| Linktree | https://linktr.ee/cyb3rops |
| Linktree | https://linktr.ee/cyb3rops |
New court documents shed light on what a 25-year-old DOGE employee named Marko Elez did inside Treasury Department payment systems. They also provide extensive new details about which systems Elez accessed, the security precautions Treasury IT staff took to limit his access and activity, and what changes he made to
New court documents reveal that the hysteria around DOGE's access to Treasury systems was largely overblown. Key details were exaggerated, and the actual impact? Minimal.
Great reporting from @kimzetter - highly recommend subscribing to her newsletter for in-depth analysis on cybersecurity and government affairs.
Read the full article here:
https://www.zetter-zeroday.com/court-documents-shed-new-light-on-doge-access-and-activity-at-treasury-department/
New court documents shed light on what a 25-year-old DOGE employee named Marko Elez did inside Treasury Department payment systems. They also provide extensive new details about which systems Elez accessed, the security precautions Treasury IT staff took to limit his access and activity, and what changes he made to
I've changed my mind on #DOGE
Violating FedRAMP policies is just too much. It doesn’t matter how much waste they uncover - how many billions were funneled into shady programs, foreign influence ops, agenda-driven NGOs, or regimes nobody voted to support.
Seeing them expose all of this while hosting their website on a non-FedRAMP system is a constitutional crisis. This must end.
If waste is to be uncovered, it should go through the proper corrupt, mismanaged institutions - so everyone involved has time to stall, erase traces, and protect themselves from this unjust witch hunt.
Next week's threat hunting in a nutshell - since the #OneNote phishing continues to deliver Quakbot, IcedID and Bokbot