One of my long-standing beliefs is that if anyone ever combs through the ranks of mid-level personnel at Fortune 500 corporate IT departments, they will find an eye-watering number of foreign intelligence agents and assets. Because these folks have acc...
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One of my long-standing beliefs is that if anyone ever combs through the ranks of mid-level personnel at Fortune 500 corporate IT departments, they will find an eye-watering number of foreign intelligence agents and assets. Because these folks have access to a lot of potentially useful information, they tend not to get paid as much as people they know with similar skills are making in Big Tech jobs, and for a long time nobody was paying much attention.
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Jason Lefkowitzreplied to Jason Lefkowitz last edited by
(I suspect Big Tech is also honeycombed with compromised individuals, they will just have been harder to recruit.)
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Tim W (admin (and human))replied to Jason Lefkowitz last edited by
@jalefkowit to what end, though? Just information gathering?
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Jason Lefkowitzreplied to Tim W (admin (and human)) last edited by
@tim That’s level one. Information can be useful in lots of ways.
Beyond that, maybe you get them to put backdoors in quiet locations, or sabotage company projects when the company is competing with your own domestic industries.
Maybe you never even call on your inside man, but it’s valuable to have one there just in case. Who knows what you’ll need tomorrow?