a. DoD and contractor employees may have access to NATO classified information only when access is required in support of a U.S. or NATO program which requires such access (i.e., "need-to-know").
b. Access to NATO classified information requires a final DoD personnel clearance (except for RESTRICTED) at the equivalent level and a NATO briefing as described in section D., below. A security clearance is not required for access to NATO RESTRICTED information. (See also Section D, below.)

Yeah, but....https://www.wyden.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/memo_-_tempest.pdf
View attachment 364322
Modern electronics, because of the demands of energy savings and/ for increased battery life have actually hardened our gear to TEMPEST attacks.
In the old days with 60mA current TTY loops you could detect across the street, so we used low-level bipolar voltage to reduce detection range by reducing field energy at the source before countermeasures.Yeah, but....
At the same time, detection methods and sensitivities have improved dramatically, as well.
One project that cadets at the Air Force Academy did while I was there (I think it was about a decade ago) was reconstruct the image on a monitor from an adjacent office by picking up the trace radiations from the HDMI cable.
Things have gotten a lot harder for everyone. The defenders have to defend against far more capable attackers and the attackers have to engage against far more capable defenders. It's the never-ending back and forth of measures, counter-measures, counter-counter-measures, and so on.In the old days with 60mA current TTY loops you could detect across the street, so we used low-level bipolar voltage to reduce detection range by reducing field energy at the source before countermeasures.
Near field detections have improved but they don't defy the physics of EM field propagation.
I have it and was looking forward to reading it, but for some reason just couldn't get into it. I don't recall why not. Perhaps I should dig it out and give it another shot. I've had a very few books over the years that didn't catch on with me at first but, upon later reading (usually in desperation for something to read) actually found it quite to my liking.Has anyone here ever read Cryptonomicon? ... best nerd book I've read in years.
Yep. Big books don't turn me off. I've read numerous sci-fi novels that have passed the 1000 page and a few that have topped 2000 pages (in a series of books with nearly twenty entries and counting).Well, it's a big book. But you don't strike me as one who minds that sort of thing, at all.![]()
The vote means Switzerland will join the likes of Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia, which have already written the right to cold, hard cash in their constitutions. Austrian politicians are also debating whether to follow suit, as people's payment habits become increasingly digital — especially since the pandemic.
The article doesn't say what the change actually does. For instance, does it require that all businesses and individuals accept cash as payment for everything? Or can businesses still operate on a cashless model?Cash is key for economic privacy. But also for untraceable monetary crimes ... it's a complicated, delicate subject:
And it also doesn't mention if there's a limit in cash deposits, or transactions ... I'm going to try and dig deeperThe article doesn't say what the change actually does. For instance, does it require that all businesses and individuals accept cash as payment for everything? Or can businesses still operate on a cashless model?
A number of possibilities. The U.S. might or might not be one of the parties involved. It could be the Kurds, or other dissident group, transmitting and Iran jamming, for instance. It could be Iran activating sleeper cells around the world. Or wanting us to think that they might be activating sleeper cells around the world. It might be complete misdirection by whomever is broadcasting to divert resources away from efforts to find their actual means of communication. Whatever is going on, it is interesting none-the-less.SW radio s the failsafe when all else fails.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.rf...station-persian-signal-iran-war/33700659.html
"The number keys that are used are perfectly random. There are no mathematical operations you can use on them to brute force them," he said. "And even if the answer gets out, say in proper English, it's not necessarily understandable."
https://theiceman.substack.com/p/a-new-spy-radio-signal-has-appeared
Iran is jamming it, we are talking (or pretending to talk) to our people inside Iran.
For the past decade, North Korea has engaged in a wide-ranging effort to place remote workers at U.S. companies in order to funnel money back to its coffers and, in some cases, steal sensitive information. Those workers’ salaries are used in part to evade sanctions and fund the communist regime’s illicit programs, including its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile efforts, according to U.S. government agencies. Last year, the FBI announced the schemes were becoming “increasingly malicious” and the Department of Justice declared the issue a “code red.”
...
Over a roughly three-month investigation, Nisos uncovered an apparent network of at least 20 North Korean operatives including Jo who had collectively applied to at least 160,000 roles. During that time, workers in the network — which some evidence showed were based in China — were employed by five U.S.-based companies and allegedly helped by an American citizen operating out of two nondescript suburban homes in Florida.
Monitoring the team’s communications nearly 24/7 through its laptop, Nisos gained insights into what its analysts say was likely a Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) IT team, including how it functioned and how its members communicated with each other. Nisos gathered that the workers were likely based in China and used only each other as references in their job applications. And like many tight-knit workplaces, the team seemed to enjoy a collegial atmosphere. Jo and his colleagues exchanged Minion-themed GIFs and chatted, often in English, about getting drinks together, smoking cigarettes and playing the online game skribbl.io together.
“We could see the coordination. We could see the facilitators. We could see the hierarchy of their cell,” Hudson said. “It was the most insightful look inside an active DPRK employment fraud cell that I know of honestly.”

French news outlet Le Monde first reported the officer, referred to as Arthur, logged a 35-minute run on the app while exercising on the deck of aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle on 13 March.
He used a smartwatch to record his run and upload the activity to the app, the paper said, creating a map that showed his location.
Not the first time, but it's far less excusable today than it used to be. I don't know what French regulations say or how well it's military members are educated on the security risks, but U.S. has very strict regulations regulations about this. In operational environments, they are simply prohibited unless specifically approved, on a case-by-case basis, when mission needs (which does NOT include personal fitness) justify it.
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