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Doge's staff are reportedly called “Big Ball”

Look, it's not ideal that Elon Musk and a team of Edgelords, who are around 20, have deprived the decision of purpose, funding and staffing. choice. Bro Crypto-Fascist and in his spare time boosted messaging for white nationalists, but at least none of them are directly related to anyone involved in foreign rival intelligence agencies. Now, let me have plenty of water and check out the latest report from journalist Jacob Silverman…

So you know the ethical employees you've met by “Big Ball” (also known as 19-year-old Edward Coristine), allegedly former members of online cybercrime groups, reportedly, They were fired for leaking the company's secret? Well, it turns out that there is another layer of his suspicious background. According to independent journalist Jacob Silverman, Coristine is the grandson of former KGB spy Valery Martynov.

According to Silverman's research, Martynov worked as an official in the technical spy department of Russian intelligence agencies in 1980, when he was sent to the United States to work as an undercover agent of the Soviet embassy in Washington, DC. About two years later, Martynov was the FBI. ) flipped and began to feed the US government's Soviet secrets.

Martynov was eventually compromised by KGB counterintelligence official Victor Cherkashin, who himself successfully developed resources within the U.S. intelligence agency. In order to get Martynov back to Russia without doubting that he was found, Cherkashin was asked to escort another Soviet spy home (Silverman explains in detail that it is a novel). After the plane landed, Martynov was arrested and eventually executed.

His legacy eventually moved to the United States permanently, and she and her children would settle down, get married and have children, including Edward.

According to Wired, Edward works from the Governor who opened his business, and he will report that he will call employees to explain the code they wrote and justify their work. Earlier this month, he was appointed as a “senior advisor” to the State Department's Foreign Technology Bureau, which stores a large amount of sensitive data related to U.S. diplomatic actions. The Washington Post reported that his role could allow him to obtain “unauthorized access to confidential materials and information that undermines other national and foreign activities.”

So, anyway, the grandchildren of the former KGB agent who did not seem to have to undergo a background check have unprecedented access to sensitive State Department data. This is just what is happening now. Is this important? I have no idea. It's just one of the details you hear, and you're like, “Yes, what could happen to these guys.”

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