Epik CEO eventually responded to the breach of his web hosting company in a 4+ hour long live video conference, where he prayed, rebuked demons, & warned that the hacked data had been cursed and could cause hard drives to burst into flames.
The data also allowed me to learn how conservative activist Ali Alexander tried to hide his name on dozens of domain registrars for election fraud conspiracy sites after Jan. 6. dailydot.com/debug/ali-alex…
The data also exposed websites, many of them pro-Trump in nature, who had been served with subpoenas days after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. dailydot.com/debug/epik-hac…
This week also saw data from the Oath Keepers militia leaked online, who began using Epik's services in January.
I wasn't able to tie the Epik breach to the Oath Keepers leak, but the dates suggest they could be related.
For those interested in the live Q&A Epik CEO Rob Monster gave 2 weeks ago about the breach—which includes prayers, trolling, rebuking demons, & a guy with a big bag of weed—I uploaded it to YouTube here w/ a full transcript linked in the description
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As first revealed on Monday by @stevanzetti, the hacking collective Anonymous announced that it had hacked Epik, whose customers have included Parler, Gab, and forums such as TheDonald. dailydot.com/debug/epik-hac…
As I noted yesterday, the breach includes the email inbox of an Epik employee that regularly spoke with CEO Robert Monster.
I attempted to speak over the phone with Monster by calling him on the personal cell number listed in his email signature but did not receive a reply.
Exclusive: Leaked chats reveal how the former lead psychologist for Cambridge Analytica is secretly working behind the scenes to influence anti-vaccine efforts.
Patrick Fagan, who has worked for Cambridge Analytica, the tobacco and gambling industries, as well as on voter deterrence campaigns, is secretly aiding the UK-based organization known as HART.
Several high-profile accounts alleged that a 'bot army' had been deployed after dozens of tweets shared identical criticisms of the UK government's plan to ease lockdown restrictions.
Microsoft's Bing search engine appears to be censoring image results for "tank man"—a reference to the lone protester who stood in front of Chinese tanks—on the 32nd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre vice.com/en/article/qj8…
Meanwhile, a search for "tank man" on Google images displays what you would expect. Both the search on Google and Bing were made from the US, not China.
To be clear, searching "tank man" on either Google or Bing does return the relevant web results.
It's the image results on Bing that don't return any results. This could be a simple glitch at the end of the day. I reached out to Microsoft to ask.