses excessive whitespace doing things like function calls/declarations with one parameter per line, and so it's probably like 100 lines "real" code of mostly tight functions -- the presentation/objections make no sense whatsoever.

I was able to generate extremely comparable output from ChatGPT by telling it to create a hyper-negative review, engage in endless hyperbole, and focus on danger, threats, and the obvious inexperience of the person who wrote it. Such is the nature of LLMs it'd happily produce the similar sort of nonsense for even the cleanest and tightest code ever written. I'll just quote its conclusion because LLM verbosity is... verbose.

---

Conclusion This code is a ticking time bomb of security vulnerabilities, AWS billing horrors, concurrency demons, and maintenance black holes. It would fail any professional code review:

Security: Fails OWASP Top 10, opens SSRF, IP spoofing, credential leakage

Reliability: Race conditions, silent failures, unbounded threading

Maintainability: Spaghetti architecture, no documentation, magic literals

Recommendation: Reject outright. Demolish and rewrite from scratch with proper layering, input validation, secure defaults, IAM roles, structured logging, and robust error handling.

---

Oooo sick burn. /eyeroll

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throwaway290
42 minutes ago
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> I was able to generate extremely comparable output from ChatGPT by telling it

Just to check, you know that ChatGPT is fully built on human writing right?

Would it be ironic if I claim "what you write looks like what the tool can output, so you used the tool" if the tool was built to output stuff that looks like what you write.

Fun fact: anything you or me write looks like ChatGPT too. It could be surprising if people didn't spend billions and stole truckloads of scraped unlicensed content including content created by you and me to get the tool to literally do just this.

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ahwelatif
4 hours ago
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I'm relatively confident this critique is AI-powered. The dead giveaways:

1. Verbosity. Developers are busy people and security researcher devs are busy even moreso. Someone so skilled wouldn't spend more than 2-3 sentences of time in critiquing this repo.

2. Hostility. Writing bug free code is hard, even impossible for most. Unless your name is Linus Torvalds, Richard Hipp, or maybe Dan Abramov, most devs are not comfortable throwing stones while knowing they live in glass houses.

3. Ownership. "Killshot" comments like this are only ever written by frustrated gatekeepers against weak PRs that would hurt "their baby". Nobody would get emotionally invested in other people's random utility projects. This is just a single python file here without much other context.

4. Author. The author is still an aspiring developer. See their starred repo highlighting adherence to SOLID/DRY principles as a primary feature of their project. Not something you'd expect to see from a seasoned security researcher. https://github.com/SSD1805/EchoFlow

5. Content. The critique is... wrong. It says the single file, utility repo is "awful" for being a "less maintainable" monolith. Hilariously, it calls the code bad because it does not need dependency injection. This was a top critique in the comment!

--

Regardless of political persuasion, I hope this trend of using AI to cyberbully people you don't like goes away.

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bryanrasmussen
24 minutes ago
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a propos number 2, I think this is only a feature of seasoned developers who have managed to outgrow their own high opinions of themselves. I've met plenty of younger devs who would totally write something like this taking down the work of someone whose style did not align exactly with what they considered "good".
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arrowsmith
24 minutes ago
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Once you've read enough ChatGPT slop, you know it when you see it:

- Massive verbosity.

- Flawless spelling and grammar.

- Grandiose tone.

- Robotic cadence where every paragraph and sentence has similar length (particularly obvious in longer text.)

- Em dashes everywhere.

- The same few stock phrases or sentence structures used over and over - e.g. "This isn't X—it's Y", which that issue uses twice in two paragraphs:

    There is nothing "hardcore" about writing fragile, insecure, and unscalable code. This isn’t pushing boundaries—it’s demonstrating a lack of engineering fundamentals.

    If this is what was learned at previous jobs, then it’s time to unlearn it and start following best practices. Because right now, this is not just bad engineering—it’s reckless.
If AI didn't write that snippet then I'll permanently retire from internet commenting.

(None of what I just wrote is intended as a defence of DOGE.)

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DonHopkins
3 hours ago
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I hope this trend of DOGE using the US Government to cyberbully people they don't like goes away.
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watwut
2 hours ago
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The point 2 makes me think you did not read what developers write on the internet, in particular in flame war, in particular when they have beef with whoever they argue with.

Verbose hostility of that kind and throwing stones, even nitpicking with exaggerated outrage are no exception. And lack of experience never stopped people from feeling and behaving like god given gift to programming profession.

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paulgb
3 hours ago
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I agree on all counts. The readme of the repo you link also smacks of an AI generated summary of the codebase. (Frankly, I don’t think the AI was able to understand what the code in that repo does, which is my guess as to why it talked much about form rather than function.)
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krferriter
7 hours ago
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Lol that's so funny. Can't imagine writing that. (the critique, not the code).
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mquander
7 hours ago
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Seeing Krebs link to this downgrades my impression of how trustworthy his assessments are.
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Ferret7446
1 hour ago
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The GitHub part makes it... weird.

You are only required to keep the GPL3 license if you re-distribute it. Putting it in a GitHub repo, is ambiguous whether or not it is re-distributing it, at least morally.

If you want to delete the license in a personal copy, that is perfectly valid according to the license terms. If you then happen to upload that to a private GitHub repo, also perfectly valid.

If you then happen to upload that to a public GitHub repo, because of, say, restrictions on free private repos, without intent to distribute, then what?

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odo1242
22 minutes ago
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Putting it on a GitHub repo IS redistributing it. By putting it on GitHub you agree in the ToS that you have the rights to distribute the code. Which you only have if you don’t violate the license.
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throwaway290
48 minutes ago
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> If you then happen to upload that to a public GitHub repo, because of, say, restrictions on free private repos, without intent to distribute, then what?

Then you keep the license eh? Distributing without an intent to distribute is distributing.

Git is free and open source. If you want version control and collaboration and NO unintended distribution completely for free you can just use Git. It even has a built in server to share with your work buddies.

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dijksterhuis
12 hours ago
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FYI the Fork got hidden/deleted in the last minute or so -- did anyone manage to clone it before it disappeared?
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whalesalad
11 hours ago
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I did. It's essentially just a single .py file: https://gist.github.com/whalesalad/06804fd734efe6bd2e0c84906...
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alright2565
11 hours ago
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    x_forwarded_for = headers.get("X-Forwarded-For")
    if x_forwarded_for is None:
        x_forwarded_for = ipaddress.IPv4Address._string_from_ip_int(
            randint(0, MAX_IPV4)
        )
lol
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marcusb
11 hours ago
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The original author claims this is to prevent API gateway from leaking the true client IP.
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timewizard
10 hours ago
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To be fair the code actually creates a new API gateway server that acts as a proxy on to an already existing server and you're possibly meant to use this header with your own gateway service.

So, it's set as a header, sent to a user owned proxy, then to the actual external endpoint.

On the other hand I think the receiving API Gateway will be able to see and log your AWS account identifier when you do this. So your IP may not be the only identifying information that needs to be obscured for this to actually work.

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icedchai
10 hours ago
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The code seems like a "creative" use of API gateway to turn it into a proxy for other external sites (single site, really, since you need one per site.) Wouldn't it be simpler to send the requests through a lambda (with a function URL) and get better control of the outbound requests?
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Sytten
9 hours ago
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This actually a very common way that hackers have used api gateway for years now.

You can take a look at plugins like IPRotate. We are currently working on bringing that into our product.

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timewizard
9 hours ago
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This is cheaper in that you don't have to pay for any compute time.
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whalesalad
9 hours ago
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tbh the ip space of lambda is large, but not as large as you might think. i did some experiments ages ago with the hypothesis that lambda could be a decent proxy network (if many ip addresses are needed) but iirc the upper limit in my testing was about ~50 ip's.

Even this example if you maxx out your usage of regions appears to only give (2,4 * num_regions) or let's say 70-80 ip's maximum. And they are AWS ip's, which means it is gonna be really easy to detect and block that traffic.

But if you know your target receives lots of traffic from AWS systems all around the world ... this is a good way to mimic that.

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plandis
12 hours ago
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GPLv3 requires the license to be kept. Seems reportable to the owner of the repo and or GitHub.
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TheDong
5 hours ago
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The only person who has standing to say anything is the original author of the code, the holder of the copyright.

It's possible, but very unlikely, the copyright license wasn't actually violated because, for example, the fork could have arranged a separate license.

The best example of this is the Qt Project's code: https://www.qt.io/qt-licensing

You can get it under a GPL license for free. You can pay them money to get it under a Commercial license that would let you modify the code without releasing changes.

So, while I doubt it happened, the person who forked it here could have contacted the original author, the copyright holder, and asked for an exemption from the GPL terms.

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DrillShopper
9 hours ago
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I'm sure the people who work for an administration that by and large flaunts court orders responsible for this will get right on that.....aaaand it's gone.
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amake
7 hours ago
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flouts
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darknavi
11 hours ago
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The fork has been deleted it seems.
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seejayjordan
10 hours ago
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posted above ^^
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grepfru_it
8 hours ago
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>not something you would expect DOGE people to understand or respect

To be fair I see in my daily life folks who copy and paste from stack overflow or random GitHub repo and move on with their day. They ignore the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike or whatever license is applied to the code they copied.

I see on this very site people who will share copyrighted articles that are behind a paywall (just because it is on some archive site doesn’t make it right).

Please don’t take this as support for DOGE and the headaches they are causing. To make a cheap jab at a group of people while ignoring the group that you associate with is bad form.

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godelski
6 hours ago
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I'd say it's wrong in both cases, but we shouldn't ignore degrees of wrongness.

Copy pasting from stack overflow without attribution is wrong but it's also harder to claim "ownership" over single lines or small snippets. It depends how "obvious" they are. You definitely can't copyright trivial functions. There's a lot of gray here but yes attribution is always good.

But things get a lot less murky when we're talking about forking a project. That's usually nontrivial and non obvious. I think what's most important is that removing a license is an active decision. Certainly that would make a critical difference in a court [0]

Then there's further escalation by who is doing the action. The more power and influence you have the greater responsibilities. All men are not created equal. Men with more power can disproportionally do more damage and require higher accountability. So yeah, I care a fuck ton more about a government employee doing something bad especially while performing official duties more than some rando. The ability to do harm is very different.

The reason I dislike your comment is because it's dismissive of the action. "Other people do it!" Is not a defense nor excuse. It is even worse by ignoring multiple points of context.

[0] though protecting open source has been traditionally hard for many reasons. Specifically it's hard for small developers to take legal action, especially against larger bodies. But isn't this something we should want to be fixed? Credit for our own contributions?!

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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
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>To make a cheap jab at a group of people while ignoring the group that you associate with is bad form.

What group does the person who makes the comment associate with?

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mistrial9
8 hours ago
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< To be fair

irony

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mythrowaway49
10 hours ago
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this part of the whistleblower complaint seem way worse:

" On or about March 11, 2025, NxGen metrics indicated abnormal usage at points the prior week. I saw way above baseline response times, and resource utilization showed increased network output above anywhere it had been historically – as far back as I could look. I noted that this lined up closely with the data out event. I also notice increased logins blocked by access policy due to those log-ins being out of the country. For example: In the days after DOGE accessed NLRB’s systems, we noticed a user with an IP address in Primorskiy Krai, Russia started trying to log in. Those attempts were blocked, but they were especially alarming. Whoever was attempting to log in was using one of the newly created accounts that were used in the other DOGE related activities and it appeared they had the correct username and password due to the authentication flow only stopping them due to our no-out-of-country logins policy activating. There were more than 20 such attempts, and what is particularly concerning is that many of these login attempts occurred within 15 minutes of the accounts being created by DOGE engineers. "

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stevenwoo
9 hours ago
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Any guesses for best possible interpretion? The Russians have infiltrated their PCs with keyloggers and DOGE are working from insecure open networks.

The worst possible interpretation is straightforward - they are working for the Russians as agents and let the Russians in or installed the keyloggers for Russia.

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breadwinner
7 hours ago
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Related: https://infosec.exchange/@briankrebs/114083485241630234

Excerpt: "How much more proof do we need that this administration is completely compromised? There is zero reason for the US to relax any offensive digital actions against Russia. If anything, we should be applying more."

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Ukv
21 minutes ago
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> Any guesses for best possible interpretion? The Russians have infiltrated their PCs with keyloggers [...]

Best possible case I see would be that the whistleblower has made some mistake (or is being intentionally dishonest). Seems plausible for instance that "it appeared they had the correct username and password" based on "our no-out-of-country logins policy activating" could just be a misunderstanding of how/when the policy triggers. Not to say it's the most likely explanation, just the least concerning one.

I think less concerning than keyloggers, while still assuming the whistleblower is correct, would be that a DOGE employee was using a VPN/proxy/Tor. Probably not a great idea to have traffic going through a hostile nation state even with encryption, but less bad than keyloggers on their machines stealing and trying credentials within minutes.

Definitely concerning though, to be clear - just steelmanning/answering the question of best possible interpretation.

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0cf8612b2e1e
9 hours ago
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I would have thought that a Russian state sponsored attack would trivially mask the IP to originate from within the USA. This is just brazen.
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kenjackson
7 hours ago
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May not be state sponsored. Could just be a Russian hacking group associated with the DOGE person.

Or it could be state sponsored and they didn’t think they needed to be covert as they could walk through the front door on invitation of the executive branch.

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delusional
4 hours ago
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There's also a chance Musk just hired a Russian citizen to work for him.
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avs733
9 hours ago
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Sometimes getting caught isn’t a bad thing. If you are trying to seed division between to groups, acting in a way that divides them - e.g., getting caught helping one side - is more effective than what you gain by not getting caught.

