beloch 1 days ago [-]
The other members of the five eyes had better be careful about what they share with the U.S. while this is going on.

Public key encryption, like Signal uses, offers good security for most purposes. e.g. It's fantastic for credit card transactions. The problem with using it for transmitting state secrets is that you can't rely on it for long-term secrecy. Even if you avoid MITM or other attacks, a message sent via Signal today could be archived in ciphertext and attacked ten years from now with the hardware/algorithms of ten years in the future. Maybe Signal's encryption will remain strong in ten years. Maybe it will be trivial to crack. If the secrets contained in that message are still sensitive ten years from now, you have a problem.

Anything sent with Signal needs to be treated as published with an unknown delay. If you're sharing intelligence with the U.S., you probably shouldn't find that acceptable.

acdha 24 hours ago [-]
Signal’s encryption algorithm is fine. The problem is the environment in which it runs: a consumer device connected to the general internet (and it’s hard to believe that someone who does this installs patches promptly). He’s one zero day or unwise click away from an adversary getting access to those messages and potentially being able to send them. Signal’s disappearing message feature at least helps with the former risk but runs afoul of government records laws.

The reason why the policies restrict access to government systems isn’t because anyone thinks that those systems are magically immune to security bugs, but that there are entire teams of actually-qualified professionals monitoring them and proactively securing them. His phone is at risk to, say, a dodgy SMS/MMS message sent by anyone in the world who can get his number, potentially not needing more than a commercial spyware license, but his classified computer on a secure network can’t even receive traffic from them, has locked down configuration, and is monitored so a compromise would be detected a lot faster.

That larger context is what really matters. What they’re doing is like the owner of a bank giving his drunken golf buddy the job of running the business, and the first thing he does is start storing the ledger in his car because it’s more convenient. Even if he’s totally innocent and trying to do a good job, it’s just so much extra risk he’s not prepared to handle for no benefit to anyone else.

crowcroft 23 hours ago [-]
An obvious issue that I noticed. He sent the exact same message to two different group chats.

I assume he copy pasted the message on his unsecured device.

How many apps had access to that text in his clipboard?

To me this isn't a technical problem with Signal, it's an opsec problem, and that's quite a lot harder to explain to people.

acdha 19 hours ago [-]
Signal does have a forward feature which would look the same but I don’t know if he uses it.
qingcharles 19 hours ago [-]
Yikes. Especially if it's been near a Windows PC. If I have link-to-PC switched on then I have a shared clipboard between phone and PC...
crowcroft 18 hours ago [-]
Or if it's an iPhone & Mac pair it probably synced with iCloud.

Surely they don't have iCloud on their devices though...

jancsika 17 hours ago [-]
> Signal’s encryption algorithm is fine.

At least in the case of the leak the culprit was the UX, no?

Suppose a user wants the following reasonable features (as was the case here):

1. Messages to one's contacts and groups of contacts should be secure and private from outside eavesdroppers, always.

2. Particular groups should only ever contain a specific subset contacts.

With Signal, the user can easily make them common mistake of attempting to add a contact who already is in the group. But in this case Signal UI autosuggested a new contact, displaying initials for that new contact which are the same initials as a current group member.

Now the user has unwittingly added another member to the group.

Note in the case of the leak that the contact was a bona fide contact-- it's just that the user didn't want that particular contact in that particular group. IIRC Signal has no way to know which contacts are allowed to join certain groups.

I don't know much about DoD security. But I'm going to guess no journalist has ever been invited to access a SCIF because they have the same initials as a Defense Dept. employee.

acdha 16 hours ago [-]
Definitely - that kind of context is critical. Signal, iMessage, etc. are designed to let you securely connect to people you just met and don’t share much with other than a phone number. The DoD has the opposite problem: they have a list of people they trust enough to have access and blocking anyone not on that list is a major feature. Beyond the fact that both are sending messages, these problems are less alike than they seem at first.
sandworm101 22 hours ago [-]
>> The problem is the environment in which it runs

Too deep. The problem is the physical environment, the room in which the machine displays the information. Computer and technological security means nothing if the information is displayed on a screen is in a room where anyone with a camera can snap a pic at any time.

acdha 21 hours ago [-]
That’s valid in general, but in the specific case being discussed is an official military facility with strict access control and I would assume it’s regularly checked for bugs.
codethief 1 days ago [-]
What other type of encryption would you use for state secrets? You seem to be implying that governments and three-letter agencies use some vastly superior cryptographic scheme, whereas AFAIK Signal is as close to the state of the art as it gets.

Also, to be clear, Signal doesn't use public-key cryptography in the naive way (i.e. to encrypt/decrypt messages) as was/is possible with RSA. It uses asymmetric key pairs to first do a Diffie-Hellman key exchange, i.e. generate ephemeral symmetric keys, which are then used for encryption/decryption. This then also guarantees forward secrecy, see https://signal.org/blog/asynchronous-security/ . (Add to that they incorporate an additional post-quantum cryptographic scheme these days, and I'm probably omitting a lot of other details.)

HWR_14 1 days ago [-]
> Signal is as close to the state of the art as it gets.

For their use case, which requires communication between two (or more) arbitrary users who never communicated before among millions of users, running on cheap commodity hardware over wireless connectivity to the internet.

Leaving encryption aside, looking only at the network level, the DoD is capable of using a dedicated fiber line. Or rather a parallel fiber infrastructure.

ethbr1 20 hours ago [-]
Aside from that, there's base level authentication that it is Hegseth.

Is this device using DoD PKI [0]?

If not, then how is DoD managing access to it? Or is there a post-it with a local password stuck to it?

[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Access_Card#Integrate...

kevin_thibedeau 19 hours ago [-]
The issue isn't the encryption. It's the unsecure device it's running on. Nobody has to waste time cracking Signal if they have backdoored one of the computers at the endpoints. The US government categorically doesn't use unapproved hardware for secure communications. This is something the Secretary of Defense is supposed to know about.
Thorrez 7 hours ago [-]
I agree. Yet for some reason the top comment on HN is criticizing Signal's encryption.
galangalalgol 1 days ago [-]
Poking around it seems like pre shared keys are used for the secure stuff, so no public keys, no rsa. It isn't that signal isn't state of the art, it just makes compromises for usability.

Edit: I didn't state something perhaps I should have. Symmetric key is considered more secure because public key is more complicated so more room for side channel mistakes, and the computation needes to break public keys doesn't scale as fast with key size. I am not an expert but that is what I've read.

JKCalhoun 1 days ago [-]
> What other type of encryption would you use for state secrets?

Maybe it’s the servers that is the problem.

yusina 24 hours ago [-]
How are the servers a problem in an end-to-end encrypted scheme?
maxerickson 19 hours ago [-]
The server could be recording the traffic for later analysis, and the contents revealed if the encryption is defeated.

The encryption probably won't be owned up to the point where it is practical to decrypt traffic in bulk, but it's a valid thing to look at.

leereeves 10 hours ago [-]
> You seem to be implying that governments and three-letter agencies use some vastly superior cryptographic scheme

About a month ago there was a discussion here saying Signal is preinstalled and widely used at the CIA.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43478091

It's also recommended by the government's cybersecurity agency CISA.

https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/2024-12/guidance-mo...

henryjcee 1 days ago [-]
came here to say similar. GGP is another great example of hn people jumping in to make comments without having even a basic understanding of what they're talking about. Frustrating as it spreads misinfo about security which is the last thing we need.
wang_li 19 hours ago [-]
You're in a comment section where people are flipping out that there exists a computer on his desk that isn't connected to any DoD network but is connected to the public internet.

Approximately 30,000 people go to work in the Pentagon every day. There are areas in the building that are SCIFs and they don't allow cell phones and laptops. But the majority of the building is an office building used for office building type stuff. Employees and contractors bring their personal cellphones and mobile devices in there every day.

int_19h 17 hours ago [-]
Are they using those devices to discuss upcoming military operations?
rocqua 1 days ago [-]
Store now decrypt later still defeats diffie hellman if you capture the handshake. And quantum computers break diffie hellman as easily as RSA.
jxjnskkzxxhx 1 days ago [-]
Quantum computers don't exist. If you want to talk about a hypothetical machine which might exist in the future you should state that plainly.

Forcing the reader to parse thru the literary devices in order to get to the argument weakens the argument.

BrawnyBadger53 1 days ago [-]
Not them but you are replying on a thread talking about how it isn't safe in the longer future. That context was already built.
kube-system 22 hours ago [-]
Quantum computers absolutely exist and are commercially available. They're just not very useful at the moment.
rtkwe 21 hours ago [-]
It get exponentially difficult to add more qubits so it's not a given that we will be able to build one large enough to be a real threat to modern cryptography.
layer8 17 hours ago [-]
“Quantum computers that break diffie hellman as easily as RSA”, where “easily” means “not at all”, do exist.
femto 1 days ago [-]
Even if Signal's encryption implementation is secure, the device on which it is running probably doesn't satisfy TEMPEST requirements. Most consumer crypto is vulnerable in some way to a side-channel attack.
wickedsight 1 days ago [-]
None of that matters if Signal is running on what is effectively a personal device connected to the internet. That device is now the weak link and is what intelligence agencies in many countries are now probably trying to get into.
nicce 1 days ago [-]
Pegasus all the way down as an example.
wickedsight 1 days ago [-]
Exactly. And Pegasus is what we know about. I'm sure there's plenty we don't know about that's used for more high profile targets, like former Fox News hosts.
LargeWu 22 hours ago [-]
It has almost certainly already been breached.
fidotron 1 days ago [-]
> Anything sent with Signal needs to be treated as published with an unknown delay.

Oddly they have thought of that already, to the point all encryption systems in use in the gov are thought of in these terms.

All that matters are the different assumed times to publication (weeks to years), and then treating the strength of measures involved differently based on what is reasonable for the given use.

If you absolutely need something to never be published then encryption isn't the solution, and nor are computers generally.

moandcompany 19 hours ago [-]
Concur. This is part of why Suite A ciphers (algorithms) exist, and the second component includes robust key management practices are so important (this includes hardening of devices to prevent leakage of signals that could compromise those keys or the cryptographic processes themselves).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSA_Suite_A_Cryptography

VWWHFSfQ 24 hours ago [-]
It's the entire mandate of the NSA's Utah Data Center. Archive all the world's encrypted data until such a time as it can be decrypted when either the algorithms have been cracked or machines are powerful enough to brute-force.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utah_Data_Center

rurban 17 hours ago [-]
More like until they'll get the keys
fidotron 16 hours ago [-]
Or maybe they found a way to outsource brute forcing the keys.
satanfirst 1 days ago [-]
I'd give different advice.

You shouldn't share state secrets with the US. They will be on or transferred between misconfigured cloud accounts. Some agency will eventually get authorization for analysis of them with an intention of financial espionage. The probable or confirmed loss of them will serve as a plausible deniability for the US when it misuses them.

dgrin91 1 days ago [-]
Isn't that true for basically everything though? I'm not familiar with what other encrypted messaging systems security agencies use, but either (1) they store ciphertexts that can in theory be attacked later or (2) they delete their data after some time, but signal has that option was well.

Obviously using signal here is a terrible opsec failure, I'm just not sure how what you are saying changes anything

stevenwoo 22 hours ago [-]
I worked at a videoconferencing hardware/software company. We provided systems to USA government offices like the NSA and State Department and provided an input for which they gave us hardware specs but told us nothing else, the customer did the final testing on it to make sure it worked as specified. We assumed it was for some sort of encryption method of which they revealed to us as little as possible, the hardware engineers who saw it tested only saw a large, portable black box. Otherwise our system used the standard encoding/decoding methods of the day in the 1990s.
perfmode 23 hours ago [-]
The most secure method of communication is a one-time pad, a pre-shared private key.

"A one-time pad (OTP) is considered theoretically the most secure method of communication — when it’s implemented correctly. That means: 1. The key (pad) is truly random. 2. The key is at least as long as the message. 3. The key is used only once. 4. The key is securely shared in advance and kept completely secret.

When all these conditions are met, a one-time pad provides perfect secrecy — an eavesdropper cannot learn anything about the message, even with infinite computing power."

nicce 22 hours ago [-]
And you need to do that on paper, not on consumer device.
velocity3230 6 hours ago [-]
lxgr 23 hours ago [-]
There are significantly fewer concerns about symmetric encryption, and while it doesn't scale to the size or budget of a service like Signal, it's exactly the type of thing the military is good at:

Distribute a bunch of physical artifacts (smartcards) across the globe; guard a central facility (a symmetric key exchange center) extremely well etc.

The military can also afford to run its (encrypted or plaintext) communications over infrastructure it fully controls. The same isn't true for a service provided out of public clouds, on the public Internet.

cryptonector 21 hours ago [-]
Signal's crypto is quite good. The problem with it is that it has zero authorization functionality, otherwise the government could use something like Signal internally. The lack of military-grade IM solutions is a problem.
DaiPlusPlus 1 days ago [-]
> The other members of the five eyes had better be careful about what they share with the U.S. while this is going on.

Right, but this is nothing new: Hegseth is only a recent example of Trump's camp mishandling sensitive docs; I'll bet there's been an inner secret Four Eyes group since the the Mar-a-Lago bathroom official-document-archive story dropped years ago.

What surprises me is that I expected Tulsi Gabbard to be the centre of mishandling allegations, not SecDef.

Discordian93 1 days ago [-]
Tulsi is a competent mole, she knows better than to be this obvious.
mapt 21 hours ago [-]
It would be gauche to attack Tulsi Gabbard, because you would have to start with her connections to Russia's Assadist interests and to RT & the Russian web brigades, and we have established (we voted on it) that any connection to Russia is Old News and Not A Big Deal and Hillary's Dirty Tricks. But Hegseth? Hegseth leaked something to The Atlantic. A far greater threat than Russia.
Spooky23 19 hours ago [-]
The circus has only been in town for a few months. This thing is, as scandals go, an almost comically dumb scenario - even by Trump whack pack standards.

