Anonymous wrote:I know he's a journalist, but reporting on such an event where he was an actor, albeit a silent one, must be incredibly hard. You have to sift out your own emotions and reactions to tell the story, but I imagine the shock and disbelief was hard to step away from.
Anyway, clown show. It's going to cost so much to fix this mess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone smarter than me explain why Signal, which uses AES-256 encryption protocol, is less secure than government TS systems, which also use AES-256?
Just asking as a non-tech person.
I can’t speak to the security, but using Signal gets around a potential FOIA.
That is one part. Also, every single person involved in this has a secure, encrypted phone for classified use only. There are approved communication protocols and signal is not one of them. They use it so that they can delete the messages that are supposed to be permanent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone smarter than me explain why Signal, which uses AES-256 encryption protocol, is less secure than government TS systems, which also use AES-256?
Just asking as a non-tech person.
I can’t speak to the security, but using Signal gets around a potential FOIA.
Anonymous wrote:This is why we need professionals in the White House. I work for a publicly traded company and every year we have to go through mandatory trainings about keeping company data safe. We are taught to be on alert and not share certain information online or in person (like new C-suite hires, new customer logos, etc). This is Business 101 type stuff.
Anonymous wrote:This is why we need professionals in the White House. I work for a publicly traded company and every year we have to go through mandatory trainings about keeping company data safe. We are taught to be on alert and not share certain information online or in person (like new C-suite hires, new customer logos, etc). This is Business 101 type stuff.
These people are unprofessional and should not be trusted with national security matters. At a minimum, they should be forced to go through data and phishing trainings like the rest of us!
Anonymous wrote:In addition to the security risk, I'm kind of appalled that these guys are the ones making these decisions. I think I always assumed there were actual military leaders making decisions that would then go up the chain.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone smarter than me explain why Signal, which uses AES-256 encryption protocol, is less secure than government TS systems, which also use AES-256?
Just asking as a non-tech person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone smarter than me explain why Signal, which uses AES-256 encryption protocol, is less secure than government TS systems, which also use AES-256?
Just asking as a non-tech person.
Anything on a commercial phone is unsecure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope this gets Hegseth fired! Please. Please. Please. (DoD employee).
If you can say - are things really bad there with him in charge?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone smarter than me explain why Signal, which uses AES-256 encryption protocol, is less secure than government TS systems, which also use AES-256?
Just asking as a non-tech person.
Not a tech person but I am in a Signal group. A few things. When I join Signal, I see all of my phone contacts who also have Signal. So I can message them there.
Even if Signal is secure, your phone isn't. If I were stopped at the airport and customs made me open my phone, they'd see it all.
And within the app, we have people joining and leaving on a regular basis, not necessarily with their real names. So who knows who's in there and what they see? I don't know if that author had his full name listed, or whether he was going by his initials and the group originator thought he was someone else. But it's easy to make mistakes. Like Hegseth could have "thought" he was texting to that group, but mistakenly texted to another Signal group. So he could have shared sensitive information with anyone in his larger circle.
And, again, even though Signal is secure, I can take screen shots of it and share. Even at my government job, where we are nobodies, there is a microsoft application on our phones that prevents us from copying and pasting data from secure government apps, and stops me from screen shotting anything off secure government apps. Signal doesn't have that.