I struggle to see what Russia would gain with nlrb data, but getting caught “helping doge” furthers distrust between the two sides of our country - which is something they gain from

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JumpCrisscross
2 hours ago
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> struggle to see what Russia would gain with nlrb data

A list of whistleblowers at American companies who presumably don't want said companies to know the details of their work.

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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
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Why would the Russians do this when Trump won the election. Isn't that the best outcome for them related to Ukraine?

>furthers distrust between the two sides of our country - which is something they gain from

How?

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avs733
8 hours ago
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The best outcome for them and other potential powerful forces is an America so roiled by internal conflict that it can’t now or ever do anything.

Yeah Trump winning seems to help them in Ukraine but their need is disruption as much as different policy in the longer term.

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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
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While I'm just guessing I'd think it would be better to wait until Ukraine is done and trump is out of office. Creating mistrust in Doge only helps Democrats
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JumpCrisscross
2 hours ago
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> guesses for best possible interpretion? The Russians have infiltrated their PCs with keyloggers and DOGE are working from insecure open networks

They were accessing Github over the internet from superuser accounts they were presumably also using as their user account. Given the code quality, I doubt their opsec is put together, either.

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pontus
8 hours ago
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Isn't it just that the IP router happens to use IPs in Russia as part of the rotation?

If they're trying to exfiltrate data, they might want to rotate through IP addresses in order to obfuscate what's going on or otherwise circumvent restrictions. Using a simple ip rotator like the post talks about would maybe be an approach they'd use. If they're not careful with the IP addresses, once in a while one might get caught due to some restriction like being outside the US. It'd maybe appear as though you're getting these weird requests from Russia, but that's just because you're not logging the requests that are not being flagged from the US.

Maybe I'm reading the post incorrectly though (if so, please correct me!)

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cthalupa
7 hours ago
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It uses AWS API Gateway. There is not a Russian AWS region.
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tenpies
9 hours ago
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Don't forget the third option: false flag.

The objective may not have been to obtain access or any useful data. The objective may have been to get the scary headlines about Russians and use the existing media and political agitprop to further destabilize the government you seek to color revolution away.

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lukev
9 hours ago
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I don't follow. Are you saying the DOGE boys are trying to give Trump bad press?
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9283409232
8 hours ago
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The theory I'm seeing is that they are creating an excuse to try to drum up public support for expanding use of AI in government under the guise of security. You already have people in this very thread and every DOGE thread playing Elon's advocate. Give them a vague reason like security and I'm sure they'll be onboard with no questions asked.
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santoshalper
4 hours ago
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That is a really dumb theory, and I'm pretty sure you just made it up.
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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
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Has anyone suggested AI as a replacement?

Why does it increase support for AI in government?

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DrillShopper
9 hours ago
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It doesn't make sense to me that an administration that by and large has been throating Putin would do that to throw more shade on Russia.

I'm not saying they didn't do that, just that it's not in line with their support for Putin and Russia. Maybe as a false flag it give Putin the cover to crack down on hacking groups that don't throat him.

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barbazoo
9 hours ago
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Best case scenario those kids were duped into giving out credentials to the wrong (Russian) people.
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lucasRW
1 hour ago
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Yeah, like the APT that compromised O365 accounts from US gov entities a year or so ago, using residential proxies to go around Conditional Access Policies..., is now logging in straight from the Kremlin. :D
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cryptoegorophy
6 hours ago
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How dumb would Russian hackers be to not use some kind of vpn? My friend who lives in Russia says that without vpn he can not access majority of USA sites so he has it always on be default. Something to is not right or these people are very very dumb.
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CSMastermind
9 hours ago
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Spearfishing then some kind of spyware on the system would be my guess.

Though with nation state actors you can't rule out Pegasus like zero-click infiltrations.

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kazinator
10 hours ago
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The article could offer a summary of this key finding, rather than, say, the pointless paragraph near the bottom about the scraping software found in GitHub not being well written.

This is the evidence which strongly suggests that the DOGE personnel are using various cloud IP addresses to scrape.

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orbital-decay
2 hours ago
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>Primorskiy Krai

Probably the least expected location to connect from, if it was genuine. Not saying it necessarily isn't, but it's not usual either and doesn't make much sense.

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Palmik
7 hours ago
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I wonder why the "no-out-of-country logins" block happens after verifying login credentials and not before, which would make more sense to me.
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sReinwald
2 hours ago
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While blocking before authentication seems intuitive for efficiency, checking after provides crucial context that's missing if you block pre-auth: you know which specific user account just authenticated successfully.

This context enables two important things:

- Granular exceptions: If Alice is attending a conference in Toronto, you can say "Allow Alice to log in from Canada next week" without opening Canada-wide logins for everyone. Pre-auth geo-blocking forces you into an all-or-nothing stance.

- Better threat intelligence: A valid login from an unexpected region (e.g. Moscow when Alice is normally in D.C.) is a far stronger signal of compromise than a failed attempt. Capturing "successful login + wrong location" helps you prioritize real threats. If you block pre-auth, you'd never know Alice's account was compromised.

Putting geo-checks after authentication gives you precise control over whom, exactly, is logging in from where, and offers richer data for your security monitoring.

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jabiko
4 hours ago
[-]
Since the system is hosted on Azure, I guess we are talking about an Entra ID login. So I think they set up a Conditional Access [1] that can blocks logins based on the country IP. These policies run after authentication and can be specific to a user.

[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/entra/identity/conditional...

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mcoliver
7 hours ago
[-]
Because then you know that credentials have been compromised
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antongribok
7 hours ago
[-]
Because you need to know who is logging in before you know what IP policy to enforce, no?
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bequanna
9 hours ago
[-]
This just seems odd.

Why would they attempt a login from Russia (if it was indeed Russians)?

It is incredibly cheap to use a VPN with a US residential IP.

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Pompidou
9 hours ago
[-]
Maybe not everyone involved is quite the genius you might've been expecting.
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ethagnawl
7 hours ago
[-]
And/or they just dgaf because they know they or anyone else involved won't ever be held accountable.
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bequanna
8 hours ago
[-]
I guess I don’t buy that.

Many non technical people use VPNs to access region restricted content. It is trivial to understand and use.

Assuming this all actually happened as described, it sounds like someone wanted it to appear that these attempts were coming from Russia.

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frumplestlatz
8 hours ago
[-]
Occam’s razor would also suggest a hoax as one of several very credible possibilities.
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threeseed
8 hours ago
[-]
Occam's razor would suggest someone from Russia could just use their own IP because people like you would think it's a hoax anyway.
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frumplestlatz
8 hours ago
[-]
Why does someone from Russia want access to NLRB data, and why would DOGE be immediately leaking just-granted NLRB login credentials to Russian assets when it would be trivially traceable back to them, and if they were in fact granted untraceable/unlogged admin credentials, could legitimately download the data themselves and simply hand it over to said Russian assets if that was their actual intention?

It's not behavior that makes any sense assuming even a semi-rational/intelligent actor.

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anang
24 minutes ago
[-]
> Whoever was attempting to log in was using one of the newly created accounts that were used in the other DOGE related activities and it appeared they had the correct username and password due to the authentication flow only stopping them due to our no-out-of-country logins policy activating.

Explains this:

> why would DOGE be immediately leaking just-granted NLRB login credential

The implication is that the credentials were for more than this specific system. It's entirely feasible that a bad actor would immediately try to vacuum up as much data from as many systems as possible, it's just that this system had a geo block that made it clear this was happening.

I don't think we need to assume that this was a targeted attack on this specific NLRB system, just that this specific NLRB system was the one that caught the attempts.

So, what systems DIDN'T block authentication?

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threeseed
7 hours ago
[-]
> Why does someone from Russia want access to NLRB data

It has details of labor disputes. Which if you’re Russia who thrives on fostering conflict in the US would be an ideal data set.

> Why would DOGE be immediately leaking just-granted NLRB login credentials to Russian assets

Because they are young, highly inexperienced engineers who have been tasked with rolling out their LLM system as quickly as possible. Their priority is not security.

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frumplestlatz
7 hours ago
[-]
Your argument is that they are so inexperienced and insufficiently monitored that they immediately leaked just-granted NLRB login credentials (how?) to Russia, while rolling out an LLM system (what system?), and the Russian assets that acquired those credentials were so inept that they risked their access — and had their logins rejected — by immediately attempting to use them directly from a Russian IP block?

Furthermore, that the NLRB data would somehow be of sufficient value to Russian state actors to justify risking burning their access to DOGE employees/data/credentials through frankly idiotic OPSEC, despite there being much higher value targets than the NLRB?

This even remotely doesn't pass the smell test.

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threeseed
6 hours ago
[-]
a) No one knows how Russia had the credentials but they did.

b) This system: https://www.wired.com/story/doge-is-just-getting-warmed-up-d...

c) DOGE under its current form will end in the next weeks/months as Musk moves on. So if you’re Russia the best bet is to get as much data now as you can.

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superconduct123
10 hours ago
[-]
Wow that's insane
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twalkz
12 hours ago
[-]
> According to a whistleblower complaint filed last week by Daniel J. Berulis, a 38-year-old security architect at the NLRB, officials from DOGE met with NLRB leaders on March 3 and demanded the creation of several all-powerful “tenant admin” accounts that were to be exempted from network logging activity that would otherwise keep a detailed record of all actions taken by those accounts.

Feels like a pretty good Occam’s razor case… but is there any legitimate reason why one would request this?

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rtkwe
11 hours ago
[-]
Even worse when you know more of the whistleblower's story which is that ~15 minutes after one of DOGE's accounts were made there was an attempted login with the correct password from Russia. Not many explanations for that that look good for DOGE...
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ourmandave
9 hours ago
[-]
That's straight up traitorous.

DOGE needs to be shutdown and everyone of them held as a flight risk while the whole thing is investigated.

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vimax
57 minutes ago
[-]
Not to defend doge at be all, but the article specifically mentioned installing a bunch of proxy and scraping tools. Is this likely to be an actual Russian state attack or just extremely poor opsec / an attempt to evade internal controls, still likely very illegal. I'm all for holding all involved accountable to the fullest extent, but this is too sloppy for Russian state involvement to make me think they're on any intelligence payroll anywhere.
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DrillShopper
8 hours ago
[-]
They work for Trump so they'll never be held to account, even if a Democrat wins the next election (assuming even have one and it's fair and free)

I never thought I'd be calling for UN observers for an election in the US but here we are

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JumpCrisscross
2 hours ago
[-]
> They work for Trump so they'll never be held to account, even if a Democrat wins the next election

Why? If Democrats take the House in the midterms, which looks more likely the longer Navarro and Musk have West Wing access, they can basically turn these folks' lives into a living hell of back-to-back hearings (and contempt charges down the road). And if Democrats win the next election, they'll presumably put someone with a pulse in charge who doesn't take two years to bring the most important cases of their administration to the docket.

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efnx
1 hour ago
[-]
I think Trump could simply pardon them, unfortunately.
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xoa
15 minutes ago
[-]
>I think Trump could simply pardon them, unfortunately.

FWIW I think you're not correct here, or rather, it's not merely irrelevant but would actually harm them. The pardon power protects against criminal prosecution by the federal government. But it doesn't protect against mere embarrassment, nor against new actions performed after the pardon. Congress isn't prosecution, their inquiries are just about information finding, and while they can result in information on crimes surfacing, whether or not the USDOJ decides to pursue that or not is completely up to them. The reason a pardon might flat out hurt in such a scenario is that there is an argument it would eliminate any claim of 5th Amendment privileges. That's commonly referred to the right to be silent, and normally that's effectively what it is, but the actual right is the right against self incrimination [0]. If you've been pardoned for something purely federal then by definition it's impossible to incriminate yourself regarding that, because no criminal case can be brought against you. So there'd be no right to refuse to cooperate with a congressional inquiry, and if you didn't that could be treated as contempt which would not be covered by any pardon for the underlying actions.

So yes if a future Administration wanted to pursue criminal prosecutions for crimes that were undertaken by the current Trump Administration, Trump's pardons could certainly put a stop to that. But in terms of "they can basically turn these folks' lives into a living hell of back-to-back hearings", pardons don't help with that one. And if the Democrats just wanted to thoroughly document exactly what went down and who was responsible to make it an indelible part of the history books, with any social consequences that'd come from that, pardons can't help with that either.

----

0: Text of the 5th Amendement: "...nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself..."

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JumpCrisscross
1 hour ago
[-]
> Trump could simply pardon them

Ironically, one of the most useful things Trump could do is prosecute e.g. Hunter Bide so SCOTUS can strike down preëmptive pardons.

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jarym
8 hours ago
[-]
The guy in the oval wants to defund the UN… he’s one step ahead of you!
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stephenitis
10 hours ago
[-]
Citation?
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orochimaaru
10 hours ago
[-]
Not parent but it’s here - https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/04/whistleblower-doge-sipho...

DOGE is a complete clusterfuck. Fwiw I think there is hard to spot fraud in the govt that should be looked at (eg price inflation at the pentagon, VA, Medicaid/Medicare, SS). They should have done the hard work of uncovering that. Instead they just went for clickbait headlines.

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mmooss
8 hours ago
[-]
> DOGE is a complete clusterfuck.

It depends what the objectives are. My impression is that they have been very successful pursuing their actual objectives, while providing a cover story of a 'clusterfuck'.

