Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Give details, NOT accusations, assumptions, Ifs, maybes, or unsupported "un-named sources, etc but, ACTUAL PROVEN FACTS.
NOW is the time to make your case.
I don't have to make a case. It's being made by serious federal investigations and by dedicated journalists that you'll label as "fake news."
If you're not interested in looking over all the volumes of info that have been released already, then it's not up to me to convince you of something that your obviously hyperpartisan bias won't allow your mind to accept.
Look it up yourself.
Or keep on posting hopeful little pleas that what's unfolding is all just baloney.
But that's a losing proposition. One that's particularly unattractive after your "big win."
Podesta was conned and GAVE them the password for access.
If they had even the security we have at our office, that phishing email would have never made it to his email. It would have been quarantined. Podesta even asked his IT guy if the email was legitimate, and the IT person said he probably ought to change his password, but go to the Google website and do it. Podesta just changed it from the email instead. I guess he figured if there was nothing wrong with the email, why bother going to the website?
Hmm, I read elsewhere that the IT guy told him to change his password directly from the website, but this appears to make Podesta even less responsible for this event. I still think better security would have never allowed Podesta to be in that position in the first place. I get a notice nearly everyday about emails caught by our email protection asking if I want to release emails from quarantine. It tells me what's in there and a little bit of the subject or first sentence of the email. Most of them are junk, but I wonder how many are actual viruses like this. I'm just glad we have a level of security to catch this type of thing.
Now maybe they had all that, but this email was so sophisticated that it wasn't caught by the security, but I also read somewhere that when the FBI reviewed the RNC server, they found similar phishing emails in quarantine.
Hmm, I read elsewhere that the IT guy told him to change his password directly from the website, but this appears to make Podesta even less responsible for this event. I still think better security would have never allowed Podesta to be in that position in the first place. I get a notice nearly everyday about emails caught by our email protection asking if I want to release emails from quarantine. It tells me what's in there and a little bit of the subject or first sentence of the email. Most of them are junk, but I wonder how many are actual viruses like this. I'm just glad we have a level of security to catch this type of thing.
Now maybe they had all that, but this email was so sophisticated that it wasn't caught by the security, but I also read somewhere that when the FBI reviewed the RNC server, they found similar phishing emails in quarantine.
LOL, sophisticated. LOL. It is the lowest form around. Well, maybe the African Princess is lower. Useless argument though.
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.