Tulsi is by all appearances more experienced in operating under the radar. That said, I’m sure she won’t disappoint.

20after4 1 days ago [-]
Maybe Tulsi is just staying out of the spotlight while Hegseth was hired to be in the spotlight.
1 days ago [-]
TiredOfLife 1 days ago [-]
The encryption is completely irrelevant if the information is sent directly to 3rd parties.
KennyBlanken 1 days ago [-]
Five eyes have been 'careful' about what they share since they got burned during the first trump presidency.
dboreham 24 hours ago [-]
They've been careful since before Perl Harbour.
ajross 22 hours ago [-]
> Even if you avoid MITM or other attacks, a message sent via Signal today [...]

That's not the threat model. The threat model is that Signal is a tiny LLC making an app on behalf of a foundation and open source software project. It's a small group of human beings.

Small groups of human beings can be coerced or exploited by state-level actors in lots of ways that can't feasibly be prevented. I mean, if someone walks up to you and offers $2M (or blackmails you with whatever they found in your OneDrive, etc...[1]) to look the other way while you hand them your laptop, are you really going to say no to that keylogger? Would everyone?

At scale, there are auditing techniques to address this. The admins at e.g. github are (hopefully) not as vulnerable. But Signal is too small.

[1] Edit: Or, because let's be honest that's the scale we're playing at: straight up threatens to Novichok you or your family.

Spooky23 19 hours ago [-]
There’s a million threats. These are not particularly bright people. They are busy and not aware of or concerned with much beyond limiting their own accountability for when they inevitably get burned by their bosses.

You and I know that. So do the adversaries. The biggest issue for them is going to be not tripping over the intelligence collecting agencies (or corps) already on their devices.

morkalork 1 days ago [-]
Even before thus, Ukraine learned painfully that it shouldn't share every plan and every detail with the US. It kind of looks like a sad, self-fulfilling proficy. Ukraine makes a plan, some details get leaked state side, plan goes disastrously. Ukraine plans another operation, doesn't say anything, the plan goes off ok. The US feels betrayed and Ukraine looks like an ungrateful ally abusing trust, the relationship is strained. The election happens and Trump points at how they're a bad partner yadda yadda. Ukraine is blamed for the outcome of what is originally an American problem, the US leaking like a sieve.
concordDance 1 days ago [-]
This is silly, many countries use consumer messaging for internal communications. The UK government famously uses whatsapp for example.
jandrewrogers 1 days ago [-]
Signal has been used widely in US intelligence for many, many years. Nothing about this is new, though perhaps people that never paid attention are just now becoming aware of it. As for the rest of Five Eyes, they use WhatsApp the same way. I’m not sure that WhatsApp would be considered an improvement.

It is clear there is a gap between how people imagine this works, or should work in theory, and how it actually works.

HWR_14 1 days ago [-]
> Signal has been used widely in US intelligence for many, many years.

For lunch orders and office softball schedules. Not top secret information.

jandrewrogers 22 hours ago [-]
This is a factually incorrect and very naive take. The same topic has been in the news in European countries too about the widespread use of WhatsApp when discussing secret information. It isn’t just the US government, everyone is doing it.
HWR_14 18 hours ago [-]
Do you have any sources? Because I don't see any information about secret information normally going through Signal or WhatsApp.
0xEF 1 days ago [-]
They're paying attention to Signal now because Hegseth doesn't know his ass from his elbow when it comes to tech and secrecy, instead acting like someone who has watched too many action films and thinks those are just like real life. The problem is not Signal. The problem is incompetence. Plain and simple. Because he blindly added persons to the group that probably didn't belong there, we now have the infamous "we have OPSEC" line, but instead of questioning why this idiot still has a job anywhere near the intelligence agencies, we're wasting our breath scrutinizing what is easily one of the best opens for secure comes if the user understands how it works.
chuckadams 1 days ago [-]
> why this idiot still has a job anywhere near the intelligence agencies

Because competence is a disqualifying attribute in the kakistocracy known as the Republican Party.

TaurenHunter 23 hours ago [-]
The sheer hypocrisy

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/sep/02/hillary-clin...

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jul/05/fbi-no-charg...

Also:

https://www.fbi.gov/news/press-releases/statement-by-fbi-dir...

"To be clear, this is not to suggest that in similar circumstances, a person who engaged in this activity would face no consequences. To the contrary, those individuals are often subject to security or administrative sanctions. But that is not what we are deciding now."

wheelerwj 19 hours ago [-]
What she did was wrong. There is no doubt about it. It needed to be investigated and dealt with accordingly. But let’s not pretend that the Secretary of State mishandling classified docs is is at all similar or related to the Secretary of Defense, sharing upcoming attack plans and actively circumventing information security, ESPECIALLY after the outcry and investigation of the Secretary of State.

But it’s not hypocritical of our country to want to improve our government officials and not for them to stagnate or slip backwards.

zitsarethecure 11 hours ago [-]
> In looking back at our investigations into mishandling or removal of classified information, we cannot find a case that would support bringing criminal charges on these facts. All the cases prosecuted involved some combination of: clearly intentional and willful mishandling of classified information; or vast quantities of materials exposed in such a way as to support an inference of intentional misconduct; or indications of disloyalty to the United States; or efforts to obstruct justice.

Hypocrisy indeed.

throw0101b 12 hours ago [-]
> The sheer hypocrisy

The Legal Eagle channel did an analysis of the two situations, "Signal War Plans v.s. Hillary's Emails":

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cw1tNTIEs-o

The two situations are not actually (legally) equivalent. One huge difference being that Hesgeth et al are setting communications to auto-delete, which is against records keep statues (there is no evidence Clinton purged e-mails).

Chyzwar 22 hours ago [-]
Classic whataboutism.
kacesensitive 20 hours ago [-]
It's literally not whataboutism.

Whataboutism is when you bring up something about person A, then the only argument against it is something relating to person B.

For example, when you point out the call the president made to the secretary of state in Georgia begging him to "find" 11,780 votes. Then, without a great excuse, the other person brings up Biden's mental decline.

Both true, both concerning, but the reply just being blatant and desperate misdirection.

afavour 21 hours ago [-]
...no it isn't? Whataboutism is when you redirect attention from issue #1 to unrelated issue #2 in an attempt to change the conversation topic: "forget that, look at this!"

OP's comment was pointing out the similarities between issue #1 and issue #2. There's no dismissal.

Chyzwar 19 hours ago [-]

  > The communication intent is often to distract from the content of a topic (red herring). The goal may also be to question the justification for criticism and the legitimacy, integrity, and fairness of the critic, which can take on the character of discrediting the criticism, which may or may not be justified. Common accusations include double standards, and hypocrisy, but it can also be used to relativize criticism of one's own viewpoints or behaviors.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whataboutism

Both Clintons private email server, Pete signal chats and Trump documents stash in Mar-a-lago are equally bad. Lack of consequences signal erosion of “Law and order” in the US. It seems that US is now not different from third rate countries where last minute exceptions, insider trading, open bribery, secret police(ICE) and targeted prosecution is a new norm.

comfysocks 18 hours ago [-]
I agree that all three are bad and shouldn’t be tolerated.