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rtkwe
7 hours ago
[-]
And conveniently gutting agencies that are or were soon to be thorns in Elon's side. FAA and EPA were annoying him around SpaceX's Starship test launches, CFPB would be annoying for his future everything app plans for Twitter, etc.
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orochimaaru
6 hours ago
[-]
Maybe. But none of those make him as much money as Tesla which is in the dumps with all the shenanigans. From a motivation perspective it seems more like rank stupidity than Machiavellian.
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mmooss
4 hours ago
[-]
Their aim seems to be power, and many wealthy people in the US have jumped on the bandwagon of supporting the seizure of power while sacrificing some money. Musk will have a roof over his head regardless.
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rtkwe
8 hours ago
[-]
Take your pick it was widely reported and you can read the original whistleblower report;

https://whistlebloweraid.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2025... - page 2 & 11

"This declaration details DOGE activity within NLRB, the exfiltration of data from NLRB systems, and – concerningly – near real-time access by users in Russia. Notably, within minutes of DOGE personnel creating user accounts in NLRB systems, on multiple occasions someone or something within Russia attempted to login using all of the valid credentials (eg. Usernames/Passwords)"

"For example: In the days after DOGE accessed NLRB’s systems, we noticed a user with an IP address in Primorskiy Krai, Russia started trying to log in. Those attempts were blocked, but they were especially alarming. Whoever was attempting to log in was using one of the newly created accounts that were used in the other DOGE related activities and it appeared they had the correct username and password due to the authentication flow only stopping them due to our no-out-of-country logins policy activating. There were more than 20 such attempts, and what is particularly concerning is that many of these login attempts occurred within 15 minutes of the accounts being created by DOGE engineers."

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/04/whistleblower-doge-sipho...

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355896/doge-nlrb-elon-...

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gnabgib
10 hours ago
[-]
From the whistle blower.

> Within minutes after DOGE accessed the NLRB's systems, someone with an IP address in Russia started trying to log in, according to Berulis' disclosure.

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355896/doge-nlrb-elon-...

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pan69
12 hours ago
[-]
> all-powerful “tenant admin” accounts that were to be exempted from network logging activity

Is this normal to build this sort of functionality into a software system? Especially software systems that heavily rely on auditability?

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michaelt
11 hours ago
[-]
Sometimes, depending on the situation.

My company retains all e-mails for at least 5 years, for audit purposes. But if some troublemaker were to e-mail child porn to an employee, we'd need to remove that from the audit records, because the laws against possessing child porn don't have an exception for corporate audit records.

So there's essentially always some account with the power to erase things from the audit records.

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Cheer2171
10 hours ago
[-]
It sounds like you haven't actually had to face that situation, because it is more complicated than just having to delete an offending attachment. You would still have an audit log of the deletion of that email record by the superuser, even if the content is deleted. And there would be other records generated to document the deletion, like I'm sure a long email or slack thread from this getting discovered and sent up the chain, over to legal, then to the FBI, then back to coordinating the logistics of manually deleting something from the audit logs. So if for a completely unrelated case, a third party auditor stumbles upon that mess, they will be able to reconstruct why a single attachment cannot be found in the audit logs.

"No" is the answer to GP: there is no legitimate reason for a fully unlogged superuser account.

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j_w
9 hours ago
[-]
Yeah, superuser accounts? Of course you need them to exist. Superuser accounts that produce no logs? There is never a reason for that. Anyone who claims they should have a superuser with no logging is up to no good.
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michaelt
9 hours ago
[-]
> You would still have an audit log of the deletion of that email record by the superuser, even if the content is deleted.

If needing things wiped from the audit logs happens often, you might indeed have an audited interface for wiping things from the audit logs.

But if it's very rare? Maybe I just request the production database password for "Incident #12345" and run some careful SQL.

> And there would be other records generated to document the deletion, like I'm sure a long email or slack thread

For sure - but the account capable of deleting entries from the audit logs exists

And if I am ordered to hand it over to someone who doesn't care to explain their actions on slack? Then there won't be any explanations in slack.

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heelix
10 hours ago
[-]
Ah man... back in the day I worked for a company that built out records management software. One of the big things on the side of the cereal box was that not even an admin could delete something flagged as a record within its retention plan. Fast forward to a company doing that for emails, messing up spam filters, and getting a blast of 'normal' porn that was all flagged as records. I believe they ended up creating security groups for those files that help keep those who were using it .. safe for work.
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acdha
11 hours ago
[-]
Very true - this comes up constantly in blockchain questions - but in that case there’d at least be an audit log showing who deleted which records.
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katbyte
12 hours ago
[-]
No. Never. While it’s expected to have a “root” account exempting from logging serves no honest purpose.
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sanderjd
12 hours ago
[-]
Of course not. It's the exact opposite and every single person here knows this.
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sellmesoap
10 hours ago
[-]
From a an old hackers perspective disabling shell history can have positive security implications. But in today's 'cattle not pets' systems mentality I'd expect all actions to have a log and not having that seems fishy to me. Keeping logging infra secure has a dubious, the log4j fiasco comes to mind. I'm not a fan of regulation for most things, but I think we need a higher cost for data leaking since security is an afterthought for many orgs. My personal leaning is to be very choosy about who I'll do business/share data with.
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typs
12 hours ago
[-]
> “We have built in roles that auditors can use and have used extensively in the past but would not give the ability to make changes or access subsystems without approval,” he continued. “The suggestion that they use these accounts was not open to discussion.”

From the previous post, they had auditor roles built in that they purposely chose to go around

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XorNot
12 hours ago
[-]
It's the same as domain admin in active directory.

You always need it to setup the system initially.

It's like root on Linux: it's an implementation detail that it must be possible.

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lovehashbrowns
12 hours ago
[-]
There’s no possible need for an admin-level user that bypasses logging. If anything these users should have additional logging to external systems to make it harder to hide their use.
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tw04
12 hours ago
[-]
Root on Linux isn’t exempt from logging. I also don’t know any enterprise that allows admin accounts to bypass logging.

There is no legitimate justification for this request.

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XorNot
12 hours ago
[-]
root on Linux can just kill the log forwarder and erase the relevant logs, or refill them with junk.
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sanderjd
12 hours ago
[-]
Yes. A more competent hack would have been to use their superuser permissions to do that kind of thing.

But instead they requested that logging be disabled, thus outing themselves as acting in bad faith.

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gusgus01
11 hours ago
[-]
At least at places I've worked, terminating the logger would cause a security incident, and the central logging service have some general heuristics that should trigger a review if a log is filled with junk. Of course with enough time and root, there's ways to avoid that. But that's also usually why those with root are limited to a small subset of users, and assuming root usually requires a reason and is time gated.
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mynameisvlad
11 hours ago
[-]
> But that's also usually why those with root are limited to a small subset of users, and assuming root usually requires a reason and is time gated.

I mean, if we were to apply the equivalent from the article, then no they would not have had a reason nor been time gated.

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acdha
11 hours ago
[-]
That still leaves highly visible log traces if you’re following most security standards (required in .gov) since you’d have the logs showing them disabling the forwarder. The difference here is that this was like an attacker but had backing from senior management to violate all of those rules which would normally get someone fired, if not criminally charged.
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II2II
11 hours ago
[-]
That is a very serious design flaw, but I also believe it is a flaw that is addressed by SELinux. (Perhaps someone with a knowledge of SELinux can offer some input here.) That said, I'm not sure how widespread the use of SELinux is and doubt that it would help in this case since the people in question have or can gain physical access.
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jmainguy
11 hours ago
[-]
If your root, you can just turn off selinux
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fipar
7 hours ago
[-]
Not without a reboot though, and while I haven’t done that, it should be possible to protect selinux ‘s config itself with a policy, requiring boot loader access to bypass, at which point you’re dealing with a different risk level.

I’ll agree that Linux security is quite limited and primitive if compared with, say, a mainframe, but it can be made less bad with a reasonable amount of effort.

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saagarjha
7 hours ago
[-]
What would the mainframe be running that avoids this problem?
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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
[-]
Assuming the Whistleblower is telling the truth, why would they make the request if they could cover their tracks themselves
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sanderjd
12 hours ago
[-]
The question is whether it needs to be possible to turn off the audit logs for that role. And of course: No.
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skeeter2020
12 hours ago
[-]
typically the admin account can createthings like super users, and super users can do anything with the data, but not sure there's a use case where a single account can do both, and why can any of them avoid logging?
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Cthulhu_
12 hours ago
[-]
Sure, to hide your tracks because you know what you intend to do isn't right.
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plandis
12 hours ago
[-]
I can’t think of any. Even if you wanted to give someone broad permissions to access and modify data, you wouldn't turn off the audit logs.
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largbae
10 hours ago
[-]
I am sure they demanded maximum access, but the logging activity phrasing sounds a little bit like spin...

I think if I wanted to describe an account with access to perform "sudo -s" as negatively as possible, I would say "an all-powerful admin account that is exempt from logging activity that would otherwise keep a detailed record of all actions taken by those accounts."

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patrickmay
12 hours ago
[-]
There is no justification for ever creating an account like that. The only purpose is nefarious.
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vkou
12 hours ago
[-]
There isn't one.

Anything musk's dogs claim to find cannot be taken at face value because of this. Because there is no audit, and no evidence that they can offer that they didn't doctor their findings.

The next time they claim that a 170-year old person is receiving SS checks, they have no way to prove that they didn't subtract a century from that person's birthdate in some table.

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FredPret
12 hours ago
[-]
Ah, this is something I haven't thought of before. This might not actually be spying, but instead just an attempt to plant fake results.
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blooalien
10 hours ago
[-]
> This might not actually be spying, but instead just an attempt to plant fake results.

That statement might be (slightly) more believable had there not been access attempts from Russian IP addresses using valid (and recently created) DOGE login credentials so very shortly thereafter.

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timewizard
10 hours ago
[-]
They give away the game if you pay attention and read other internal sources from other agencies. This is all about shoving AI into the loop and removing federal workers from it.

They want to prove that AI can do "just as good a job" on these data sets and arrive at "equal conclusions" with a much higher level of effiency.

This is what happens when you get high on your own supply.

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vkou
12 hours ago
[-]
And even if it's not and everyone involved is a qualified, thoughtful, unimpeachable public servant with no agenda but the general welfare of the Glorious Republic of Arstotzka in their hearts, the lack of an audit trail means that you have to seriously consider that they aren't.

Of course, given the blatant dishonesty and criminality that the rest of this administration is producing (see: every immigration law case that they are losing in court), you'd have to be a useful idiot to actually assume good intent from them.

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FredPret
12 hours ago
[-]
Of course, it just never occurred to me that there's a less bad but still terrible explanation for ghost admin access.
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Suppafly
12 hours ago
[-]
I'm only really familiar with the 'tenant admin' concept from microsoft administration, it's commonly used otherwise?
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spencerflem
12 hours ago
[-]
Obviously no
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api
10 hours ago
[-]
To allow dodgy offshore actors to snarf huge amounts of data on US citizens to prepare a huge propaganda assault for the next election?
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tootie
8 hours ago
[-]
Interview with whistleblower detailing the attack and the threats directed against him:

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/nlrb-whistleblower-claims-...

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cmurf
8 hours ago
[-]
this guy's lawyer says: This is a difficult topic for Dan to discuss, but prior to our filing the whistle-blower disclosure this week, last week, somebody went to Dan's home and taped a threatening note, a menacing note on his door with personal information.

...

While he was at work, and it also contained photographs of him walking his dog taken by a drone.

This is mafia shit.

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Corrado
3 hours ago
[-]
I just finished watching Daredevil: Born Again[0] and this incident looks shockingly familiar to what happened in the show. I don't know how the show runners knew this was going to happen but it feels like they've been spying on the future. Do they have a time machine or are they really that good (and the current administration that bad)?

[0] https://www.imdb.com/title/tt18923754/

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1oooqooq
11 hours ago
[-]
very clear admission of guilt.
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jimt1234
5 hours ago
[-]
The Deep State! The government is filled with spies determined to "leak" the great work DOGE is doing is the press - so, of course, it needs "God mode" access. Totally legit.

That's the best I could do. LOL

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mfer
11 hours ago
[-]
Setting aside legitimate (thats a matter of judgement)...

Some previous attempts for DOGE to get data has resulted in data being deleted before they can look and requests for judges to block access to data.

DOGE may be trying to be covert in order to stop these two activities from happening before they can get and review the data.

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throwworhtthrow
11 hours ago
[-]
> Setting aside legitimate (thats a matter of judgement)

By definition, a judge decides what's legitimate.

If DOGE expects their access to be blocked by a court judgement, and bum-rushes agencies to exfiltrate data ahead of the judgement, that's also criminal intent.

I am not sure what you are getting at. "Covert" isn't how I'd describe DOGE's actions. "Brazen" maybe?

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mfer
9 hours ago
[-]
People have admitted in news interviews to destroying government data to prevent others from knowing what the government was doing. That’s likely criminal. This is a legitimate reason to get at information before people who might destroy have the opportunity.

What’s happening with judges is very political. We likely won’t know what’s allowed until things have gone through the appeals process. There have been cases of judges admitting they will rule against the current administration no matter the topic or law. This is messy, to say the least.

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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
[-]
>There have been cases of judges admitting they will rule against the current administration no matter the topic or law

What exactly did they say and who said it?

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Braxton1980
8 hours ago
[-]
>What’s happening with judges is very political. We likely won’t know what’s allowed until things have gone through the appeals process.

What is very political about it?

Since appeals are also decided by judges why is that a better system?

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watwut
1 hour ago
[-]
In American system, appeal process is a very formal thing - it checks whether all the ts were crossed, whether process was followed. It is not checking the evidence, it is bringing new evidence, nothing like that.

That is how it was designed.

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LiquidSky
8 hours ago
[-]
>People have admitted in news interviews to destroying government data to prevent others from knowing what the government was doing. That’s likely criminal. This is a legitimate reason to get at information before people who might destroy have the opportunity.

Yes, this is precisely the accusation being made against DOGE: they are the government actors criminally trying to to prevent the public from knowing what they're doing.

