Day 8 – George Webb Outs Task Force Orange Spying On Americans

The Spy Ring In Congress Series Now becomes far more informative with the guilty plead of Imran Awan for bank fraud in DC District Court, and his US government protection from prosecution for activities relating to his spying activities on Capitol Hill, including illegal procurement, diversion, and eventual destruction of uncrackable Blackberries, iPhone with StealthGenie software, laptops, and network gear, all designed to mask pay for play political dealing under color of law while effectuating reprisals on whistleblowers at the same time.  With these telltale signs of State support for the Awan Spy ring, the Series now digs deeper to the ultra-secret power behind the Awan Spy Rings technology and methods : an intelligence agency spy group called Task Force Orange.  Enjoy the first episode of the TF Orange, as they actuate a reprisal on the author of this series on June 15th, 2017 for exposing this group illegal uranium trade in a scandal known as Uranium One.

3 responses to “Day 8 – George Webb Outs Task Force Orange Spying On Americans”

  1. Kathryn A Sweeting. Aka kelly Avatar
    Kathryn A Sweeting. Aka kelly

    George I’m the one that sent the audio look at another reply I left I found a picture of them but if you want to know what happened to him after Marquette here’s your answer seems like you might have to go to the library at Marquette University it’s a gold mine.

    http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/searchv2.php?q=Peace+corps&submitButton=+Search+the+Collections+#gsc.tab=0&gsc.q=Peace%20corps&gsc.page=1

    Like

  2. So she left Google now she ,goes to Facebook ,and this is after leaving DARPA ???
    EX-DARPA HEAD REGINA DUGAN LEAVES GOOGLE FOR FACEBOOK

    Regina DuganFACEBOOK
    Regina Dugan—the former head of Darpa who was running the Advanced Technologies and Projects lab at Google—has left the internet giant to take up a similar post at rival Facebook.

    Facebook announced the news this morning through blog posts from Dugan, CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg, and chief technology officer Mike “Schrep” Mike Schroepfer. “I’m excited to have Regina apply Darpa-style breakthrough development at the intersection of science and products to our mission,” Zuckerberg wrote, referring to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the research and development arm of the Department of Defense. “This method is characterized by aggressive, fixed timelines, extensive use of partnerships with universities, small and large businesses, and clear objectives for shipping products at scale.”

    Dugan will lead a new team inside the company dubbed Building 8. At Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California, each building is tagged with its own number, but there is no Building 8—yet. The name seems to be a play off the aims of the new group: to build all sorts of future technologies for the company. Why 8? There are eight letters in the Facebook name. According to Zuckerberg, the company will put “hundreds of people and hundreds of millions of dollars” in the group, but he did not give a specific time frame for these commitments.

    In a way, Dugan and Building 8 are merely continuing work that is already well underway at Facebook. This week, at its F8 conference, the centerpiece of its year, Facebook unveiled a new-age video camera that can generate 360-degree video for the social network and two new wireless antenna systems that can expand the reach of the internet (and thus the reach of Facebook). These projects are indicative of the company’s rather consistent effort to build new technologies—both with hardware and software—that can advance its core mission: to “connect everyone on Earth.”

    Google takes a somewhat similar approach to research and development, and Dugan was a big part of that inside Facebook’s primary rival. As the head of Google’s Advanced Technologies and Projects group, or ATAP—which came to Google via its acquisition of phone maker Motorola—she oversaw the development of Project Tango (an effort to create tools for digitally capturing our surroundings and converting them into 3D virtual worlds), and Project Ara (an effort to create tools for building highly modular mobiles phones). The group has also explored projects related to biometrics and security, something that could be quite useful to Facebook. Inside ATAP, the aim was not just to explore new ideas that may or may not come to fruition in the years to come, but to rapidly and actively push new technologies into the real world.

    TRENDING NOW

    Science
    Vector, Anki’s New Home Robot Sure Is Cute. But Can It Survive?
    Part of her working philosophy at Google was that researchers were assigned to projects that would last only two-years (before possibly being extended to more). “I believe that’s essential for innovation,” Dugan told WIRED last year. “One week of their time is 1 percent of their entire duration in ATAP. That makes them impatient with bureaucracy and process. And with a small enough group, you can start to strip away those things and go really fast.” This was inspired by her time at Darpa. From 1996 to 2000, she was a program manager inside the Defense Department lab, and from 2009 to 2012, she served as the Director of Darpa, overseeing the entire operation.

    “I am on the one hand, tremendously excited. Building 8 is an opportunity to do what I love most… tech infused with a sense of our humanity. Audacious science delivered at scale in products that feel almost magic. A little badass. And beautiful. There is much to build at Facebook… and the mission is human… compelling,” Dugan wrote in her blog post this morning. “On the other hand, I am sad to leave the pirates of ATAP.”

    Then she went on to describe some of the difficulties that faced the Google lab. “Each of our efforts to create new, seemingly impossible products, has been faced with intense challenges along the way. Technical challenges. Organizational challenges. Challenges that might have broken lesser teams,” she wrote, addressing her former charges inside ATAP directly. “This is the type of work we signed up for when we built ATAP. It is terrifying because it means we have to face our fear of failure, stare it down, more days than most. So be it.”

    #DARPA#ENTERPRISE#F8#FACEBOOK#GOOGLE

    Like

  3. Julian wants to tell, how they spy on us.Why he will be given to CIA first WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said he would contact technology companies and privately supply technical details of the CIA’s collection of bugs Frank Delaware

    Like

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: