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Archive Request

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They just want researchers in the enclosure to feel enriched and stimulated. ('The Enclosure' is what archivists call the shadowy world outside their archives in which so many people are trapped.)
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popular
15 hours ago
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acdha
1 day ago
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Washington, DC
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WebWrangler
5 hours ago
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This is exactly what it’s like to get data from the federal government.
South Puget Sound
alt_text_bot
1 day ago
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They just want researchers in the enclosure to feel enriched and stimulated. ('The Enclosure' is what archivists call the shadowy world outside their archives in which so many people are trapped.)

DOGE as a National Cyberattack

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In the span of just weeks, the US government has experienced what may be the most consequential security breach in its history—not through a sophisticated cyberattack or an act of foreign espionage, but through official orders by a billionaire with a poorly defined government role. And the implications for national security are profound.

First, it was reported that people associated with the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had accessed the US Treasury computer system, giving them the ability to collect data on and potentially control the department’s roughly $5.45 trillion in annual federal payments.

Then, we learned that uncleared DOGE personnel had gained access to classified data from the US Agency for International Development, possibly copying it onto their own systems. Next, the Office of Personnel Management—which holds detailed personal data on millions of federal employees, including those with security clearances—was compromised. After that, Medicaid and Medicare records were compromised.

Meanwhile, only partially redacted names of CIA employees were sent over an unclassified email account. DOGE personnel are also reported to be feeding Education Department data into artificial intelligence software, and they have also started working at the Department of Energy.

This story is moving very fast. On Feb. 8, a federal judge blocked the DOGE team from accessing the Treasury Department systems any further. But given that DOGE workers have already copied data and possibly installed and modified software, it’s unclear how this fixes anything.

In any case, breaches of other critical government systems are likely to follow unless federal employees stand firm on the protocols protecting national security.

 

The systems that DOGE is accessing are not esoteric pieces of our nation’s infrastructure—they are the sinews of government.

For example, the Treasury Department systems contain the technical blueprints for how the federal government moves money, while the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) network contains information on who and what organizations the government employs and contracts with.

What makes this situation unprecedented isn’t just the scope, but also the method of attack. Foreign adversaries typically spend years attempting to penetrate government systems such as these, using stealth to avoid being seen and carefully hiding any tells or tracks. The Chinese government’s 2015 breach of OPM was a significant US security failure, and it illustrated how personnel data could be used to identify intelligence officers and compromise national security.

In this case, external operators with limited experience and minimal oversight are doing their work in plain sight and under massive public scrutiny: gaining the highest levels of administrative access and making changes to the United States’ most sensitive networks, potentially introducing new security vulnerabilities in the process.

But the most alarming aspect isn’t just the access being granted. It’s the systematic dismantling of security measures that would detect and prevent misuse—including standard incident response protocols, auditing, and change-tracking mechanisms—by removing the career officials in charge of those security measures and replacing them with inexperienced operators.

The Treasury’s computer systems have such an impact on national security that they were designed with the same principle that guides nuclear launch protocols: No single person should have unlimited power. Just as launching a nuclear missile requires two separate officers turning their keys simultaneously, making changes to critical financial systems traditionally requires multiple authorized personnel working in concert.

This approach, known as “separation of duties,” isn’t just bureaucratic red tape; it’s a fundamental security principle as old as banking itself. When your local bank processes a large transfer, it requires two different employees to verify the transaction. When a company issues a major financial report, separate teams must review and approve it. These aren’t just formalities—they’re essential safeguards against corruption and error. These measures have been bypassed or ignored. It’s as if someone found a way to rob Fort Knox by simply declaring that the new official policy is to fire all the guards and allow unescorted visits to the vault.

The implications for national security are staggering. Sen. Ron Wyden said his office had learned that the attackers gained privileges that allow them to modify core programs in Treasury Department computers that verify federal payments, access encrypted keys that secure financial transactions, and alter audit logs that record system changes. Over at OPM, reports indicate that individuals associated with DOGE connected an unauthorized server into the network. They are also reportedly training AI software on all of this sensitive data.

This is much more critical than the initial unauthorized access. These new servers have unknown capabilities and configurations, and there’s no evidence that this new code has gone through any rigorous security testing protocols. The AIs being trained are certainly not secure enough for this kind of data. All are ideal targets for any adversary, foreign or domestic, also seeking access to federal data.

There’s a reason why every modification—hardware or software—to these systems goes through a complex planning process and includes sophisticated access-control mechanisms. The national security crisis is that these systems are now much more vulnerable to dangerous attacks at the same time that the legitimate system administrators trained to protect them have been locked out.

By modifying core systems, the attackers have not only compromised current operations, but have also left behind vulnerabilities that could be exploited in future attacks—giving adversaries such as Russia and China an unprecedented opportunity. These countries have long targeted these systems. And they don’t just want to gather intelligence—they also want to understand how to disrupt these systems in a crisis.

Now, the technical details of how these systems operate, their security protocols, and their vulnerabilities are now potentially exposed to unknown parties without any of the usual safeguards. Instead of having to breach heavily fortified digital walls, these parties Β can simply walk through doors that are being propped open—and then erase evidence of their actions.

 

The security implications span three critical areas.

First, system manipulation: External operators can now modify operations while also altering audit trails that would track their changes. Second, data exposure: Beyond accessing personal information and transaction records, these operators can copy entire system architectures and security configurations—in one case, the technical blueprint of the country’s federal payment infrastructure. Third, and most critically, is the issue of system control: These operators can alter core systems and authentication mechanisms while disabling the very tools designed to detect such changes. This is more than modifying operations; it is modifying the infrastructure that those operations use.

To address these vulnerabilities, three immediate steps are essential. First, unauthorized access must be revoked and proper authentication protocols restored. Next, comprehensive system monitoring and change management must be reinstated—which, given the difficulty of cleaning a compromised system, will likely require a complete system reset. Finally, thorough audits must be conducted of all system changes made during this period.

This is beyond politics—this is a matter of national security. Foreign national intelligence organizations will be quick to take advantage of both the chaos and the new insecurities to steal US data and install backdoors to allow for future access.

Each day of continued unrestricted access makes the eventual recovery more difficult and increases the risk of irreversible damage to these critical systems. While the full impact may take time to assess, these steps represent the minimum necessary actions to begin restoring system integrity and security protocols.

Assuming that anyone in the government still cares.

This essay was written with Davi Ottenheimer, and originally appeared in Foreign Policy.

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fxer
4 days ago
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Well as long as there isn’t a private email server involved
Bend, Oregon
emillafilipowicz88
1 day ago
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josephwebster
4 days ago
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Heil Elon
Denver, CO, USA
emillafilipowicz88
1 day ago
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popular
4 days ago
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DGA51
3 days ago
This is all due to the Republican Party enforcing obedience on its elected members.
emillafilipowicz88
1 day ago
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JayM
4 days ago
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Atlanta, GA
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1 public comment
GaryBIshop
6 days ago
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The people have spoken, this is what they want. Enjoy!

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Wife

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Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
In devastating news, I was informed by patreon subscribers after this comic was complete that there is a Dutch town named Winkle, permitting a Winkle Winkle-Winkle Winkel Winkle Winkel Winkel.


Today's News:
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popular
21 days ago
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hannahdraper
22 days ago
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Washington, DC
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silberbaer
21 days ago
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winkle winkle winkle winkle winkle, yeah!
I'm sexy and I know it...
New Baltimore, MI
WorldMaker
23 days ago
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The toughest part of the is trying to figure out which Ws are pronounced like Vs. Bet it’s a wild tongue twister between the switch ups.
Louisville, Kentucky
jlvanderzwan
21 days ago
As a Dutch guy with a German partner: Dutch is a W, the German kind of depends on which regional accent you're going for. The real subtlety would be in the almost-but-not-quite-nonexistent differences in the way "nkle"/"nkel" is pronounced acrossed the languages

T. Rex Evolution

5 Comments and 8 Shares
Unfortunately, body size and bite force continue to increase.
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popular
25 days ago
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DougK
26 days ago
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Randall needs to make up his mind. https://xkcd.com/1211/
Work in D.C., live in NoVA
astw56
25 days ago
So the future of the T. Rex is... a giant feathered snake?
matthiasgoergens
23 days ago
T-Rex went extinct as did most other dinosaurs. But some (like the birds) survived. Seems perfectly consistent with today's comic.
rickhensley
26 days ago
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Now put that on a plane.
Ohio
gordol
26 days ago
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Snakes.
Earth
llucax
26 days ago
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Science!
Berlin
alt_text_bot
26 days ago
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Unfortunately, body size and bite force continue to increase.

Origami Black Hole

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You may notice the first half of these instructions are similar to the instructions for a working nuclear fusion device. After the first few dozen steps, be sure to press down firmly and fold quickly to overcome fusion pressure.
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popular
44 days ago
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pinmare422
34 days ago
Nice Joke
acdha
44 days ago
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Washington, DC
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jlvanderzwan
41 days ago
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Does the recursive self-similarity mean it's also a fractal black hole? Aside from the information loss thing at the event horizon I guess
gordol
46 days ago
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65Qzc3_NtGs
Earth
cjheinz
46 days ago
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LOL! Nice!
Lexington, KY; Naples, FL
alt_text_bot
46 days ago
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You may notice the first half of these instructions are similar to the instructions for a working nuclear fusion device. After the first few dozen steps, be sure to press down firmly and fold quickly to overcome fusion pressure.
pinmare422
34 days ago
If U want Help For Pinterest Videos Download. ithis tool will u downloading from pinteresthttps://pinmate.app/

Linear Sort

5 Comments and 9 Shares
The best case is O(n), and the worst case is that someone checks why.
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popular
62 days ago
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jlvanderzwan
62 days ago
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This joke was funnier 13 years ago when some anonymous weirdo invented "sleepsort"

https://web.archive.org/web/20151231221001/http://bl0ckeduser.github.io/sleepsort/sleep_sort_trimmed.html
macr0t0r
63 days ago
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Well...if you want determinate time...
bcs
62 days ago
while true: pass
Groxx
63 days ago
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It's good to let your computer rest occasionally, to avoid burnout
Silicon Valley, CA
GaryBIshop
63 days ago
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I love it that it is Python!
edquartett2
63 days ago
It's not Python πŸ˜‰ "length()" is just "len()" and functions begin with "def"
alt_text_bot
63 days ago
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The best case is O(n), and the worst case is that someone checks why.
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