>There have been cases of judges admitting they will rule against the current administration no matter the topic or law.

No, there haven't, but feel free to provide a source.

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santoshalper
4 hours ago
[-]
Citation or you're full of shit.
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briandear
2 minutes ago
[-]
Related: 2016 thread on Hillary Clinton’s internet connected printer and her unauthorized private server containing classified information:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11782383

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ThinkBeat
12 hours ago
[-]
1. DOGE employees access data they were not supposed to.

This fairly clear.

The story says that DOGE attained access to an account that had huge permissions into what it could see and alter. The person or persons from DOGE may have downloaded 10GB of data. The person may have used this in a manner that is illegal. Or it is illegal to start with. With the understanding that POTUS may or may not be allowed grand such access. (I dont think POTUS can)

2. DOGE employee downloaded code that could be used to use a huge pool of IP addresses, from AWS to bypass forms of throtheling. 3. The code was badly written. 4. The person is a racist

How would a person from DOGE use "unlimited" number of IP adderssess from AWS to hammer and automaticlay screenscape webpage, benefit from it when it came to copying extremly sensetive data from an internal National Labor Relations Board database?

Did 10.000 sessions authenticate to the database at the same time, using AWS UP addresses and scraped the data?

Something is pretty broken if the system with extremly sensetive data is available from external IPs -and- allowing a single account to login 10.0000 times to concurrently scrape data off the interal database?

Of are they saying that this code was adapted to use 10.000/100 IP addresses internal to National Labor Relations Board and scrapes using those?

The automation later noted makes a lot more sense to aid the work.

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declan_roberts
10 hours ago
[-]
The author brings up the ip scraping but makes no effort to tie anything together. It's actually really confusing. Were they using this utility to steal the data or are these two just totally unrelated things?
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SpicyLemonZest
9 hours ago
[-]
We have no way to know what they were using it for, because as the article details, DOGE works hard to make sure nobody can find out what it's doing or why.
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grandempire
9 hours ago
[-]
> I dont think POTUS can

What data in a federal agency could the chief executive not have authorization to access?

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roywiggins
7 hours ago
[-]
I am fairly sure it would be a crime for the President to pull up someone's VA health records on a whim, or at least it would be a crime for anyone at the VA to facilitate him doing that.

We can also add to that IRS data. The articles of impeachment against Nixon included the following:

"He has, acting personally and through his subordinates and agents, endeavoured to obtain from the Internal Revenue Service, in violation of the constitutional rights of citizens, confidential information contained in income tax returns for purposes not authorized by law" (emphasis mine).

There actually are laws regulating the handling of personal data collected by the government and it generally doesn't have a "the president wants to see it" exception.

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arrowsmith
19 minutes ago
[-]
"When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal" - Nixon

I wonder, if he was alive today would he stand by those words?

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grandempire
6 hours ago
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I would agree with that emphasis. Misusing presidential privilege is always a possible impeachment, if congress cares.

I think that he can access a health or irs record for cause - anything which would not get him impeached.

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Terr_
5 hours ago
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> What data in a federal agency could the chief executive not have authorization to access?

Personally? For starters, he can't access anything the Legislature's laws say he can't.

The Executive is there to implement the law, and that includes obeying them him/her-self.

A President telling other people to break the law on his behalf by threatening to fire them is also a crime of extortion.

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grandempire
5 hours ago
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> he can't access anything the Legislature's laws say he can't.

Can the legislature make rules for the president without constitutional amendment?

I am interested- I’ll see if I can find examples.

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Terr_
2 hours ago
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Well, if the legislature truly cannot make any statue affecting the President, that has some terrifying implications.

It would mean a President is is legally permitted to ignore laws against raping a child on the sidewalk outside 1600 Pennsylvania avenue Ave then murdering all of Congress by blowing up the Capitol.

Recently, a majority on the Supreme Court has claimed there's immunity for "Official Acts", but hasn't laid out any rule for when an official-looking act is actually an unofficial one... They're basically reserving the right to decide later. (Ex: Officially ordering the US military to kill Congress and Supreme Court Justices.)

Not that I want to give the current one any more evil ideas.

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nulbyte
7 hours ago
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I think the question is whether employees of an advisory group that is not an actual department of the government are on the list of people to whom can he authorize access to this type of sensitive data.
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dfedbeef
12 hours ago
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The CEO of Tesla and Space-X; a self-proclaimed high IQ individual, an alleged programmer, has apparently hired a straight-up script kiddie to their elite delta force of technical government downsizers.
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AIPedant
8 hours ago
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I hated Elon Musk long before it was cool: I was a fan of Tesla in the early days, and when I read Musk's "super-secret master plan" for Tesla I thought "yeesh, the board chairman is an idiot, where did they find this bozo?" (I knew a bit about SpaceX but somehow didn't make the connection.)

That said, I was surprised to learn much later that, by all accounts, Elon Musk was a competent and resourceful leader in SpaceX's early days. Maybe these stories are just his personality cult in action, but I found it plausible. It appears he once knew his place as an engineering manager, without LARPing as a Chief Engineer (he didn't appoint himself to CTO until quite a bit later). I worked for a really good manager who didn't know how to code, but he knew a lot about software and was very good about pulling back on coding things vs pushing forward on software design. It seemed like Musk was similar at SpaceX.

Which is all to say that celebrity is a helluva drug. I don't think Musk was ever an especially "high-IQ individual," and his first marriage suggests he's always been a misogynistic loser. But being anointed "a real life Tony Stark!" seems to have destroyed his brain. Ketamine probably doesn't help.

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sidibe
8 hours ago
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> That said, I was surprised to learn much later that, by all accounts, Elon Musk was a competent and resourceful leader in SpaceX's early days. Maybe these stories are just his personality cult in action, but I found it plausible

He's good at having and raising money which was what SpaceX needed, I think he was probably the same then as he is now. Reading about his early days at Tesla and the PayPal stuff, I don't really buy the idea he was ever different and took a dark turn. He's the type of person that will never self-regulate and somehow has never faced any negative consequences for lying and self-aggrandizing so has kept pushing it further

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AIPedant
7 hours ago
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This is a frustrating comment. I said "I was surprised to learn" because I had the same impression you did, but then I learned something new. It seems like you're just rejecting my conclusion out of hand without bothering to learn anything.

Eric Berger's book in particular suggests that, before Falcon 1 was successful, Musk was much more humble and collaborative with the other early SpaceX hires, and typically deferred to their expertise. He was always reckless and megalomaniacal. But after Falcon 1 he became much worse.

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dfedbeef
8 hours ago
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Having an empty life full of sycophants and scammers sounds like a negative consequence. I have a bet with my wife that Tesla will go under within 10 years so we'll see how that plays out.
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kilna
10 hours ago
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Um, as best I can tell from similar articles, they're all script kiddies.
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arm32
8 hours ago
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Total HackForum vibes.
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jppope
11 hours ago
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I agree with the script kiddies comment- which is basically what the reporting has shown... but in a way isn't that part of the point? That they can save billions of dollars just by having a couple of relatively normal comp sci kids (who can't even rent a car) review the most basic financial information of our government departments. These guys aren't supposed to be "delta force" they are supposed to be the interns.

Not trying to defend the means to the end, but I would really like my tax money used more efficiently. I will also say am extremely worried about the levels of access that they are being given, especially since it comes with basically no accountability

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frank_nitti
10 hours ago
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Your comment assumes the conclusion that these comp sci kids were able to save billions while preserving the correct behavior of the system, i.e. if their changes cause even one person to miss one payment they should have received, then the rest of your comment is entirely baseless.

If you could prove that billions were saved in pure waste, then I’d imagine any sane citizen would agree with you, setting aside matters of decorum and human decency (e.g. RIFs that may ultimately be necessary but conducted in an inhumane way)

I’d like my tax money used efficiently, but this group does not merit the trust to carry out those changes, even on a technical level

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matwood
10 hours ago
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> I would really like my tax money used more efficiently

Except by most accounts so far it was being used efficiently by the federal workforce. This whole debacle will end up costing the US tax payer more money. See cutting the IRS or USAID which will probably lead the US to bailing out farmers. And if they privatize, then it'll be even more expensive.

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throwaway173738
9 hours ago
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I mean if they privatize USAID it’s a tremendous opportunity to loot on a scale we have not seen. Same thing if they privatize the IRS or Social Security. Think about all the money that could be invested in their friends’ enterprises out of the treasury float or the SS trust fund.
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kaitai
7 hours ago
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At the VA medical system, they word-searched for "consulting" and cancelled contracts for.... surgical equipment sterilization, medical waste removal, stuff related to air quality that's required for hospital accreditation, and local burial services for people who die in the hospital.

Then a lot of those had to be reinstated because you simply can't operate a hospital without sanitation.

Just like they had to scramble to hire back the folks at the National Nuclear Safety Association.

Yeah, efficiency is great. But this is like ordering tacos and getting... a used tire and some dirty diapers...?

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joquarky
11 hours ago
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> I would really like my tax money used more efficiently.

This is immature thinking, because, who wouldn't?

The contention comes from differing opinions on what is waste.

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throwaway173738
9 hours ago
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A lot of people seem to consider anything that doesn’t personally, immediately, and directly benefit them to be a waste of their tax dollars. God forbid you use their property taxes to build schools their adult children don’t go to.
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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
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It's a manipulation technique. It implies that the opposition doesn't believe this.
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guhidalg
10 hours ago
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> review the most basic financial information of our government departments

That is what the GAO is for https://www.gao.gov/ , and these people are much better than script kiddies.

> I would really like my tax money used more efficiently

Me too! You are on hacker news so I assume you are firm believer in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdahl%27s_law ! If you would like your tax money used efficiently, are you willing to discuss cuts to social security, medicare, medicaid, veteran benefits, and whatever else is at the top of the budget? https://www.cbo.gov/publication/61181? What would you cut?

Personally, I would increase taxes on anyone making over $500K/year and stop nickle and diming our federal government so the US can actually become a first world country for everyone that isn't a software engineer.

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tmpz22
10 hours ago
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> Not trying to defend the means to the end, but I would really like my tax money used more efficiently. I will also say am extremely worried about the levels of access that they are being given, especially since it comes with basically no accountability

This is like the derelict father with partial custody who parachutes in one weekend a month to buy his son ice cream and a new video game to leave two days later the conquering hero. Meanwhile mom works two jobs, has to set all the expectations and responsibilities for the child, and the father is late on child support payments.

DOGE blitzkrieged government IT. It'll be years before we understand the scope of what they've done and given available evidence: these are script kiddies who worship Musk, I don't think there is ANY reason for optimism or charitable consideration.

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llm_nerd
11 hours ago
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There is a phenomena I've noticed in this industry where people who lack a skill compensate by convincing themselves that they are a savant at seeing and exploiting that skill they lack in others. They find and encircle themselves with people who they believe are the Best of the Best, at least in their imagination, and it is critical for their ego that this is never challenged. They will be blind to any evidence to the contrary because they need the people they "identify" to be extraordinary, justifying their great people curation.

I mean, I guess this really happens in all industries. Art, music, leadership, software development. People who maybe once had credibility in something and now desperately try to foist Their People as the best in the industry.

I feel like that is what is happening here. None of the people who Elon surrounds himself are notable in any way, and their skills are hugely suspect, but he has to have his harem of "Super Coders" to prop up his own mythology.

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nop_slide
12 hours ago
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I find the following bizarre. Ignoring who this marko guy is, why would a random person post such a "take down" of the repo? I have never randomly passed by a repo and wanted to just dunk on it. Also this critique reeks of being AI generated.

> On February 6, someone posted a lengthy and detailed critique of Elez’s code on the GitHub “issues” page for async-ip-rotator, calling it “insecure, unscalable and a fundamental engineering failure.”

Link from quote: https://github.com/markoelez/async-ip-rotator/issues/1

The follow comment is interesting to be a coincidental, such a weird interaction.

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rideontime
12 hours ago
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It's only "bizarre" if you "ignore who this marko guy is." It's not a coincidence, it's somebody pointing out that DOGE's "cracked coders" are wearing no clothes.
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frank_nitti
11 hours ago
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And the follies here seem to be many. I’m not following why this Marko guy would make a publicly-visible fork of a repo (though he seems to have deleted it since this story went big), and why they would openly request to have their accounts exempted from logging when they were apparently already privileged users.

I must be missing something here; surely the level of elite technical skill implicit in his résumé would preclude this kind of thing

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Spivak
10 hours ago
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Well yeah they're junior developers. By all account from good schools but literally everyone here has dealt with junior developer brain.

I would say that Elmo picked a bunch of junior devs because they don't have enough maturity to talk back and will do anything they're asked but I think that's too charitable. I think he actually went this route because Elmo is a sad man in his 50s who is desperately trying to pretend that he is, and has not matured beyond, his 20s.

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rideontime
9 hours ago
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Not just junior developers, but zoomer junior developers. I'm guessing Marko was just following Grok's advice.
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mandevil
11 hours ago
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On February 6th, Marko Elez announced his resignation from DOGE after the WSJ discovered many racist posts he made in 2024 (which they published on the 5th). That likely made someone really interested in what his actual coding skill levels were, and they took a look at a repo he had made.

Musk did a "poll" on X that voted for rehiring Elez to DOGE, by February 20th Elez had a US Government email address again, and on Febrary 21st he was reported as working for DOGE at the Social Security Administration.

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areyourllySorry
2 hours ago
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> Upon learning of your resignation, following reports that you were linked to an account advocating to “normalize Indian hatred” and for a “eugenic immigration policy,” I can’t help but address the staggering hypocrisy of these views within the context of the IT industry

the 2nd comment in the issue explains why the 1st was posted pretty clearly

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epoxia
12 hours ago
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They took down the repository ~20 minutes after OP's comment. Archived link: https://web.archive.org/web/20250423135719/https://github.co...
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tootie
8 hours ago
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Surely Elez is currently reading this thread right now too. Probably reveling in the attention like all the juvenile hacker boys.
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nativeit
12 hours ago
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Why wonder? The user who wrote it seems to be a pretty well established user, and their public repositories suggest that they work in adjacent contexts, so it's entirely plausible they attempted to use async-ip-rotator in one of their projects.
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marcusb
12 hours ago
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???

The public repos for this person that I could find that weren't forks with no activity to upstream consisted of a dice-rolling guessing game, rock-paper-scissors, and some kind of framework for downloading and transcribing audio files that does not yet download or transcribe, but implements a whole bunch of boilerplate. I find it rather difficult to believe this person engaged in a good-faith review of the async-ip-rotator code base.

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throwaway290
23 minutes ago
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I wouldn't expect somebody to use their main non throwaway account, which probably ties to their job or school to write this today... when if someone in the gov doesn't like what you say they do things like cancel your visa or sanction your employer.
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nativeit
12 hours ago
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It's also worth noting that Feb 6 may very well be after Marko Elez became a public figure with DOGE. The article doesn't do a great job of expanding on any of this.
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watwut
12 hours ago
[-]
Are you genuinely puzzled or just wanted an excuse to point us all toward that comment? If "the comment" is correct word for what amounts to full article in length.
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sepositus
11 hours ago
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Why would they want an excuse to point everyone to that comment when it's literally linked in the article?
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willio58
12 hours ago
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The fact that they left these packages public on GitHub.. guys you do know you can make things private right? Just shows how dumb these people are honestly
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mingus88
12 hours ago
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Or they are emboldened in knowing there will be absolutely no consequences.

Go look at the list of pardons this administration has handed out. These guys won’t even be charged.

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declan_roberts
10 hours ago
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They were given a blanket pardon dating back to 2014. No crime even listed!
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DaSHacka
6 hours ago
[-]
Sounds like another administration I know....
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apical_dendrite
12 hours ago
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Or they think what they're doing is righteous and they're proud of it. It isn't - DOGE is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths through cuts to health programs - but I suspect they are deluding themselves into thinking it is.
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cpursley
12 hours ago
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> DOGE is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths through cuts to health programs

That seems like a lot. Source?

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douglasisshiny
11 hours ago
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apical_dendrite
11 hours ago
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dgellow
12 hours ago
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Not that it matters in this specific case, but on GitHub privated forks aren’t fully private: https://docs.github.com/en/pull-requests/collaborating-with-...
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darknavi
11 hours ago
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It's git. Just clone and push to a new, private repo (on or off of GitHub) without clicking "fork".
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dboreham
12 hours ago
[-]
Making a fork of a public repo private involves using the git cli.
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arm32
8 hours ago
[-]
Ooh, scary!
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vt_mruhlin
11 hours ago
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What? They reused public packages that have been public for years. One guy made a public fork with some changes. Is that not what open source is intended for?
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dkrich
2 hours ago
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I think he’s saying that if their intent was to not get caught which you’d assume, they could have made a private repo instead of a public fork tied to a doge account
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DaSHacka
6 hours ago
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You misunderstand, open source is bad actually, when the heckin cheeto man is the one doing it.

Just as its only worth complaining about geriatric geezers in office until the cheeto man brings in young hackers, then the problem is that "the old impaired people were good, actually".

Don't observe. Don't think. Merely repeat the approved message.

> The Party told you to ignore the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.

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tw04
12 hours ago
[-]
Someone needs to go to prison over this. It’s not just a misunderstanding, it is an intentional attack on every US citizen.
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candiddevmike
12 hours ago
[-]
The people who need to see/understand this live in a different reality where uncomfortable things like this are ETL'd into righteous anger towards people they don't like.

This is the deep state they've been worried about, this is the boot that will tread on them.

EDIT: parent comment was highest ranked comment for the article and is now at the bottom?

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j2kun
12 hours ago
[-]
A twisted justification for suggesting someone who broke serious laws not face consequences.

We live in a nation of laws, whether or not conspiracy-minded individuals prefer to follow them.

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Aeolun
12 hours ago
[-]
> We live in a nation of laws

You stopped living in a nation of laws a while ago. Now you live in a nation of might makes right.

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bilbo0s
12 hours ago
[-]
We'll see.

The thing about the law in the US, it's slow and heavy. You'll need to be pretty mighty to move it if it catches up to you.

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jayd16
11 hours ago
[-]
Justice delayed is justice denied.
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myko
11 hours ago
[-]
I would have agreed years ago, but seeing trump - who obviously should be in prison for January 6th, among other crimes - back in the WH pretty much proves the US is not a nation of laws.
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matwood
10 hours ago
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It's worse. SCOTUS says he's immune to any law while POTUS meaning he can have people commit crimes on his behalf and then pardon them (or simply commit them himself). See the 1/6 insurrectionists.
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dwaltrip
8 hours ago
[-]
People are fighting back. It’s not over yet.
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cmurf
7 hours ago
[-]
Voters elected an abuser and now we're being abused.

This is what happens with the authoritarian faction, present in all societies, wins an election. The people who stand for the Constitutional order didn't do enough. Whether they weren't sufficiently positive persuasive or negatively persuasive, here we are with President Psycho in office.

The law didn't fail. Order didn't fail. The self-governed, the people, failed to support and defend the Constitution.

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bagels
11 hours ago
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Supreme court gave Trump a pass on all his crimes. We have already seen. No more waiting is necessary to find out.
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padjo
11 hours ago
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That law now officially includes an individual who is immune from the law and who can issue pardons to anyone for anything. So you live in a nation with optional laws.
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willhslade
11 hours ago
[-]
Federal laws only. There is some daylight there.
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tines
12 hours ago
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All the evidence is contrary to your assertion that we live in a nation of laws.
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threatofrain
12 hours ago
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We live in a nation of peers before we live in a nation of laws.
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awesome_dude
11 hours ago
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Laws are only as strong as the enforcement.

One of the things that is being exposed by the current administration is that, even though the Judiciary is an arm of the government, and supposed to provide a check on the Executive, the reality is that the Executive has the power to pardon anyone it sees fit, voiding the power of the judiciary (the argument is that the ultimate power lies with the voters who can pass their judgement on the Executive, and its use of its powers, by voting them out, hopefully)

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BrenBarn
11 hours ago
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> Laws are only as strong as the enforcement.

This is one of the fundamental issues that underlies our broken system in the US. The gaps between what the law actually is, what people think it is, what people want it to be, and what it in practice is, are enormous.

Some of the recent deportation cases highlight this. You have cases where people were living in the US illegally for decades but faced no repercussions, and now people are upset because they were suddenly detained and/or deported. Virtually all the framing I see is about how it's a sudden and horrible injustice that they were detained during a "routine" ICE check-in --- very little about how we have accumulated this palimpsest of rules and enforcement policies resting on laws which don't actually encode the state of affairs most people want.

If we want people to be able to immigrate easily and safely (and I do), we need to stop breathing sighs of relief when a new president comes in and issues some kind of temporary executive order that makes things okay in the short term. We need to fix the laws at all levels, including criminalizing enforcement actions that are contrary to the law. That would likely mean massive purges of many individuals in local and state governments and law enforcement agencies, with many of them sentenced to considerable prison terms for the kind of enforcement discretion that we currently accept as normal. It's not going to be pretty. But it has to be done if we want to return to a system grounded in the actual rule of law and not the rule of law enforcement.

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lovich
9 hours ago
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Bruh, do you think people are pissed about the deportations just because they’re immigrants?

Deport them all if they came here illegally and that was _proven_, but the government just skipped all due process and as we’re seeing and as the government already admitted, people are being mistakenly deported to these camps and then the same government says they can’t do anything to reverse it.

You can’t be waxing poetic about the rule of law and how we need to enforce everything when they can’t even follow due process

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BrenBarn
3 hours ago
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Following due process is part of enforcement, and yeah, it needs to be done in accordance with law. But we've had problems with due process for a long time. One example is that our court system is not remotely adequate to handle the load it actually needs to handle. The result is long delays in justice (which usually benefit those with enough resources to wait it out), as well as a heavy reliance on plea bargains (which can act as an end-run around due process by applying pressure on vulnerable accused people to essentially waive their due process rights).

I don't disagree that there are huge problems with how enforcement is currently happening. My point is that we've had those problems for a long time and the current situation is just pushing things to the breaking point along the same axis.

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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
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>You have cases where people were living in the US illegally for decades but faced no repercussions, and now people are upset because they were suddenly detained and/or deported

I believe the concern is the cases where the person had a temporary stay.

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Larrikin
8 hours ago
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Do you believe there should be criminal prosecution for state and local government officials currently refusing to to work with ICE in its current form in the Trump administration?
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BrenBarn
3 hours ago
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In a sense, yes. I lean more and more toward the idea that we're not going to get out of this mess without "hitting rock bottom", so to speak. That means we have to somehow confront people with the reality of the laws we actually have, not the imaginary ones we've convinced ourselves we have. If we had those kinds of criminal prosecutions we might get riots in the streets and revolutions that would result in changes to the laws. Moreover, if we had had those kinds of criminal prosecutions in the past (e.g., George Wallace), we might have been able to fix things with less pain than will be required now.
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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
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What crime is that?
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Larrikin
7 hours ago
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Whatever he imagines it to be with this statement

> We need to fix the laws at all levels, including criminalizing enforcement actions that are contrary to the law.

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awesome_dude
11 hours ago
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> But it has to be done if we want to return to a system grounded in the actual rule of law and not the rule of law enforcement.

This is never going to happen - politics aside of what you might or might not believe about the current situation.

It's about as likely to happen as every religious individual on the planet obeying every rule in their sacred book.

The reason that they don't happen is because peoples' ideas on what is acceptable and isn't in a society changes, sometimes quite rapidly - note that the current US Administration was (attempting) to use a statute from the 1700s, are you obeying all the laws (that haven't yet been repealed) from then?

edit: An obvious example is the fact that the USA exists - it's on land that was acquired via theft, and murder. Therefore every person living on that land is receiving stolen property - let me know when that law is being enforced.

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aiauthoritydev
12 hours ago
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Chances of that happening are zero right now.
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mikeyouse
12 hours ago
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I fully believe there's a stack of pardons in Trump's drawer for everyone involved in this debacle. I can't imagine breaking so many laws all over the government if you thought you'd ever have to face consequences. The alternative to pardons in preventing the next congress & administration from cleaning this up is too dire to really contemplate.
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satanfirst
12 hours ago
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They are betting the system won't go after them later which is a very bad bet if they eventually give back the executive branch and an even worse bet if the power they support never gives it back. About as brilliant as being in a photo with Stalin.
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geraldwhen
12 hours ago
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Trump can wait until the last day in office then issue pardons for any possible crimes, right? Biden did something similar I believe
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Aloisius
11 hours ago
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Can't pardon state crimes nor cases of impeachment.

Arguably, if you impeach someone in public office, even if they aren't convicted by the Senate, any pardon of those same acts becomes moot and they can be tried in court for the same offenses. At least, that's what the DoJ suggested in 2000.

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9283409232
8 hours ago
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This Congress won't impeach Trump. If they were willing to, they would've already.
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Aloisius
8 hours ago
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This Congress probably won't, but the next one might.
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jmcgough
7 hours ago
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They could impeach again, but senate will refuse to convict. If Jan 6 didn't motivate them to stop this, nothing will.
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9283409232
8 hours ago
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Most of the seats up for reelection in 2026 are Dem seats. North Carolina is the only one I can realistically see Dems flipping.
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Aloisius
7 hours ago
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The entire House is up for reelection. They are who impeach. The Senate is who convicts.
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9283409232
7 hours ago
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Without a conviction, impeachment is just performative at this point.
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magicalist
12 hours ago
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> Trump can wait until the last day in office then issue pardons for any possible crimes, right?

Is your mental model of the pardon process actually confused? Yes, the president can unilaterally issue pardons, and Donald Trump is president until the end of his term, so he can issue pardons on his last day in office.

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pests
12 hours ago
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Is the hostility really required?

The comment was about last-day pardons, not pardons in general. Its a topic many presidents have gotten flak or attention for.

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magicalist
11 hours ago
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What hostility? I was asking if they were really confused or if they were asking rhetorically. If they were actually confused, the answer is yes.

edit: oh, I guess "and Donald Trump is president until the end of his term" could come off as patronizing. I meant it just as a statement in a chain of reasoning

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satanfirst
11 hours ago
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Recent untested precedent exists of blanket pardons needed for unqualified crimes and they are so far likely to be challenged on a different technicality (first?).. Asking what people think is not confused unless you are being uncharitable or know a lot of actual precedents that we all should know from another era.
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geraldwhen
10 hours ago
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I am fully unaware of any challenges to recent pardons. I don’t follow politics much and just knew about the blanket pardon that I assume all presidents will use going forward unless it’s challenged in court.
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dboreham
12 hours ago
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Time to remove the pardon powder. Has it achieved anything productive in the last 100 years?
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nativeit
12 hours ago
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I think it's been used properly in a lot of instances, especially when you consider that federal law can quickly become out-of-step with modern sensibilities, so being able to relieve those harmed by laws flawed under contemporary standards is important. There's probably a better way of handling that, but it's one instance where the power of presidential and governors' pardons have been applied appropriately.
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BrenBarn
11 hours ago
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> I think it's been used properly in a lot of instances, especially when you consider that federal law can quickly become out-of-step with modern sensibilities, so being able to relieve those harmed by laws flawed under contemporary standards is important.

