Thread: Security and Legal Issues
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08-02-23 20:13 #32
Posts: 2337Originally Posted by Jcn1965 [View Original Post]
Look a buddy of mine was just minding his own bidness and posting here, he gathered info from others via PMs and posted what he learned. He told me when 5 guys all confirmed a key point, he posted it. Turns out one of the popular places to visit had a pimp and LE was involved, his posted ended up as "evidence" in Affidavits for search & arrest warrants, our Fed buddies came looking for my buddy but never found him. THAT my friend is why I use the highest level of OpSec I can figure out.
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08-01-23 20:27 #31
Posts: 1427Originally Posted by ItsAllGreat570 [View Original Post]
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08-01-23 17:09 #30
Posts: 2719Originally Posted by ItsAllGreat570 [View Original Post]
It would be a real problem if someone could go from a gift card that I purchased them on my personal credit card at a grocery store, back up the trail to the name on that credit card. It makes perfect sense to me that this is not something someone not in the FBI could accomplish. Gosh, I wish I could go the other way. I give a girl a gift card, and if she buys some panties online from Victoria's Secret, I can get the address she has them sent to.
I think it is a good idea when you can to get the real name of a SB. It is leverage against them in case they try to pull anything. You keep it in your back pocket, though, IDK any particular use for it during the regular arrangement. I have gotten a girls' real name by running her license tag # through a web site, or paid online searches when she uses her real #, not a texting app, or sometimes, when I get them to get a room for us to meet in, her name is right up there on the television. Watch out for that one if you are in the habit of getting a room for play. I have even gone to the extent of unplugging a TV, or hiding the remote in the safe, so that a girl could not turn on a TV that was going to give up my name.
I never use reloadable debit cards. Only the prepaid ones. There is a fee, exorbitant though it may be. This is the price we pay for safety when we are stepping out.
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08-01-23 07:07 #29
Posts: 62Originally Posted by FarFarAway [View Original Post]
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07-12-23 14:16 #28
Posts: 2719Originally Posted by BunkerBuster [View Original Post]
So what is the situation in this day and age?
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07-12-23 09:23 #27
Posts: 2719A blast from the pat
Originally Posted by Coolhand2 [View Original Post]
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10-22-16 13:36 #26
Posts: 295Spammer on the site
Be careful. Post big red letters, Senior Members Only. Just my speculation.
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04-20-12 04:55 #25
Posts: 272Opsec
'When you think of Pit Bull you think big trucks. Big rims, but oh not me I stay low key. Cause if they can't spot me. Then they can't watch me. And if they can't watch me then they sure as hell can't stop me. ' – Pit Bull.
Kicking a little street knowledge for ya. My occupational endeavors have always involved a great deal of secrecy and security. I was taught at an early age to have a separate account known only to you. Offshore if possible. Keep the amounts below certain limits and you have no (tax) reporting issues. I established the account before marriage so it is not marital property laws even after tying the knot. My play money came out of my paycheck before it hit the joint account. My excuse if needed was that I was required to have expense money available for last minute assignments at all times and that for security purposes it should not lead back to my family.
You are conducting a covert operation. Practice operational security (OPSEC). If the warden breaches security she should only be able to determine that something is going on. She should not be able to figure out who, what why, when, where, and how much. Make like you are a Mission Impossible team member and make sure your communications self-destruct in five seconds. If you are holding onto contraband (emails, texts and photos) and the warden tosses your cell you are fucked. At best you are going to be thrown into solitary confinement and at worst you she is going to bend you over while reaching for the broom handle.
Yes, I've been through a divorce. It had nothing to do with infidelity and everything to do with incompatibility. But that does not change anything. Divorce is a rule of law. A simple division of property. It is only the white hot emotions that surround the event that make it difficult. Do not be afraid of the lawyer for the opposition. You can always get one for yourself. Be proactive, now. If you have a risk of divorce for ANY reason do your research now. Learn how it works. Know in advance who your advocate will be. Develop your intelligence on the opposition. Develop a plan to protect your assets. Practice safe sex gentlemen and that means more than just slapping on a condom.
