ggm 4 months ago

THis felt pertinant. Especially noting the [flagged] status:

> Indeed, one consistent feedback I’ve heard from a subset of readers here is something to this effect: “I used to like reading your stuff more when you weren’t writing about politics all the time.”

> My response to that is: “Yeah, me too.” It’s not that I’m suddenly interested in writing about political matters; it’s that various actions by this administration keep intruding on my areas of coverage.

> A less charitable interpretation of that reader comment is that anyone still giving such feedback is either dangerously uninformed, being disingenuous, or just doesn’t want to keep being reminded that they’re on the side of the villains, despite all the evidence showing it.

I don't want to go full throttle on this, but I think the mostly neutral stance being taken historically over flagging and un-flagging is going to be a semi constant irritation now that there is active warfare to "capture the flag(ging)" going on. I suppose I could be told "always thus" but I do think there's a qualitative difference emerging to past practice.

The difference is, if you critique Musk/Doge you get flagged. It's almost robotic. It's strongly suggestive of a coded solution. I don't think we always had that.

duxup 4 months ago

>“Please provide a password protected attachment that provides your full name, your dates of employment (including date of termination), and one other identifying factor such as date of birth or social security number,” the message reads. “Please, to the extent that it is available, attach any termination notice.”

>The message didn’t specify how affected CISA employees should share the password for any attached files, so the implicit expectation is that employees should just include the plaintext password in their message.

I guess if you fire the guys who know how to use computers ... this is what happens.

The scale of incompetence with the Trump administration knows no end...

  • bamboozled 4 months ago

    Could The USA go down in history as the empire that voluntarily gave up it's dominance. Pretty fascinating.

    It's like if Rome had a referendum to just leave the world stage and the majority of voters said, "great idea".

    Nearly every other case in history seems to involve some type of military failure. I guess there is a chance that in the future, people might say the USA's information space was invaded and so it fell victim to propaganda. Time will tell.

    • jiggawatts 4 months ago

      The voters in both the Roman Empire and the United States are content with bread and circuses.

    • llm_nerd 4 months ago

      Trump in I believe last night's interview with Fox (guy seems to do these daily, repeating the same lies and nonsense night after night, so it's tough to know if it's new or not) complained that every other country had "raped and pillaged" the United States.

      Imagine being on top of the world, the richest large country on the planet, and declaring that really you're the victim. There is a fundamental blindness to realize that all of these things are not givens, and that things can get much, much, much worse.

      And they are going to get much worse. And Trump's approval rating will probably dip to 45%. The US has committed to the bit of being a modern idiocracy that just like the excitement of "oh boy, what hijinx is he going to do today???"

      • throw0101b 4 months ago

        > Imagine being on top of the world, the richest large country on the planet, and declaring that really you're the victim.

        An observation by Umberto Eco in his essay Ur-Fascism:

        > 8. The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies. When I was a boy I was taught to think of Englishmen as the five-meal people. They ate more frequently than the poor but sober Italians. Jews are rich and help each other through a secret web of mutual assistance. However, the followers must be convinced that they can overwhelm the enemies. Thus, by a continuous shifting of rhetorical focus, the enemies are at the same time too strong and too weak. Fascist governments are condemned to lose wars because they are constitutionally incapable of objectively evaluating the force of the enemy.

        * https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/umberto-eco-ur-fasci...

        * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ur-Fascism

        The possible 'validity' of the US being a victim would be NATO allies not spending want they promised, 2% of GDP. But folks like Vance are going after even Poland at times, who is spending more per GDP than even the US in recent years.

        • llm_nerd 4 months ago

          >The possible 'validity' of the US being a victim would be NATO allies not spending want they promised

          To entertain this, though, is there anyone that thinks that if every NATO member spent 2% (or 4%, or 10%) the US military budget would be smaller? Does anyone think this for a second?

          Trump hasn't even broached reducing the military budgets, despite effectively withdrawing from the world and becoming isolationist in policy. He has asked for cuts in some areas to allocate to his "own agenda", militarily, which should disturb people, but the military is a sacred cow. And of course there was the $2.9 trillion dollar adventure in Iraq. And the $2.3 trillion dollar adventure in Afghanistan. Wars that cost NATO lives and money, but ostensibly had nothing to do with NATO. And now that NATO sans US is arming up for a post-US world, the end result is going to be a massively less influential, effective, and thus rich United States.