No, that is exactly what we don't need. When law becomes out of step with modern sensibilities, the law needs to be changed. Precisely the problem we currently have is that we have become too accustomed to dealing with a sort of "shadow law" system where the way things actually work is not the way they're supposed to work according to the law. That is a recipe for confusion, bias, favoritism, and inequity. What we need is a system of laws that actually lets the people fix things when they are broken instead of patching around them. (This is, in my view, a byproduct of other aspects of our legal system, in particular the grossly over-restrictive process for amending the constitution.)

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nativeit
11 hours ago
[-]
That's not really what I meant. Just because a law is repealed or changed, doesn't mean the people who were sentenced to prison because of its original form will receive revised sentences.
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BrenBarn
4 hours ago
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You can revise their sentences with law as well.
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tcmart14
11 hours ago
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At the very least, it seems obvious there should be an asterick on the pardon power of, "you can't use it to pardon your employees/staff." Or pardon people for things they did under your direction/purview.
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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
[-]
Are you referring to cases where the person already served their time or are long dead?

Like a pardon for someone convicted of being gay in the early 20th century?

These are symbolic and provide no practical relief. Losing this to stop all pardons would be worth it to me

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sterlind
12 hours ago
[-]
it's written into the Constitution very explicitly. and it's a really bad time to hold a Constitutional Convention.
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derektank
10 hours ago
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I'm not actually convinced that now would be a terrible time to hold a constitutional convention. Yes, it would be messy, but the nature of the ratification requirements (3/4 of all states) means that nothing could make it through without essentially unanimous consent of the country as a whole.
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cgriswald
9 hours ago
[-]
While we are at it we can add ranked voting and a vote of no confidence (maybe initiated by congress and voted on by the states or people).
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romellem
11 hours ago
[-]
To remove the presidential pardon power, you'd need to [amend the Constitution][1]. Getting [two thirds of both Houses of Congress][2] to pass any amendment in the foreseeable future seems highly unlikely if not downright inconceivable.

[1]: https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artII-S2-C1-3...

[2]: https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/artV-1/ALDE_0...

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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
[-]
Why?

It doesn't affect the power of congress so why would they care?

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Reason077
12 hours ago
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It's a bizarre and archaic power, which has been abused by presidents from both parties.
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xorcist
11 hours ago
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It's also clearly incompatible with most (all?) modern definitions of democracy.
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woodruffw
12 hours ago
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9283409232
8 hours ago
[-]
You forget who the president is. They will get away with all of this and everything else. Doesn't mean we shouldn't try but lets be realistic here.
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root_axis
11 hours ago
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Not really possible since they would be pardoned even if anyone was ever willing to prosecute them.
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pyinstallwoes
10 hours ago
[-]
Writing ai slop? Thanks !
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the_optimist
12 hours ago
[-]
Explain please.
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MOARDONGZPLZ
12 hours ago
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The complaint alleges that DOGE was able to get unlimited-permissions admin accounts that were not subject to logging. They also downloaded external repositories that gave users of those repos lots of different IPs. The complaint further alleges that the DOGE person used the combination of these things to "download... more than 10 gigabytes of data from the agency’s case files, a database that includes reams of sensitive records including information about employees who want to form unions and proprietary business documents."

If this is all true, this is basically hacking sensitive data in the open. We already know the current administration has worked to hobble unions. So putting these things together, this act is not only wrong in and of itself, but the data is likely going to be used to harm americans' interests. So, deserving of punishment.

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alabastervlog
12 hours ago
[-]
And they fucking illegally fired the IGs who are supposed to act as watchdogs for and light-shiners-on-of blatantly-illegal activity like this in the executive. The ones we added after Nixon's crimes. It was one of the first actions of the administration, blanket firing without actual cause, which is supposed to be required, and without the required notice-period to Congress.

That should have exhausted any benefit of the doubt right off the bat, even among those inclined to think Trump's maybe not great but also some ordinary amount of bad for a politician. You don't do that unless you fully intend to do some crimes. Not only that, they were so goddamn eager to crime that they couldn't wait the 30 days or whatever. They intended to do criminal shit immediately.

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EvanAnderson
11 hours ago
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I wish the firings of the IGs was something that "Joe Sixpack" understood. Honestly, even that the IGs exist(ed).

(It wouldn't change the opinions of anybody who matters, I suppose.)

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mingus88
12 hours ago
[-]
If you take a step back and realize that the intent is to utterly destroy the social safety net provided by social security, Medicare, etc that we have all been paying into our entire adult lives, tell me why every citizen affected should not pursue civil and criminal charges of theft and fraud with malicious intent?

And then the means to do so have involved ignoring the courts and bypassing constitutional checks and balances? Please tell me how this isn’t criminal if not treasonous?

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cap1434
11 hours ago
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Not only did you not explain the original comment, you added more assertions that are significantly more extraordinary without explaining your reasoning for those either.
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Cthulhu_
12 hours ago
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Sensitive government data was (sure, allegedly) extracted to Russia via an account that was expressly created to hide / not create logs. This is treason. Allegedly.
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goatlover
12 hours ago
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This administration is doing a lot of things that are borderline treasonous. Hopefully they get prosecuted when they get voted out or ideally get removed form power.
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alabastervlog
12 hours ago
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Trump will blanket-pardon anyone who's still on his good side. And maybe some who aren't, just to limit the reach of investigations. And Trump himself's untouchable—while it remains technically possible to criminally prosecute a President for actions in office, it's in-practice impossible short of some unlikely hypothetical scenarios, thanks to the Supreme Court (the Roberts court loves leaving things technically intact, but actually not)
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dmbche
12 hours ago
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malfist
12 hours ago
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If I told you someone went to your bank and demanded the right to setup accounts with permissions to do everything and to have all logging of that users activity disabled, and then a whistleblower pointed out that they downloaded everyone's bank statements, you'd probably be pretty up set.

After all, why do they need unfettered access? Why do they need your bank statements? Why do they need to hide what they're doing with the unfettered access?

That's what's happening here. There is no good explanation other than bad actors

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skissane
9 hours ago
[-]
The problem with prosecuting them – they are employees of a White House office, doing what their bosses told them to do, and it is clear their bosses are carrying out the President's wishes.

If Joe Blow off the street walks into a federal agency and takes all their data – open and shut case, throw the book at them, see you in a few decades.

If someone from the White House walks into a federal agency, tells the agency leadership "the President wants me to take all your data", and the agency leadership replies "sure, go right ahead" – not a scenario people were expecting, so the existing laws haven't been crafted to clearly criminalize it. Maybe some enterprising prosecutor can find a way to map it to the crimes on the statute book, maybe it is just too hard. But even if the prosecutor overcomes that hurdle, it will be far from easy to convince the jury / trial judge / appellate courts that the legal elements of the crime are actually met – and if it actually gets as far as a conviction upheld by the appellate court, what do you think the conservative SCOTUS majority are going to do with that when they get it? And many prosecutors, foreseeing those low odds of ultimate success, will stop before they even get to an indictment.

So, I think the odds of anyone ultimately being convicted over this are low, even if Trump never pardons them.

Maybe, Congress might pass a law to make it more clearly illegal, which might make it easier to prosecute if a future administration repeats the same behavior.

EDIT: if people are downvoting this because they think my analysis of the likelihood of successful criminal prosecution is wrong, it would be great if they could reply to explain where they think I got it wrong

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j_w
9 hours ago
[-]
The claim that because your boss tells you to do something illegal means that you should just do it is bullshit. It's your social responsibility to not capitulate under these circumstances.

If you don't feel that way then you deserve the world you are creating.

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skissane
9 hours ago
[-]
The problem is a lot of relevant criminal laws contain this word “unauthorized”. If you have access to a computer system, and it is authorized by the people who own the system, it isn’t a crime. These people will say that whatever they did/bypassed was (1) authorized by the President (of course if you ask Trump if he authorized them to do whatever he’ll say “yes”); (2) authorized by the senior agency leadership (because Trump has made clear that if they refuse to authorize it they’ll be fired).

So, how do you prosecute them for accessing a computer system (or data or whatever) without authorization when both the President and the senior agency leadership say they authorized it?

Well, you can’t-unless you want to argue that the President / agency leadership’s authorization is illegal and hence illegally invalid, ultra vires. But even supposing you are right about that in the abstract, will you be able to convince a judge and jury of it? And even supposing you convince a jury, trial judge and appellate court, there’s a dozen different ways SCOTUS could overturn it (from narrow questions of statutory construction to sweeping rulings about the President’s inherent constitutional power to demand information from the executive branch), and I think the main question for the current SCOTUS majority will be which of those ways they choose.

My impression is that a lot of people are mixing up what they think the law ought to be, with what it actually is. Just because something ought to be a crime doesn’t mean it actually is one - and that’s especially going to be the case with unprecedented situations, it is hard to make something a crime if nobody foresaw it would one day happen.

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cmurf
4 hours ago
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All public servants take the oath found in 5 USC 3331. The oath is to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. Not a person.
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skissane
4 hours ago
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That's not a counterargument to my position that successful criminal prosecution is unlikely.

If you are going to charge them with a crime, which one? CFAA?

How then to prove that access is unauthorized under the CFAA given evidence that both the President and senior agency leadership authorized it? Trying to claim that those authorizations are legally invalid gets into rather murky areas of law, and is (AFAIK) without precedent. Can you point to any previous cases of a successful CFAA prosecution where the access was authorized by a senior federal official but that authorization was declared legally void?

How do you get past the fact that the law is ultimately whatever SCOTUS says it is, and it seems more likely than not that the majority of current SCOTUS will want to say that this specific situation isn't a crime?

I feel like people are rejecting my position because they don't like it or don't want it to be true. Of course, maybe I'm wrong – maybe Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanagh, Barrett and Roberts are all secretly dreaming of sending Musk and his minions to federal prison; or maybe they'll dispassionately follow their own judicial philosophies to the logical conclusion that doing so (using CFAA or whatever) is statutorily and constitutionally required - but that doesn't seem very likely to me, given their track records. Do you really think I'm wrong about that?

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declan_roberts
10 hours ago
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People voted for this
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happyopossum
12 hours ago
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You’d have to prove a crime here to send someone to jail, correct? What would the charges be?
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9dev
12 hours ago
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Without knowing the specifics of US law, there’s a lot in there for a reasonable case. Improper handling of sensitive data, interfering with ongoing legal proceedings, abuse of telecommunications infrastructure (looks like the guy runs a brute forcing crawler on a government system) and probably even more.
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ceejayoz
11 hours ago
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El Salvador seems very willing to take people off our hands for mere allegations.
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MattDaEskimo
12 hours ago
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Untraceable and complete access to government databases. I can't begin to imagine the implications here.
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xorcist
11 hours ago
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We only hear about the cases where a someone is taking the risk of blowing the whistle, and actually manages to get the story out. Hopefully with enough substance for people to take the information seriously. How many cases that are likely to reach public knowledge is left as an exercise to the reader, as the saying goes.
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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
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>How many cases that are likely to reach public knowledge is left as an exercise to the reader, as the saying goes.

Is this some reminder to people that bad things occur that aren't found out.

Considering how everyone is aware of this is your comment some sort of clusterbomb whataboutism?

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tootie
8 hours ago
[-]
Direct access to private data relating to accusations against companies Musk owns.
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munchler
12 hours ago
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So what exactly is being alleged here? That these DOGE bros wrote and used “hacker” code from GitHub to bypass security limitations on NLRB data? Why would they even need to do that if they had superuser accounts in the system already?
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woodruffw
12 hours ago
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I think the point of the article is that the whistleblower's original claims can be substantiated publicly. It's another datapoint indicating that the DOGE people are operating haphazardly at the absolute best and, more likely, attempting to obscure their tracks because they know that what they're doing wouldn't pass legal muster.
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pkilgore
12 hours ago
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DOGE downloaded libraries to assist in data exfiltration, and did exfiltrate data (obtained via the superuser accounts).

Suggest reading the complaint: https://whistlebloweraid.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2025...

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superconduct123
10 hours ago
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The lede is buried but the implication is downloading a huge amount of data on union organizers, which can then be given to a company to pre-emptively fire those individuals
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weaksauce
12 hours ago
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they added a backdoor that is not audit logged. that's why.
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timewizard
12 hours ago
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The article is written very poorly. The disclosure itself is far more readable.

https://whistlebloweraid.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2025...

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underyx
12 hours ago
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Also this PDF contains a detail I haven't seen reported elsewhere:

> Furthermore, on Monday, April 7, 2025, while my client and my team were preparing this disclosure, someone physically taped a threatening note to Mr. Berulis’ home door with photographs – taken via a drone – of him walking in his neighborhood. The threatening note made clear reference to this very disclosure he was preparing for you

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llm_nerd
11 hours ago
[-]
It's an interesting detail because if true -- and I fully assume it is -- the intention likely wasn't to dissuade him from going public, but instead to make him look like a conspiratorial nut. When I first saw this story and heard that "drone shot of him / threatening note" I admit that I immediately assumed it was a flake, but on further details I think that was actually the reason for doing that.
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munchler
12 hours ago
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Thanks. So the tools downloaded from GitHub were allegedly used to scrape personally-identifiable information (PII), details about ongoing legal cases, union-related data, and corporate secrets. The whistleblower observed large spikes in outbound data traffic, suggesting that gigabytes of sensitive information were exfiltrated with logging disabled, so as not to leave a trail.
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uxp100
12 hours ago
[-]
Yes, this is much more clear than the article.
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Sparyjerry
8 hours ago
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To everyone saying 'where are the arrests?' This is all conjecture at this point and time will tell what was click bait and truth. Below is the statement from NLRB's acting press secretary.