SubCmdr
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02-05-12 06:54 #24
Posts: 2677I'm able to explain the phone if needed
Originally Posted by Zman429 [View Original Post]
I know I'll never have to explain why a number tied to certain activities was forwarded to my personal phone. The day my burner goes into 4 trash cans in pieces, all connection to me is severed.
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02-04-12 22:28 #23
Posts: 907Originally Posted by Bunker Buster [View Original Post]
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02-04-12 22:08 #22
Posts: 540Originally Posted by Richmond Fotog [View Original Post]
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02-04-12 21:04 #21
Posts: 2677Never gave her the password
Originally Posted by Richmond Fotog [View Original Post]
When you use Google Voice, Google has a record of all calls and texts, and a record of your personal phone number, where the calls were forwarded. This info is easily obtained by subpoena. With a burner phone, there's nothing connecting the phone and usage to the user, short of reviewing store security tapes to identify the purchaser paying cash for a refill card. No agency or force is going to take this manpower-intensive step outside of a major investigation. A subpoena takes 5 minutes to prepare, and the telecom company does all the legwork.
Am I missing something?
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02-04-12 19:55 #20
Posts: 108Originally Posted by Richmond Fotog [View Original Post]
I totally agree with you about Google Voice. I consider it a life saver. It lets my SBs text me to their hearts content and I never have to worry about the Warden picking up my phone. It's so much easier to sit at my computer and answer a text then walking around the house with my phone in my hand. The problem with a burner for me is where do I hid it where it's safe from discovery. Google Voice gives you privacy and control. Just what a Monger needs. Every Monger with a SO owes it to himself to check out Google Voice.
Coolhand
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02-04-12 04:23 #19
Posts: 1823Originally Posted by Richmond Fotog [View Original Post]
I'm not going to waste time discussing SOPA and PIPA, for the time being they are dead issues, they will resurface in new and different forms in perpetuity. This is going to be the fight that lasts as long as there is an internet. So vote for the people who are less likely to support it, and hope that the lobbying power of the Hollywood Studios and the RIAA gets diluted in time. Other than that, boy wasn't it a prescient moment when V. P. Cheney told Patrick Leahy to go fuck himself. It's almost like he knew that Leahy would write a bill like this. So vote, or pray. Moving on.
Intellius etc. Don't aggregate private data, they can't. And if they could, a "background check" would be a whole hell of a lot more expensive than $49. 00.
The surprise here might be exactly how much information is actually public. That being said, there are services out there that can pull more esoteric data about an individual, and if you're getting a divorce, you're already paying for the P. I. To be hunting it all down for your soon to be ex wife anyhow. I support a corporation's ability to get paid for providing the same information that is available with the most basic research skills in a courthouse records dept. And google, but don't think that Intellius is selling "personal"information that isn't already out there, they're not. DNB is a good resource, but mostly for corporate research. Most of that is public too, but if someone is trying to find out about who you are, there will always be a low paid secretary at a doctor's office or at the MVA who is willing to bend the privacy rules for some extra money. And that will never stop, for the same reason that this hobby will never stop.
The bottom line is that if "they" are trying to get you,"they" will. It's a long told standard in the corporate world, If you don't want to see it on the front page of the WSJ, don't write in in an email and click the send button.
Privacy today means owning your own domain and better controlling access to your email. Not having a social networking identity at all. And none of that would matter, because you still drive a car and go to the doctor and you have a job and a bank account too. So for the time being, consider this silver lining. Isn't it an amazing thing that Jackson moved the server out of the US and beyond the reach of the DoJ?
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02-04-12 03:28 #18
Posts: 1004Was the first "privacy firewall" you built NOT giving your password to a significant other? I assume she didn't hack your email your email account. If anyone hasn't learned the value of using log-in passwords and setting up user accounts In Windows, well, you're just lazy.
In my opinion, the only things a person needs is Google Apps (add $10 for your own domain) and Google Voice. I have yet to see any feature like "Block caller" or even "Do Not Disturb" on any burner phone. If you set it up properly and learn how to use it fully, you'll never buy another burner phone. Even if Google started charging for it I'd pay the fee.
Originally Posted by Bunker Buster [View Original Post]