thanks douglas i found the events are reported elsewhere too random thoughts: you could possibly finetune a video-classification model to recover the speech from the video with a ton of phone call videos i guess people like this have/will be taking over our government unless we can figure these things out better
On Tue, Dec 19, 2023 at 20:34 Douglas Lucas <[email protected]> wrote: > It's logs filed in court. They make up some of the exhibit(s) in a > court-filed declaration by Kevin Skoglund, computer security expert for > plaintiffs in Curling v. Raffensperger. > > Skoglund's full declaration is here > > https://douglaslucas.com/files/CurlingVRaffensperger_KevinSkoglundDeclaration_5December2022.pdf > > Basically, SullivanStrickler is the Atlanta-based forensics firm from > which technicians carried out much, though not all, of the breach. Their > ownership is still supportive of it. After exfilitrating all voting > computer files, these SullivanStrickler breachers put them on a > restricted-access ShareFile for select Trumper allies to download. The > logs you are looking at relate to this ShareFile accessing, showing that > basically, the voting files are out there in the shadowy wild, but not > in public hands, just in the hands of Trump allies ... so far, or as far > as can be determined. Maybe they sold them to whomever. I wouldn't be > surprised to see portions of it, or all of it, leaked at some point, but > I think Trumpers are more interested in not getting arrested than they > are in civil disobedience or debugging voting software. Dominion Voting > Systems hasn't shown anything to indicate they care about the copying of > their chief 'intellectual property' assets. Which is weird. > > Douglas > > On 2023-12-19 17:25, Karl Semich wrote: > > hi douglas! i’m directing my spam energy around your blog so i swamp > > it less. > > > > I visited this link: > >> Online distribution was via private access, not public internet. > > > >> https://www.dropbox.com/s/gqlxtxuezipwxlx/08122022-000137.txt > > > > answer my questions only if it is fun to! > > > > Should I know what I am looking at here? > > > > It looks like this might be a handpasted access log for a > > court-related file repository containing voting machine and digital > > forensics data from the months of dec 2020 through feb 2021. is this > > correct? > > > > how does it back that online distribution of compromised files was via > > private access? is this the folder that was used for distribution? > > what folder is it / what system is it from? > > > > are all these names, email addresses, companies, etc, the specific > > individuals that the files were distributed to? > > > > it’s cool to see right inside things like this!! >