"Tim Bearese, the NLRB's acting press secretary, denied that the agency granted DOGE access to its systems and said DOGE had not requested access to the agency's systems. Bearese said the agency conducted an investigation after Berulis raised his concerns but "determined that no breach of agency systems occurred."

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355895/doge-musk-nlrb-...

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jmcgough
7 hours ago
[-]
People should not need to be conjecturing. The federal government should have clear documented reasons for the things that it does. It should have oversight, but all of the oversight has been fired, every department headed by yesmen and fox news anchors. We are all left guessing because they are doing loads of things that seem either treasonous or performed with very little thought to the consequences.
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porphyra
12 hours ago
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Isn't the ip rotator used to scrape from public websites to bypass rate limits? Not sure how that automatically means they are "siphoning sensitive case files".
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borski
9 hours ago
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It doesn’t. Coupled with the whistleblower complaint, however, it is evidence.
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tootie
8 hours ago
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The IP rotator was discovered in the analysis. The exfiltration of data was discovered by an NLRB employee and triggered the complaint. A member of their staff saw the spike in egress, found the source and that the audit log had been bleached.
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growdark
12 hours ago
[-]
>Ge0rg3’s code is “open source,” in that anyone can copy it and reuse it non-commercially.

A little nit-picking, but that's not what open source means, especially as it relates to the GPL in this case. If you can't use the code commercially, it's neither "open source" (as defined by OSI) nor free software (as defined by the FSF).

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nativeit
12 hours ago
[-]
Right, but the original statement isn't being mutually exclusive.
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neilv
10 hours ago
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> Berulis said he went public after higher-ups at the agency told him not to report the matter to the US-CERT, as they’d previously agreed.

If the allegation is true, what would be the motivation of the higher-ups to keep this secret from US-CERT?

It appears to be a severe compromise, and the context suggests that much of the rest of the federal government is imminently vulnerable to the same tactics by the same threat actor.

Where the higher-ups reporting the security crisis through better channels?

Or were they trying to keep it quiet entirely, so might be complicit in something bad?

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dkrich
2 hours ago
[-]
Or they’re just fearful of retaliation/termination for making waves with this administration
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jmward01
9 hours ago
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So the real question is, who do you actually report this too if the fox is guarding the hen house? The only place that makes any sense is congressional oversight in some way but that will go nowhere except maybe a quick NPR story.
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Havoc
10 hours ago
[-]
>The new accounts also could restrict log visibility, delay retention, route

Guessing those are the same accounts that got accessed by Russian IPs?

Genuinely wondering whether the US democracy is going to make it to December.

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blendergeek
10 hours ago
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> Ge0rg3’s code is “open source,” in that anyone can copy it and reuse it non-commercially.

That isn't what "open source" means.

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DaSHacka
6 hours ago
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Unfortunately about what you should come to expect from Brian Krebs.
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breadwinner
7 hours ago
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Musk has installed Starlink terminals on the whitehouse rooftop, to bypass security:

https://www.wired.com/story/white-house-starlink-wifi/

"The ad hoc addition to the otherwise tightly controlled White House information environment could create blind spots and security exposures while setting potentially dangerous precedent."

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donnachangstein
7 hours ago
[-]
> Musk has installed Starlink terminals on the whitehouse rooftop, to bypass security

This is confirmation bias and absolutely unsubstantiated nonsense. Hedging your bets on hyperbolic dreck like this is why people don't take the serious stuff seriously.

Do you think cellphone hotspots - that everyone has in their pocket - are also part of some grand conspiracy?

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breadwinner
7 hours ago
[-]
Right. But then it is part of a pattern:

See: https://infosec.exchange/@briankrebs/114083485241630234

Excerpt: "How much more proof do we need that this administration is completely compromised? There is zero reason for the US to relax any offensive digital actions against Russia. If anything, we should be applying more."

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Braxton1980
7 hours ago
[-]
Good point, why install another internet connection (starlink) when you can easily use celluar data if you wanted to avoid White House network security?

Very weird

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ChrisMarshallNY
12 hours ago
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What sucks is, is that Russia and China now, almost certainly, have all this data, but they don't worry me, as much as the American oligarchs that now have it.
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kazinator
12 hours ago
[-]
I almost can't make heads or tails of out of this scatterbrained word salad.

Let's start with this:

> Berulis said the new DOGE accounts had unrestricted permission to read, copy, and alter information contained in NLRB databases.

> Berulis said he discovered one of the DOGE accounts had downloaded three external code libraries from GitHub

What exactly does that mean? NLRB database accounts are GitHub accounts? (Surely not.) Or the same IP address accessed both, suggesting it was the same person? Define "account".

No coherent point being made here. This story needs to clearly separate the rhetoric about GitHub repositories from the NLRB access, and connect them together coherently.

The flow seems to be:

1. Some DOGE people obtained unbridled access to NLRB, with the ability to erase audit trails.

2. There is some sort of evidence that the same people downloaded tools from GitHub for distributed web scraping, suggesting intent to scrape massive amounts of data from somewhere (inferred to be the NLRB database).

There is no evidence cited in the article for the actual downloading of gigabytes of data; the "whistleblower" is quoted only as saying that DOGE required certain privileged accounts to be created and that the users of the accounts supposedly downloaded some web scraping software from GitHub.

At least mention some circumstantial evidence, like a suspicious increase in access activity, coming from distributed IP addresses in the Amazon cloud, following the download of those tools.

This:

> On February 6, someone posted a lengthy and detailed critique of Elez’s code on the GitHub “issues” page for async-ip-rotator, calling it “insecure, unscalable and a fundamental engineering failure.”

seems neither here nor there; why include that. It may be that the tools DOGE are using are not adequately safeguarding the data, but it seems like an extraneous point, and undigestable without specifics.

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dehrmann
11 hours ago
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The only interesting part of 2 is it looks like Doge wanted all the data. The technical details of how they scraped it mostly doesn't matter.
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kazinator
9 hours ago
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Plus in the whistleblower's actual report, there is evidence of them getting it, like logs of network output far above previous levels, and those accounts making accesses from various IP addresses (including geo-blocked attempts from Russia).
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xyst
11 hours ago
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The government dogs are literally script kiddies, go figure.
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jiggawatts
12 hours ago
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This is much ado about nothing. The article tries to very hard to make something ordinary sound nefarious.

This appears to be DOGE employees simply doing their job.

You may not agree with what they’re doing in a political sense, but if you were tasked with the same problem you’d come up with a nearly identical solution.

For example: “tenant admin” is probably the special role that can bypass access control (not audits!) and see and read all data.

This sounds scary but I regularly request this right from large government departments and I get it granted to me.

Its use is justified when normal access requests would be too complex / fiddly and error prone. Generally, in a large environment, there is no other way to guarantee 100% coverage because as an outsider you don’t even know what permissions to ask for if you can’t see anything due to a lack of permissions!

Seriously: sit down for a second and think about how you would go about getting access to make a full copy of an organisation’s data for an audit if you fully expect both passive resistance and even active efforts to hide the very things you’re looking for.

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Delk
11 hours ago
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The original complaint mentions:

"7. March 3rd - I received a call during which an ACIO stated instructions were given that we were not to adhere to SOP with the doge account creation in regards to creating records. He specifically was told that there were to be no logs or records made of the accounts created for DOGE employees."

Which part of doing an audit, or some other DOGE employee's job, requires logs or records not to be made of their accounts?

Another quote:

"They were to be given what are referred to as “tenant owner” level accounts, with essentially unrestricted permission to read, copy, and alter data. Note, these permissions are above even my CIO’s access level to our systems. Well above what level of access is required to pull metrics, efficiency reports, and any other details that would be needed to assess utilization or usage of systems in our agency. We have built in roles that auditors can use and have used extensively in the past but would not give the ability to make changes or access subsystems without approval. The suggestion that they use these accounts instead was not open to discussion."

Audits don't require being able to alter data.

Also, some of the data is mentioned as being sensitive. Although granting access to the data of another agency may make sense, I have trouble believing that direct access to data such as sensitive personal information of third parties would routinely be given to people from outside of the organization. Even within the organization the group of people given access to sensitive data should be as limited as possible.

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xorcist
11 hours ago
[-]
I have taken part in audits for several organizations over the years, and I can assure you that's not how audits are done at all.

In fact, should the auditor find there is a way for them to access sensitive data without it being logged, they will flag it immediately. That would be the case even under simple financial regulation.

There is absolutely the risk that the people you audit will lie to you or present you with false data. In practice that's not common, because they stand to at the very least lose their jobs. It could also be illegal. Not worth it.

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jiggawatts
7 hours ago
[-]
A normal audit, sure. This isn’t that. This is the prison guards flipping the mattress looking for contraband.

All of the public complaining is by staff that don’t understand their new position in the pecking order.

There is a King in charge and he cares not for the wailing of the petty nobles.

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watwut
1 hour ago
[-]
>This is the prison guards flipping the mattress looking for contraband.

No its not. These prison searches in fact do tend to find knives and what not and do in fact have some role in managing prison violence.

This is not about anything like that at all.

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jiggawatts
35 minutes ago
[-]
It’s an analogy about established civilised audit procedure versus whatever DOGE is doing, which is… not that.

It’s not about literal shivs.

Speaking of finding things under the mattress, they did find corruption and waste, which they feel justifies their approach.

In my opinion the tiny amount of “waste” they uncovered is arguably not worth the damage and risk done, but that’s my opinion, not theirs.

Again: the damage and humiliation is part of their agenda. They feel that departments are “disloyal” to the King… err… President and hence ill treatment is not only justified but warranted.

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xorcist
16 minutes ago
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To what extent has those findings been verified? I know the was a lot of noise about things that turned out to be mostly imaginary.
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shakna
11 hours ago
[-]
> Furthermore, on Monday, April 7, 2025, while my client and my team were preparing this disclosure, someone physically taped a threatening note to Mr. Berulis’ home door with photographs – taken via a drone – of him walking in his neighborhood. The threatening note made clear reference to this very disclosure he was preparing for you
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frumplestlatz
11 hours ago
[-]
It would be astonishingly stupid to threaten a whistleblower in such an amateurish manner when you’re backed by the party in power and have the full and official apparatus of the state at your disposal.
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bdangubic
11 hours ago
[-]
astonishingly stupid sounds about right for the people leading apparatus of the state :)
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frumplestlatz
11 hours ago
[-]
What could they possibly hope to accomplish with a threatening note and drone photos other than to provide fodder for his complaint?

Why would drone photos even be necessary when you’ve already demonstrated that you know where they live?

What possible purpose does such a threat serve?

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bdangubic
10 hours ago
[-]
not sure if this is a serious question…? what would it accomplish if you were the whistleblower? if it was me, my family would be on the first flight out of the country
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frumplestlatz
10 hours ago
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It would convince me that whoever I was whistleblowing on was so remarkably stupid as to engage in a felonious criminal conspiracy while leaving behind physical evidence thereof.

I hope that the threatening note and photos have been turned over to the police, where they can be analyzed for fingerprints, printer microdots, et al, and the police can canvas the neighborhood for security camera footage.

As a tactical move, this kind of threat makes zero sense for anyone in the government to carry out if they are even a semi-rational actor.

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shakna
4 hours ago
[-]
That assumes that legal repercussions are expected. The current administration behaves as if laws are only to be followed in case of failure, and only temporarily.

They refer to "lawfare", where you do whatever you feel necessary, and only engage in legal systems where absolutely required, and only to make whatever inciting behaviour legal in retrospect.

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bdangubic
10 hours ago
[-]
our HIGHEST-level government people are texting each other (along with whoever else happens to be in their contacts) war plans so you know, stupid is as stupid does :)
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bronson
11 hours ago
[-]
To intimidate. To scare into silence.
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frumplestlatz
10 hours ago
[-]
Except that all you’d be doing is creating a trail of physical evidence demonstrating a felony conspiracy — and a frankly stupid one at that.
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bronson
9 hours ago
[-]
From recent news it seems unlikely these guys are interested in behaving rationally.
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frumplestlatz
8 hours ago
[-]
It just doesn’t pass the smell test.

- Who decided to threaten the whistleblower and why?

- Who approved such an idiotic idea?

- Who determined his home address?

- Who flew the drone, timed to capture photos of the whistleblower while on his way to/from his home?

- Who took the drone photography, printed out the images, and wrote a threatening note?

- Who then took all that and physically posted it on his door?

That’s a very involved process, with substantial risk, with no realistic upside. None of the incentives are aligned with the behavior. It simply doesn’t make sense.

Applying Occam’s razor, it seems a lot more likely to be fabricated — that’s a scenario in which incentives actually align with the behavior.

In practice, that shouldn’t make a difference to the investigation; given the physical evidence, they should investigate in great detail the origin of the threat — regardless of whether it’s a hoax or real.

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Maxious
5 hours ago
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You don't think Big Balls can order a drone on amazon? He was already fired once for intimidating rival companies online https://newrepublic.com/post/191325/elon-musk-doge-teen-cori...
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frumplestlatz
4 hours ago
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I'm not sure what you're referring to; that article says he leaked internal information to a competitor.

That's not ethically excusable, but it's worlds apart from the kind of very real-world felonies involved in this kind of intimidation.

This kind of intimidation would be an incredible and extremely stupid escalation that carries the potential for decades in federal prison, and for what? DOGE has the ruling party and the full force of the executive branch backing their actions. They have no need whatsoever to engage in behavior so ridiculous and counterproductive.

To be clear, this would have required stalking the whistleblower at and around his home, in person. It would have required creating significant physical evidence that could trivially lead back to the perpetrator. There will be cell phone location records, security camera footage, printer microdots, camera lens/sensor fingerprints.