However, Hegseth’s transgression was the worst in terms of severity by orders of magnitude. Details of an in-progress military operation and all.

Chyzwar 18 hours ago [-]
We do not know. We do not know what documents Trump had in Mar-a-lago, who had access to them, and what he shared with others. Furthermore, we do not know what was in Clintons emails and who read them. If anything, Hegseth’s is less damming, since we know the content of chat and participants. In both Clintons and Trump cases, the impact could be much bigger. The problem in all cases is lack of accountability.
afavour 18 hours ago [-]
> If anything, Hegseth’s is less damming, since we know the content of chat and participants

That at least is surely not true. We know the contents because his attention to security was even less than the others we've heard about.

wang_li 19 hours ago [-]
Whataboutism is when you are trying to show a double standard because person A did a thing that you were upset about and person B did the same thing and you don't care. Asking why you care about a person doing a thing and didn't care when a different person did something different is not whataboutism.
PaulDavisThe1st 19 hours ago [-]
I agree with the GP on the definition of whataboutism, and think that you have described something with a much older term: "pointing out the hypocrisy".

They both share in common that rather than continuing to talk about just one thing, you are now talking about (at least) two.

But whataboutism is a diversion tactic that tries to shift the attention from behavior/event A to behavior/event B; pointing out the hypocrisy notes the similarities between behaviors/events A and B and contrasts the response.

Both can be deployed in similar situations, but the motivations for choosing one over the other are substantially different.

Chyzwar 19 hours ago [-]
OP did not state his motivation, leaving it for open interpretation.
CGMthrowaway 18 hours ago [-]
Is a double standard good or bad?
ethbr1 20 hours ago [-]
The dismissal is implied. And this behavior is endemic in modern reporting and political conversation.

Novel idea: what if we focus on the exact issue that was originally brought up?

'Someone else did it, or something like it, sometime, somewhere.' I'm past caring about that -- because it's used too frequently to distract from the current issue.

A. Hegseth broke the law and shared classified information on a system that wasn't approved for it.

B. Or, he unilaterally declassified operational details without informing anyone or going through a normal process.

It can only be one of the two above options, because the facts aren't in question.

Edit: But looks like National Security Advisor Mike Waltz will be taking the fall for this: https://www.bbc.com/news/live/crkx3ed5dn2t

pessimizer 20 hours ago [-]
> The dismissal is implied.

Is it? I'd think that somebody who took Hillary's hidden 3rd party communications seriously would take these seriously too.

The bizarre behavior is insisting that what Clinton did was trivial, but that this is a disaster.

Also this emphasis on security is backseat driving from a bunch of people who want to attack Iran. The real problem with them using third-party communications is that they avoid FOIA.

ethbr1 18 hours ago [-]
Can you try responding to what Hegseth did without mentioning anyone else?

It's a simple ask.

HPsquared 22 hours ago [-]
There's a fine line between whataboutism and precedent.
inverted_flag 22 hours ago [-]
I look forward to the FBI's thorough investigation of Hegseth then.
Sabinus 13 hours ago [-]
And Hegseth answering questions before a House committee for 11 hours, like Clinton did.
FrustratedMonky 19 hours ago [-]
Classic what about, whataboutism, whataboutism.
daveguy 21 hours ago [-]
I prefer the term trumpist douchery.
TaurenHunter 22 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
Ajedi32 22 hours ago [-]
Valid concerns about op-sec and personal responsibility aside, I think this is another example of why "security at the expense of usability comes at the expense of security". Official DoD communications equipment sucks, so people use the less secure, more usable encrypted communications platform when they feel they can get away with it.

Maybe the DoD should work on developing some internal Android and Signal forks that focus on adding additional critical security controls without impacting usability. There's an obvious desire path here.

beardedwizard 22 hours ago [-]
They are using unofficial comms to stay off the record and unaccountable, it has nothing to do with ease of use.
Ajedi32 22 hours ago [-]
That's possible I suppose, but do you have any evidence of that or is it just your personal biases causing you to assume the worst motivation you can imagine must be the correct one?

I know personally that given the choice I'd probably rather use Signal than whatever messaging system the DoD contractors managed to come up with. And private conversations between senior military officials over encrypted DoD communication channels probably aren't FOIAable anyway.

beardedwizard 22 hours ago [-]
Perhaps, but the simplest answer is often the correct one. People are exactly who they appear to be.
justsid 18 hours ago [-]
But the simple answer is that the devices suck and people don't want to use them. This is going to be more and more true as time goes on because new people coming in will be used to the creature comforts they have from their personal equipment. I'm not defending anyone here, the people in power need to be held to a higher standard than some rando citizen on the street.
alistairSH 21 hours ago [-]
IIRC, DoD uses Wickr RAM for TS messaging and Teams for non-sensitive comms.

Both are fairly "meh" WRT to usability, but neither are so awful people should be breaking the law over it.

FuriouslyAdrift 20 hours ago [-]
Wickr is supposed to only used for unclassified info like health data.

They have a completely sepearate internet for TS/SCI (JWICS https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_Worldwide_Intelligence_C...)

alistairSH 19 hours ago [-]
I thought there was a build/version of WICKR for DoD-like usage. Maybe not.
FuriouslyAdrift 17 hours ago [-]
I think Wickr RAM is specific to DoD... still not for anything S/TS
bagels 21 hours ago [-]
That is not the worst motivation I can imagine.
PaulDavisThe1st 19 hours ago [-]
Tell us the worst one you can imagine, please.
f38zf5vdt 21 hours ago [-]
> That's possible I suppose, but do you have any evidence of that

Yes, in the chat where a reporter was accidentally present, many of the messages were set to be disappearing. I don't know why anyone would do that if not to avoid recordkeeping laws.

> The images of the text chain show that the messages were set to disappear in one week.

https://apnews.com/article/war-plans-hegseth-signal-chat-inv...

Further, Project 2025 suggests bypassing federal record keeping legislation by simply holding in-person meetings without record.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxe55mU4DA8

Oddly, the Project 2025 training videos that presumably the members of the executive cabinet have seen say _not_ to delete messages or set messages to auto-deleting _because_ that would be in violation of federal record keeping legislation.

12 hours ago [-]
panzagl 21 hours ago [-]
The real answer is that none of the people Hegseth wants to show off to have access to those networks.
15 hours ago [-]
jordanpg 20 hours ago [-]
> when they feel they can get away with it.

It's not just this. Security involves compromises and trade-offs. Humans will be stupid humans and re-use passwords, install better but insecure software, not ever update, etc. It's an old story.

In the year 2025, if communication with any other human on the globe isn't as simple as opening and app and typing, then people will find another way because there are about a thousand better ways.

So I doubt they are trying to get away with anything. They're just preferring the trivial option over the option that probably involves a physical token or slow biometrics or 15-second logout or whatever arduous security features the government comms probably have. Just like any human would.

Perhaps this will force the government COMSEC people to re-evaluate their practices.