          Trump keeps repeating his talking point that the US purportedly spends $200B a year "defending" Canada (a number so fantastically stupid that it should yield instant laughter by all), which is hysterical as the single military threat to Canada, it has been demonstrated, is the United States (this isn't new -- in the 1980s Canada blocked the UK from selling Canada nuclear submarines as it would allow the country to defend Northern sovereignty from the US). And FWIW, Canada could have had nuclear weapons in the 1940s, or any year since. And that is precisely what we should acquire -- as should Germany, Italy, Spain, Japan, Taiwan, Australia, etc -- and we can enjoy the Trump world of outrageous nuclear proliferation.

          • throw0101b 4 months ago

            > To entertain this, though, is there anyone that thinks that if every NATO member spent 2% (or 4%, or 10%) the US military budget would be smaller? Does anyone think this for a second?

            What's important is that countries promised to do so—and didn't. And this isn't a sudden thing: the agreement was reached in the NATO summit in Latvia in 2006.

            (Speaking as a Canadian.)

            • llm_nerd 4 months ago

              If we're being precise, Canada made no such promise. It was an aspirational target. The guidance, actually first agreed to in 2014, was that countries would move towards the 2% target. And Canada has indeed moved towards the 2% target, and with some very substantial capital purchases in the near future (icebreakers, subs, massive radar arrays, possibly fighter jets) it will certainly get there.

              But there was no promise that was broken.

              • throw0101b 4 months ago

                Even the Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO), which is a watchdog on federal spending, thinks that Ottawa promised to do that amount of spending:

                > In 2006, NATO member nations set a policy goal to allocate at least 2% of their GDP to annual defence spending. While some countries, most notably the United States, exceeded this target, the majority fell short. After eight years of limited progress, NATO members reaffirmed their commitment to this goal in 2014. Since this time, Canada has consistently remained below the 2% threshold, and as of 2024, it is one of only eight member nations still failing to meet the target, with projected defence expenditures totaling only 1.37% of GDP.

                * https://www.pbo-dpb.ca/en/publications/RP-2425-020-S--fiscal...

                2014 was simply was a repetition of what was said in 2006. But:

                > The alliance members accepted to continue to spend a minimum of two percent of individual national Gross Domestic Product on defence, or where a country is currently spending less than two percent, then to move towards spending two percent of Gross Domestic Product on defence within the next ten years.

                * https://www.canada.ca/en/department-national-defence/corpora...

                It's been ten years now, and Canada has not hit two percent even if you take 2014 as the starting point.

                (And I'm aware of all the procurement programs that have been announced.)

      • jmye 4 months ago

        > Imagine being on top of the world, the richest large country on the planet, and declaring that really you're the victim.

        This is their long term MO. Their voters are, largely, aggrieved white men, who have been told they’re the victims of women like, having jobs and making dating decisions. Their politicians are perpetual victims of “mean” or “nasty” opposition. Their policies will fix all your problems, that we’re all caused by the other team.

        Everything is grievance and made-up victimhood. 80m people absolutely eat it up.

      • bamboozled 4 months ago

        It's a self fulfilling prophecy isn't it?

        The USA will likely become a victim of it's own cruelty, stupid policies and nonsense and then his voter base will actually agree with him even more. They will truly feel like they were hard done by and lap up the BS even more. Which will be scary because it will reach biblical levels of worship if it already hasn't. Going to be wild.

  • BLKNSLVR 4 months ago

    No no, this was incredibly well thought out.

    This is the largest set of employees who know how insecure email is, and so are least likely to send anything remotely related to personal information via that medium, and therefore they will all remain fired and 'the administration' can claim they obviously didn't want to get their jobs back because very few emails were received in response to the request.

    • ceejayoz 4 months ago

      And those that do reply can be fired for violating infosec policy.

  • GloomyBoots 4 months ago

    Well that seems to open up a loophole. Send them the password-protected document. Don’t send the password since it wasn’t explicitly requested. Could even use a one-time pad for good measure since it is just a really long password.

  • cycrutchfield 4 months ago

    What else can you expect from a team that includes luminaries such as “Big Balls”?

  • njovin 4 months ago

    You're completely missing the point. This is another brilliant chess move by Elon . It's a trap and he's testing these people. When they fail the test he will have absolute proof that they were dangerous and incompetent employees. /s

nativeit 4 months ago

> when the very institutions that made American innovation possible are being systematically dismantled, it’s not a “political” story anymore: It’s a story about whether the environment that enabled all the other stories we cover will continue to exist.

Now there's a [flag] for ya.

jmclnx 4 months ago

I would encrypt the information that has 1000 lines that says "get a warrant" and email that encrypted document to them stating "My key is on your server you sunsetted last week" :)