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dekhn
11 hours ago
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I don't believe your statement that you ask for, and successfully receive, tenant admin rights from large government departments.

DOGE employees aren't simply doing their job. They are actively subverting the government to fatally wound it.

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apical_dendrite
12 hours ago
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Do you also delete logs, fire the cybersecurity team, and stonewall breach investigations?

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355896/doge-nlrb-elon-...

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watwut
12 hours ago
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In that case, you and departments you work for are either breaking the law regularly or working with public data anyway.

Besides, no one needs unmonitored write access for audit. Even less DOGE who does no audit and don't have knowledge how to do audit. Audits are supposed to he traceable.

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jiggawatts
7 hours ago
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No one needs write access, but most systems only have a read/write predefined role for tenant-wide access. If you don’t trust the department staff to give you anything but a predefined role, it’s typically the only option. Similarly if you need to fire privileged IT staff on the spot for headcount reduction you need admin-equivalent rights to lock them out. You can’t in general trust disgruntled admins to lock themselves out!

Also, in some cloud systems full read access can give you direct or indirect access to service keys / API keys which then are write equivalent permissions anyway.

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watwut
3 hours ago
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> If you don’t trust the department staff

I find the argument the most absurd in relation to DOGE. There is no reason to give them more trust then to anyone else in goverment ... and multiple reasons to trust them less. Starting from personal histories of some of them and how they were selected.

As such, this "I dont trust" is just reflection of their incompetence, arrogance and a lazy excuse.

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fzeroracer
9 hours ago
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> This sounds scary but I regularly request this right from large government departments and I get it granted to me.

Prove it. I want you to give examples of where you did something like this.

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jiggawatts
7 hours ago
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It’s not publicly provable for many obvious reasons such as the delegation being time bound.
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fzeroracer
6 hours ago
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Anything is publicly provable. And I think you can publicly prove it too. As another poster put it, if that's how you've dealt with systems before then either you were working with publicly available data or you were party to a crime.
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rob_c
12 hours ago
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Omg they also saw spikes in DNS traffic and high load during days exfiltration ahead of audit...

Clearly the (system) auditing infrastructure wasn't robust enough to still provide a lot of monitoring even in the service is being managed by someone else...

Also a several hundred line teardown of a 300line file is exactly what is wrong with some coders. Not having a CI/CL for every single short tool written once to do a job is called being productive...

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dboreham
12 hours ago
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Absolute balderdash.
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cyberjerkXX
4 hours ago
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Hello, I work in incident response and cyber forensics within the private sector and as a government contractor. I'm familiar with the government contracting company that currently holds the SOCaaS contract with the NLRB - it's MindPoint Group. They share the a SOC with the DOJ. I reviewed the whistleblower’s evidence, and I have significant doubts about his claims.

Firstly, anyone claiming that "the whole government is compromised" is being conspiratorial. Breaches of this nature are reportable to CISA (US-CERT), the DOJ, local law enforcement, and the FBI. The NLRB has its own cybersecurity incident response team, which includes legal counsel. If both the NLRB and US-CERT determined that this wasn’t a reportable incident then I trust their judgment.

Secondly, I’ve seen a lot of speculative commentary about the Russian IP allegedly logging into the DOGE account. A simple OSINT investigation reveals that this IP has had a negative reputation for over a year, specifically flagged for credential stuffing and scanning activity. Credential stuffing is a common tactic when credentials have been leaked or breached, often showing up on platforms like intelx.io, DeHashed, or BreachForums.

It's also worth noting: no serious nation-state actor would use an IP with such a known bad reputation. Doing so would risk burning any operational investment they’ve made. Nation-state actors almost always use clean infrastructure or proxy chains to conceal their activity.

The timeline the whistleblower presents spans two months, yet I find his interpretation of the activity speculative without hard evidence—especially considering he admits he does not possess the actual logs. That’s a huge red flag.

Thirdly, I tried to find the whistle blower’s official title, and it’s usually hidden in the media. In his official report he states that he is a Dev Sec Ops engineer. He also claims that he lost access to privileges – but the emails in the screen shot seemed to be a zero-trust/principle of least privileges hardening effort. That’s not suspicious to me.

Fourth, the screenshots the whistleblower provided of the Azure environment appeared extremely sparse. While I don’t know the exact size of the NLRB’s infrastructure, unless it's unusually small, I would expect to see more resources. From what I reviewed, the Azure dashboards he used had no filters applied, which raises the question—why are there no other subscriptions, VMs, load balancers, WAFs, etc., visible?

Regarding the DLP policy alerts, he could have easily shown the associated data. Interestingly, the alerts were labeled “test,” which is significant—but he chose not to address or explain that. Omitting that context makes the evidence less compelling. He also leaves out basic critical Indicators of Compromise (IOCs) like src_ip, src_port, dest_ip, dest_port, bytes, and duration. I’m not expecting him to extract mutex and environment variables but showing the basics would be convincing enough consider all they would have been accessible to him from the dashboards he screenshots in the document.

Finally, his claim that the NLRB doesn’t have a SIEM is demonstrably false. The NLRB shares a SIEM with the DOJ, which is operated by MindPoint Group under a SOCaaS contract.

Here’s my general take on the situation: The whistleblower had only been with the organization for six months and served as a mid-level DevSecOps engineer—not a security analyst, incident responder, or SOC analyst. After DOGE was announced, the NLRB began implementing Zero Trust principles and the Principle of Least Privilege. This is typical hardening. As a result, his old admin access which was over provisioned and no longer necessary for his role—was revoked. He panicked. Still having access to some Azure tools, he could have used a test or dev environment (referencing the sparse number of resources in the screenshot but he claimed it to be prod with no filter), toggled a few settings, took screenshot, and constructed a narrative around it. He escalated it to the CEO, who initially listened. However, the incident response team conducted an investigation and found nothing substantiating his claims. NLRB and US-CERT determined it to not be reportable, or which indicates that if it was a security event it was not an incident.

As for the Russian IP, it may be real—but it’s clearly tied to credential stuffing activity, not a sophisticated threat actor. If it genuinely accessed a DOGE account, that would indicate a breach on the DOGE side or weak password hygiene. But again—as mentioned earlier—he doesn’t have the logs to back this up, and his reasons for that are unconvincing. #Doubt.

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dkrich
2 hours ago
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Can you explain why a GitHub repo for IP rotating and tied to a prominent DOGE member was downloaded and then deleted?
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pyinstallwoes
11 hours ago
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That page reads completely incoherently if you understand junior level programming mental models. This is a hit piece for non technical audience meant to conjure fud.
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bryancoxwell
10 hours ago
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It’s not at all about programming
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77pt77
12 hours ago
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> accounts created for DOGE at the NLRB downloaded three code repositories from GitHub

Why is anything of significance on github in the first place?

Edit: It's not. They just download python libraries to do "IP rotation" to circumvent rate limits.

On the actual complaint: (https://whistlebloweraid.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/2025...)

It seems that the data was stored in Azure which doesn't make it any better.

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teraflop
12 hours ago
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If you continue reading, that question is answered. The GitHub repositories don't belong to the NLRB (or to DOGE), they were generic tools that were used to exfiltrate data from the NLRB.
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77pt77
12 hours ago
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I noticed and wanted to delete the coment but you replying made it impossible.

They downloaded "IP rotation" python libraries to circumvent rate limits.

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Cthulhu_
12 hours ago
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What do you mean? It was "just" a tool to circumvent anti-scraping measures.
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icedchai
12 hours ago
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If they have full access to the systems, why are they scraping them externally?
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Izkata
11 hours ago
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This is the big question everyone here seems to be skipping over. It seems like they're using "database" in the colloquial sense and actually mean some sort of already public data that's just rate limited (for example https://www.nlrb.gov/advanced-search).

Then depending on the order of events, either scraping didn't work well enough and were given "unlimited" (not rate limited) access, or the accounts were actually denied so they fell back to scraping. Or perhaps these two things are just unrelated despite what the story is claiming.

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icedchai
10 hours ago
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Or maybe, even with access, they couldn't figure out how to query the actual database, so they resorted to scraping? Even with full "tenant" access, it could take some time to figure out where to look.
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dizhn
12 hours ago
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They are not. If I read the article right, they downloaded tools to use, mostly to do with anonymous web scraping.
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hashstring
12 hours ago
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Haha, and the Github repo is now offline. lol.
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af3d
8 hours ago
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Sorry, but the whole story just reads like a bad mystery novel; tales of Russian hackers, "suspicious" Github repos, somehow-nefarious (docker?) "containers", unspecified threats made (and I quote) in "meat space".

Also interesting to note that not only has Berulis' attorney lead multiple lawsuits against the Trump administration in the past, he was also an intern for both Chuck Schumer and Hillary Clinton. Now that obviously doesn't prove anything, but it could nonetheless be considered a strong indicator this all might be politically-motivated.

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brigandish
3 hours ago
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From the "critique"[0]:

> Upon learning of your resignation, following reports that you were linked to an account advocating to “normalize Indian hatred” and for a “eugenic immigration policy,” I can’t help but address the staggering hypocrisy of these views within the context of the IT industry.

> This field, including your own career, is built on the labor, innovation, and expertise of Indian engineers and developers. To hold such hateful beliefs about a group that forms the backbone of this industry isn’t just reprehensible—it’s a complete contradiction of the reality you benefit from every day.

> My original critique of your code addressed technical issues and provided solutions, but after learning about your expressed views, it’s clear that poor coding isn’t the root problem here. Your mindset is incompatible with the fundamental values of IT: collaboration, respect, and global interconnectedness.

> Someone who advocates for hate cannot build systems meant to serve diverse users, nor can they lead or contribute meaningfully to teams that rely on trust and mutual respect. I strongly suggest you reflect on the harm your beliefs cause—not just to others, but to your credibility and future in this profession.

It doesn't invalidate the same author's critique above it at all (the critique itself manages to do that) but how it ended up mentioned in Krebs' article is puzzling. It harkens back to the days when journalists would quote-mine random Twitter users' tweets as if it meant something. "Twitter user @john89674651684685 said…" Give me a break.

[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20250423135719/https://github.co...

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the_optimist
12 hours ago
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For those genuine actors here: this theoretical outrage assumes the premise of something immoral or illegal, and completely ignores the authority structure. This looks and smells like an info operation.
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polalavik
12 hours ago
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Just, as an exercise, list out 3 good reasons someone might want untraceable admin accounts then list 3 really bad reasons they might want that. If you manage to find 3 good reasons does the outcome of those those outweigh the risks of the potential bad reasons?
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rockemsockem
10 hours ago
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Good: 1. The account-level below that doesn't have access to certain stuff and just happened to have untraceable stuff 2. They just said "give me the highest level of access" and didn't investigate what that meant 3. Can't think of a good third atm

Bad: 1. They want to do nefarious things untraceably 2, 3. I think 1. covers pretty much everything.

Personally, if I'm put in charge of overhauling a system I don't want to waste my time waiting on approvals for BS, I just want to be given the highest level of access I can be given to get on with work.

I'm not saying this is fine, but the information here is basically a random list of things that happened and it doesn't really tell a nefarious story to my eyes.

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yibg
3 hours ago
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I honestly don't understand the defenses of these actions here. Forget about the nature of data we're talking about here. If I was an engineer working at say google, and I put in mechanisms to access a bunch of data and bypass both auth and audit, I'd get fired instantly.
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the_optimist
9 hours ago
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I appreciate the question. The most obvious is that this is an “audit the auditors” exercise, and they do not want to leak information toward a likely adversarial counterpart. If they have the authority to so, then they do. An adjacent complaint about “not following Treasury policy is similar.” If these systems exist, there is a governing authority structure, and that does not begin at the level contemplated in this document.
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ceo_tim_crook
12 hours ago
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the doge guys are truely living the script kiddie dream
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golemiprague
11 hours ago
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I don't see anything wrong with what they did, they basically got admin accounts so they can peak into the system and used some libraries from github. What is the problem here? Got a feeling it is just politically motivated, people are not happy that the Trump administration is actually doing something to make systems more efficient and stop money waste of tax payers. I am sure they will make some mistakes along the way and I am sure not every "saving" is actually saving but when you look at so many systems and so much money some errors are expected.
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hahajk
12 hours ago
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I have a theory that "business ethics" is really just "following the law." In capitalism, outside a few select industries like journalism, as long as it's legal you can - and should - do anything to maximize profits. It has turned into (or perhaps always was) the govt's job to set those rules.

Now, the govt also has to create rules for itself. So it creates the Privacy Act and layers of beurocratic checks and balances. These rules are to protect the people, not to derisk or protect the govt. After all, the govt has all the power.

So when capitalist businesses leaders are given the keys to govt, the normal ways of ethical alignment don't work. If you don't follow your own rules, who cares? They're your rules! I think what we're seeing is what happens if you apply traditional capitalist business practices to govt administration.

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wat10000
11 hours ago
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The trouble is that money is power, so the people who succeed the most at maximizing profit end up getting a lot of influence over the rules.

In some countries, this is done with outright bribery. Here, we do it with campaign contributions and lobbying and “we’ll create jobs in your district.”

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BriggyDwiggs42
12 hours ago
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Yeah actually. I think that’s about right.
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Clubber
12 hours ago
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>In capitalism, outside a few select industries like journalism, as long as it's legal you can - and should - do anything to maximize profits.

Honestly, if you were around watching the news 30+ years ago, you would notice a stark difference in how news is covered then versus today. You can't really blame them, they are doing what they can to survive, but coverage today much more tabloid than news.

I would say the "fake but accurate," was the death knell, but it might have been sooner.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killian_documents_controversy

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