Updated to add: I'm not defending their practices, just giving a likely explanation. Blaming the users is not always the best way to evaluate a security failure.

cdkmoose 18 hours ago [-]
I would hope that when it comes to OpSec, SecDef, DoD, NSA, etc, don't act "Just like any human would."
jordanpg 16 hours ago [-]
All humans act like humans would. From a security standpoint, it is a mistake to assume otherwise in any context.

https://www.google.com/search?q=computer+security+human+natu...

eutropia 21 hours ago [-]
The dude has a staff of 30 people who's whole job is to connect him to literally anyone he wants to communicate with -- you're telling me that the usability of concierge service with more than two dozen staffers is inferior to using signal in a building with shitty cell service?
opello 20 hours ago [-]
I've wondered about this quite a bit and imagine there's got to be a "telephone" (the game of message distortion) like aspect where if some of the communication was explained, even a little push back might change the outcome. For example, a human intermediary presented with "send these details to these people" might get a "are you sure this person should have access to this?" ultimately preventing a bad/illegal action. People avoiding this kind of accountability, even just to a communications staffer, seems like it would have to be to reduce the subtle steering that happens when people are faced with conflict they don't want to, or have run out of psychological budget to, address.
standardUser 1 days ago [-]
If you're going to put a guy in charge who is completely unqualified and has a history of alcohol abuse you should at least make sure he's competent. It's actually very grating to see someone operating at this highest level of authority and treating it like its beneath them. It feels like we're watching history get written by the most entitled and inept among us.
sillyfluke 1 days ago [-]
What kind of tickles me is that any new poltical thriller tv series or movie that posits that matters of state in the US are conducted by serious and knowledgable people is now virtually unwatchable for me. It's virtually impossible to suspend the disbelief required to enjoy something that is so far removed from the reality of today's politicians.

(The recent cringe inducing Deniro series comes to mind)

mrbombastic 1 days ago [-]
Yeah it has ruined the old zombie movies where the government ends up the bad guy but a competent bad guy that makes unilateral decisions like quarantining a city or bombing a civilian center to contain infection. I am pretty sure they are gonna all be either 1) running around panicking with the rest of us 2) infighting and useless 3) denying the truth before their eyes if such a catastrophic crisis ever were to happen.
mycatisblack 1 days ago [-]
You should watch Civil War (2024) some time. The disbelief is shrinking on that one.
sillyfluke 1 days ago [-]
As I recall the battle lines were a bit awkwardly drawn for that one. The realism would increase if Cali and Texas were governed by the same party for some time in real life (as I recall they were allies in that movie).

I would like to see someone take up the idea of Canamerimex Union in a movie for kicks -- that is, the idea of Canada, California and Mexico forming a union on the west coast (and maybe continuing down the east coast, with Canada bridging both coasts)

nozzlegear 23 hours ago [-]
> As I recall the battle lines were a bit awkwardly drawn for that one. The realism would increase if Cali and Texas were governed by the same party for some time in real life (as I recall they were allies in that movie).

I actually liked that little detail and don't think it's too farfetched. In real life those two states are currently on opposite sides of the political spectrum, but (iirc) we don't actually know why the civil war started in the movie and it seemed careful to avoid any kind of left vs right ideology. California and Texas both have a rich history of calls for secession from the union, and both have heavyweight economies that could allow them to stand as their own countries. I think if a civil war did break out where both states disagreed with the Federal government, they'd be more likely than you think to form an alliance.

sillyfluke 15 hours ago [-]
If they had developed that whole backstory of an alliance (how loose is it, how close or apart are they politically despite the military alliance etc) it would have been a different, and in my opinion, much more interesting movie. It just felt it was leaning too much on the visceral war aspect of it, and that didn't contain enough originality to carry my interest frankly. Others have mentioned the style, I just found the style uninspired "Vietnam War nostalgia" including aping the glorification of photojournalists and the overemphasis on non-social media "respectable journalism" from older reputable Vietnam movies.
righthand 22 hours ago [-]
The war in the movie starts because authoritarian elected Potus Nick Offerman creates an economic division between the states which causes the states to group up geographically and ally on their divisions. California and Texas today wouldn’t pair but given enough pressure they might to ensure they remain an economic power house.
nerdponx 22 hours ago [-]
I could imagine them seceding independently, but allying once seceded, especially if the CA secession government shifts more conservative.
fireflash38 17 hours ago [-]
All it would take is one major disaster hitting the two most populated areas in CA to turn the state red.
nozzlegear 15 hours ago [-]
We're getting deep into the hypotheticals now, but that disaster would probably also wipe out what makes California such a formidable economic powerhouse -- maybe that would be one reason California would want to ally with Texas. The disaster might also kneecap the state's ability to field an effective military via the National Guard.

But like I said, what was interesting to me about the movie was the fact that the two states were allies against the Federal government, without any mention of the modern day left vs right culture war. It's interesting to think about how such an alliance could come to be when we remove the things we suppose might spark a civil war today.

mapt 21 hours ago [-]
They currently vote different, but there are a few things they have in common.

They're both ridiculously disenfranchised in the Senate.

They've both got significant antivax elements.

They've both got a very large Hispanic population and a portion of the Mexico border.

They're both large states with large economies and large governments; Whereas the Connecticut governor leading the Connecticut national guard is numerically incompetent at protesting the actions of the federal government, or has to overcome a bunch of coordination problems with other governors, they aren't and don't. Whereas Trump was free to seize the COVID pandemic supplies that Maryland bought and paid for, and redistribute them as political favors to red states, it would have been more difficult to do to a state with six times the population and a power center far from Washington. Any effort to oppressively regulate interstate trade is diminished somewhere you're dealing with large amounts of intrastate trade; Conversely, any impediments on trade with and travel to Mexico are going to be substantial issues in both Texas and California.

mnky9800n 1 days ago [-]
I found that movie to be disgusting as it takes real footage of war horrors such as 20 days in Mariupol, suicide bombers, etc. and sanitizes that for American audiences. Using this visual style of movies like 20 days in Mariupol indicates the filmmakers watched those movies and thought that could make them buck. Then it gives you some bullshit feel good call of duty action at the end to go kill the president which is tonally different both in visual style and in the context of the narrative. And it replaces the horrors of war such as bombing maternity hospitals and watching pregnant women be dragged from the wreckage with stereotypical racist Americans. And it justifies all this because it tells the tale of some war time reporters and asks the question what if they are just adrenaline junkies which is why they do their jobs? Thereby undercutting the real value and heroism of those who report on these conflicts who are captured, tortured, and murdered (e.g., Viktoriia Roshchyna). It does nothing to connect the audience with anything that is actually happening in the world and even serves to insulate Americans from the horrors of Ukraine and elsewhere while attacking journalists. I thought that movie was disgusting.
nathan82 1 days ago [-]
Do you have a different example other than 20 Days in Mariupol? Because the filmmakers definitely didn't watch that and think it could "make them buck". Principal photography for Civil War took place the year before 20 Days in Mariupol premiered.
decimalenough 1 days ago [-]
...huh? Civil War is about a group of reporters in the final days of a future civil war in America where a rather Trumpian president is about to be overthrown by rebels. It's not "replacing" anything in Ukraine because it's an entirely different story than Ukraine.
mnky9800n 1 days ago [-]
I am talking about the visual language of the movie and how it takes the style of documentary films like 20 days in Mariupol (a movie about the beginning of the war in Ukraine). not the narrative.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 days ago [-]
I am confused. What is your complaint here? That US author's stole the visual approach?
mnky9800n 22 hours ago [-]
I don't think the approach was stolen. It is fine for artists to take styles and ideas from other works and put them in their own. My point is that I found the film to be generally an affront to the suffering of people in actual, ongoing wars. It trivialized those experiences using them as a costume so american audiences could giggle in delight at the cinema without having to worry about the trappings of an actual war. And it did so all to tell a narrative that was somewhat against war-time journalism, painting their efforts as self absorbed and self serving. Like look at the way they film the death of the Kirsten Dunst, in this hero pose with camera in hand searching for the perfect picture. Contrast that to the actual life and death of someone like Viktoriia Rushchyna who was tortured and had organs removed or Shireen Abu Akleh who was allegedly shot in the head by a sniper while wearing a press vest. I simply found the film disgusting and if people disagree with me that is fine.

Of course any film about war (or perhaps any topic) could be controversial to someone. The WW2 epics starring John Wayne or Sergei Eisenstein's Alexandr Nevsky are both examples where the directors twisted every detail and used every opportunity to present a political message that the viewer may or may not agree with. My view on this is that the director of Civil War, Alex Garland, makes statements with the film that I disagree with. He seems to not see the humanity in people, at least, in my opinion. The movie never doubles down on anything, there is no deeper examination of the characters in the film, they just are until they aren't anymore. This is similar to his 2018 film Annihilation, which is essentially a retelling of J.G. Ballard's The Crystal World, and all of those characters in some way lack a humanity (although I think this works much better in this film as you discover that each character goes into the zone to find something about themselves that is missing and what defines them as human to themselves). And similar to The Beach, the novel he wrote that was turned into the movie The Beach, starring Leonardo Dicaprio about vapid westerners partying in thailand, or 28 days later, the zombie movie he wrote directed by Danny Boyle. Garland seems to see life as cheap and meaningless across the books and movies he has created. He cares more about the visual trappings of the setting he creates than the humans who live there. In the case of Civil War, I find it offensive as it uses the visual style of documentary films about ongoing wars as a costume and set dressing for his movie. And this movie comes from a culture (American) that started a war in Iraq and has done basically no introspection as to how those decisions completely changed their society into what it is today. This also influences the Civil War film. The president is blamed exclusively for all bad things across america. The entire movie is about how everything is the president's fault but lets interview him to see why.

A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 17 hours ago [-]
<< My point is that I found the film to be generally an affront to the suffering of people in actual, ongoing wars.

In a sense, you do have a point. I do happen to agree that it is rather hard to match the sheer.. what is a good word here.. brute reality of war. It is genuinely hard to do even with the best efforts, because, and this is kinda the point that I am slowly leading towards: that the reality has to meet the expectations of the audience.

And this is where I think you seem to fail at something you chastise the director/producer/maker(whole crew?), who made that movie. You seem to think that all wars all the same at all times; that the esperanto of violence would immediately cause a rather quick, normative default 'war' state that anyone could recognize. But you would be wrong... I don't want to bore you with the details, but just to give an idea consider the thought that it was not that long ago that soldiers wore rather colorful uniforms ( for a reason ) and it is only more recent wars that made them try to blend into environment. And this is but one, small, but visible difference, which will define how a war "looks" like.

<< It trivialized those experiences using them as a costume so american audiences could giggle in delight at the cinema without having to worry about the trappings of an actual war

Does it? I watched the movie, because I heard so many differing opinions that it got me curious. I try to abstain from most movies lately. Frankly, were it not for my wife, we wouldn't stream, but it is what it is.

But more to the point, which scene seemed trivial to you? Maybe my experience is different, because I watched it home?

On the other hand, I think, again, you misunderstand something. Just by default, most of us do make odd sounds, when were are nervous or uncomfortable ( yes, even laugh ). I do not want to assume too much, but I think even if you saw someone laugh, you might be misinterpreting something. My point is that, even if what you observed ( assuming it was observed ) is true, it is.. not the movie's fault. People's come in all shapes and sizes. I know I laughed hard that one time I thought I was close to dying.

<< And it did so all to tell a narrative that was somewhat against war-time journalism, painting their efforts as self absorbed and self serving.

I mean.. I did not get that impression, but I think that one could be safely left to interpretation.

<< I simply found the film disgusting and if people disagree with me that is fine.

I am not sure what to disagree with. That war is bad? That the movie does not capture its true horrors? That people suffer? You might be losing your point a little.

<< Of course any film about war (or perhaps any topic) could be controversial to someone.

I didn't see it as controversial. It was mildly interesting, but that was it. I personally think too many read too much into it, while Bill Hicks probably would have called it for what it is.

<< The WW2 epics starring John Wayne or Sergei Eisenstein's Alexandr Nevsky are both examples where the directors twisted every detail and used every opportunity to present a political message that the viewer may or may not agree with.

Ok. Now I know you are older than me. And to that I can only say: welcome to the cinema. It is not just WW2 movies. Everything now has a message. Sometimes, it is ridiculously overt, sometimes not.

<< My view on this is that the director of Civil War, Alex Garland, makes statements with the film that I disagree with.

Hwell, you probably should not have watched the movie or listened to him or both.

<< The movie never doubles down on anything, there is no deeper examination of the characters in the film, they just are until they aren't anymore.

Well that.. is an interesting criticism. I was going to respond reflexively, but I am going to ask you a real question that ties back to your original complaint how movies don't show the true horrors of war.

Would you agree, especially based on the lack of deeper examination phrase you used, that, the fact that all those deaths don't matter is in a sense a lot more terrifying than whatever deeper meaning you would want to add to those deaths. Meaningful death could mean immortality, but just not being there anymore is just that..

<< The president is blamed exclusively for all bad things across america. The entire movie is about how everything is the president's fault but lets interview him to see why.

Again, I think you misunderstand the audience of that movie, because that part is a very clear reflection of the real life in US.

I was going to continue, but I think it is clear that we disagree to a fair degree. Please let me know what you think. It may end up being an interesting conversation.

For the record, I was fortunate enough to not have experienced actual war, but some of family members did so I got to hear some of the stories. I am not even talking about a trained soldier doing a tour in a foreign land ( though that experience clearly gives you a close insight into what is happening in that time ). I am talking about the civilians just trying to survive.

ryukoposting 1 days ago [-]
In that case, you may enjoy Veep.
sillyfluke 1 days ago [-]
Yes, I am familiar. When the dust has settled, it should probably go down as one of the best written shows this side of the century.
trhway 1 days ago [-]
Total endorsement for Veep!

There is a significant difference though which even Veep didn't predict - the people in Veep were still riding in the well-oiled deep-state car, while those clowns today is actively destroying that car.

Wrt. clowns - note that the most important Hegseth's staffer is his wife who was his producer back at Fox and basically does the same for him at the Pentagon.

jay_kyburz 24 hours ago [-]
And "Don't look Up!"
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
On the other hand, the UK Spitting Image puppet series of sketches The President's Brain is Missing holds up remarkably well, due to being about Reagan.
wickedsight 1 days ago [-]
I'm currently watching 24 again and it now feels even more like fiction than it ever did.
mnky9800n 1 days ago [-]
24 was a wonderful piece of American propaganda whose only goal was to make it seem like torture was okay.
layer8 17 hours ago [-]
Yeah, the “justified torture” is when I had to stop watching.
mrguyorama 18 hours ago [-]
People who talked about how 24 and Jack Bauer showed that torture was good actually included a goddamned supreme court justice and I think the SecDef? The Bush Jr admin was openly fans of the show.

Oh, and the cast were invited to have a panel at a conference for the fucking Heritage Foundation!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_P52G4Kyq5M A look at the 24 world and it's insane violence by Jon Bois

mnky9800n 17 hours ago [-]
There should be a whole PhD dissertation in how 24 took over American culture and was used to justify heinous acts with some trite “the ends justify the means” hero porn on prime time.

Edit: and don’t forget this show was on fox.

Der_Einzige 23 hours ago [-]
The jack bauer power hour is a strong memory of my childhood.
acdha 24 hours ago [-]
Yes, it was sickening to watch a lot of people - even self-proclaimed libertarians – flip on torture during that period. There was a stark reversal from the 90s where the War Crimes Act was unanimously passed because back then anti-torture laws were thought of as affecting enemies like the Viet Cong, which lasted less than a decade.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Crimes_Act_of_1996

ModernMech 23 hours ago [-]
True, anything that doesn't approximate Idiocracy is now not realistic enough.
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
The entire administration is selected for loyalty. In this environment competence is a threat.
SequoiaHope 1 days ago [-]
> It feels like we're watching history get written by the most entitled and inept among us.

I suspect this is somewhat common in history (this is not meant to excuse it), but we can’t tell because those people still wrote the narrative.

twixfel 1 days ago [-]
So Trump will be looked back on as a good president? Highly unlikely, I'd say. Trump is quite uniquely awful in the history of the US.
SequoiaHope 19 hours ago [-]
Trump is awful and so was G.W. Bush and Reagan and Nixon and Andrew Jackson and even George Washington[1].

We don’t learn much in school about George Washington burning down Iroquois villages because we focus on other things. It’s entirely possible that Trump becomes so bad that the people who remember his misdeeds get erased like so many Iroquois or Vietnamese people or gays with HIV under these other presidents.

Here’s a clip [2] of Noam Chomsky describing the war crimes of every post WW2 president. Many people still regard those people as good presidents because they ignore their misdeeds.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town_Destroyer

[2] https://youtu.be/5BXtgq0Nhsc

VierScar 1 days ago [-]
Japan's WWII history is uniquely bad but they don't learn about it.

Can threaten authors with treason for negative books like he did in an EO recently. Change school curriculums. Then Maga can start revising history..

Was the 2025 recession from tarrifs? Nah it was Biden's inflation, or Ukraine aid. Actually.. didn't China impose tarrifs on US and US just reciprocated?

The reality will be altered and murky

yobi0h 1 days ago [-]
> Japan's WWII history is uniquely bad but they don't learn about it.

I see this claim form time to time, but the unsavory side of WW2 is thought in classes, although not without controversy [1]:

Despite the efforts of the nationalist textbook reformers, by the late 1990s the most common Japanese schoolbooks contained references to, for instance, the Nanjing Massacre, Unit 731, and the comfort women of World War II, all historical issues which have faced challenges from ultranationalists in the past. The most recent of the controversial textbooks, the New History Textbook, published in 2000, which significantly downplays Japanese aggression, was shunned by nearly all of Japan's school districts.

On the other hand, after the occupation, GHQ had imposed a press code [2], i.e. censorship of mass media, that undoubtedly had an impact on postwar Japan, so you could say that the point still stands.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_history_textbook_cont...

[2] https://www.hiroshimapeacemedia.jp/?p=139387

MostlyBad 22 hours ago [-]
Having lived in Japan for 2 year and working in what one would hope being a very educated environment (Todai and Rikadai PhD candidates), I can personally account that the number of Japanese who actually know about that bit of their history is few. Culturally, they don't speak about this topic - and there if something is not spoken about then it does not exist. I would not be surprised if some teachers could simply not cover that bit of the programme without any consequences; Japan is specifically good at not following its own laws, when such laws have been written mostly to appease international observers - same with women equality and discrimination of minorities laws.
twixfel 1 days ago [-]
The problem is that everyone knows tariffs don’t work. History will not be kind to trump nor his supporters.
AnimalMuppet 23 hours ago [-]
> The reality will be altered and murky

The reality is already altered and murky. There has been a full-blown total information war over reality for several years now.

But Trump and MAGA, even if they win, won't win forever. There will someday be an end to this particular attempt to impose unreality. Then history (or at least the history of this) can be told honestly. (Or at least without MAGA spin. It may have a new spin, but it will at least be a different one.)

djaychela 22 hours ago [-]
I think your suspicions are wrong. Yes, there are plenty of less competent people in history, but not to this level. Trump is an imbecile who just happens to be good in one direction (bullying and manipulation). Put him in an escape room on his own and he'd die in there. While I can think that many previous UK leaders have not been genius-level, I can't think of one who was anywhere near as stupid and beligerent as Trump. Other than maybe Liz Truss, who is thick as two short planks, but fortunately was ousted quickly. That won't be happening with Trump, and the US (and the larger world) will pay for these pocket-lining morons' mistakes.
SequoiaHope 19 hours ago [-]
George HW Bush, Reagan, Nixon, Andrew Jackson, George Washington. They all did horrible things and their incompetence or evil led to widespread suffering of people most of us have forgotten.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43860662

djaychela 4 hours ago [-]
Ditto the other response here. Trump is orders of magnitude worse. No other US leader in living memory has had such a negative effect overseas, and everyone I know in business in the UK is looking to move away from dealing with the US as quickly as possible given the unpredictable and capricious nature of the administration.
int_19h 17 hours ago [-]
None of the people you've listed approach the level of incompetence of Trump and his administration.
eviks 1 days ago [-]
Competence is part of qualification, so what you're asking for is not possible even in theory
layer8 17 hours ago [-]
There was a related HN submission yesterday that didn’t get traction: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43846682
imglorp 19 hours ago [-]
This is highly competent.

One skirts the official tools like this to prevent accountability from a written record. Completely sensible if you're planning to be judged for your actions.

verisimi 1 days ago [-]
True. But what did you think was happening before, with previous governments?
michaelt 1 days ago [-]
https://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/23/us/politics/23berry.html

For a High-Tech President, a Hard-Fought E-Victory

For more than two months, Mr. Obama has been waging a vigorous battle with his handlers to keep his BlackBerry, which like millions of other Americans he has relied upon for years to stay connected with friends and advisers. (And, of course, to get Chicago White Sox scores.)

He won the fight, aides disclosed Thursday, but the privilege of becoming the nation’s first e-mailing president comes with a specific set of rules.

“The president has a BlackBerry through a compromise that allows him to stay in touch with senior staff and a small group of personal friends,” said Robert Gibbs, his spokesman, “in a way that use will be limited and that the security is enhanced to ensure his ability to communicate.”

[...]

The presidency, for all the power afforded by the office, has been deprived of the tools of modern communication. George W. Bush famously sent a farewell e-mail address to his friends when he took office eight years ago.

While lawyers and the Secret Service balked at Mr. Obama’s initial requests to allow him to keep his BlackBerry, they acquiesced as long as the president - and those corresponding with him - agreed to strict rules. And he had to agree to use a specially made device, which must be approved by national security officials.

verisimi 1 days ago [-]
There was also all that nonsense about Hillary's laptop and emails.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/sep/02/hillary-clin...

philipallstar 1 days ago [-]
It's fascinating to see the difference in coverage.
JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> the difference in coverage

Because there was a difference in conduct. Obama consulted "lawyers and the Secret Service," "agreed to strict rules" and "use[d] a specially made device...approved by national security officials." Hegseth yelled YOLO before effectively tweeting target co-ordinates for our warbirds.

yubblegum 1 days ago [-]
> "lawyers and the Secret Service,"

Yeah, but that bit about "handlers" of the President of the United States could also be a data point here. That term is usually used in conjunction with 'asset'.

PaulDavisThe1st 19 hours ago [-]
That term is widely used in multiple contexts.
mrguyorama 18 hours ago [-]
The President is supposed to be "an asset". An asset of the USA. They are subservient to an institution, despite being granted certain powers and authority.

Nixon once said "If the President does it, it's not illegal", despite that being just nowhere to be found in the Constitution in any form, yet that statement caused a bunch of right wing think tanks and policy institutions and voters to agree so wholeheartedly that they spent 70 years ensuring it would become reality.

Significant portions of the Republican party have been trying to make the US a monarchy again for decades.

darkerside 1 days ago [-]
It's fascinating to see the victim mentality on behalf of those who really don't need it
gadders 1 days ago [-]
Stuff like this I would imagine: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jan/20/hillary-clin...

"Some of the classified emails found on former secretary of state Hillary Clinton’s home server were even more sensitive than top secret, according to an inspector general for the intelligence community."

whydid 1 days ago [-]
This is an example of the False Equivalency logical fallacy.
kubb 1 days ago [-]
When you feel real love for your favorite celebrity convict, whose incompetence is beyond denying, you'll put your mind to work to search for any device that will enable you to excuse anything he does and who he nominates.

People will talk about "politicians being incompetent", or act like actually anyone who has ever been in the office was like this. It's a pretty close and comforting way to deal with the reality of supporting a fraud without having to admit that you were duped.

gadders 1 days ago [-]
"A false equivalence or false equivalency is an informal fallacy in which an equivalence is drawn between two subjects based on flawed, faulty, or false reasoning"

What is the faulty reasoning here? Apart from "My side good, your side bad."

lesuorac 22 hours ago [-]
The faulty reasoning is the conduct is different.

Obama's and Hillary's blackberries were government procured devices altered by the NSA for security purposes.

The current US defense secretary isn't doing that.

gadders 19 hours ago [-]
What about Hillary's personal email server?
int_19h 17 hours ago [-]
It was pretty bad, and there should have been more serious consequences for sure.

Did they discuss details of upcoming military operations on it, though? Because that's a whole other level of wilful negligence.

Sabinus 13 hours ago [-]
Hilary answered questions for 11 hours in front of a partisan House committee regarding her email server.

Trump's admin won't get a fraction of that scrutiny.

AnimalMuppet 23 hours ago [-]
You can find incompetence in previous cabinet officials. This batch of cabinet officials has far more people who are far more incompetent and unqualified than any previous cabinet.

The faulty reasoning is saying that "this is just like previous administrations". It's not.

gadders 22 hours ago [-]
But the previous president was in the advanced stages of alzheimers and struggled to form coherent sentences. I think he alone beats anyone in the current organisation.
jmye 12 hours ago [-]
> and struggled to form coherent sentences

As opposed to the current guy, who hasn’t completed a sentence or a thought in twenty years and regularly goes off on tangents about black people eating pets. Great take. Love when you folks make it clear you’re just here to shitpost dishonestly.

verisimi 1 days ago [-]
[flagged]
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
> government is immoral

Maybe you're going to find out how much more immoral warlordism is. "Not having a government at all" is a weird fantasy of teenagers.

(the really odd combo is people who hold both the "government is immoral, especially the US federal government" and the "the US federal government should go to war with China" combo, which a few moments thought will show the contradiction)

verisimi 1 days ago [-]
Let's imagine we do go to warlordism and I do get to see how immoral it is.

At least I won't have to pretend that the coercion and theft is actually moral and good, right? At least I won't have to doublethink myself, turn myself inside out to justify the unjustifiable.

Ackonwledging the problem (immoral government) is just the first, esxential step towards making an actual difference. Why continue to pour in more effort to support an already failed system?

HWR_14 1 days ago [-]
> I won't have to pretend that the coercion and theft is actually moral and good, right?

Of course you will. Not praising the warlord as moral and good will result in real physical consequences for disloyalty, maybe even summary death. As opposed to saying the same thing on HN when just your position is attacked.

14 hours ago [-]
DonHopkins 1 days ago [-]
>I don't have a preference between blue or red.

In other words, you prefer red, but prefer not to admit it.

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> In other words, you prefer red, but prefer not to admit it

Lazy nihilism doesn't belong exclusively to one party.

darkerside 1 days ago [-]
No, but in this context, it's hard to disagree with the comment
verisimi 1 days ago [-]
> In other words, you prefer red, but prefer not to admit it.

No.

I invite you to look into my historical comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=verisimi

yummypaint 1 days ago [-]
[flagged]
JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
"Please don't post insinuations about astroturfing, shilling, brigading, foreign agents, and the like. It degrades discussion and is usually mistaken. If you're worried about abuse, email hn@ycombinator.com and we'll look at the data."

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

vkou 1 days ago [-]
Generally there would be a few garbage appointments, not an avalanche, and more important people have been shitcanned for lesser scandals.
1oooqooq 1 days ago [-]
they at least had to pretend. and to pretend they had to let competent staffers do the work so they could take credit.

even bush fooled everyone he was literate (save from the two times he held books upsidedown) while in office.

thrance 1 days ago [-]
And this is coming from the supposedly "anti-DEI" administration. What a fucking joke.
1 days ago [-]
1 days ago [-]
enaaem 1 days ago [-]
Imagine Hegseth was a black woman…
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
UK comparison: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-47996907 ; black woman MP has a train can, everyone treats it as a massive scandal. I think someone had a survey once where they found that one third of all hate mail and death threats directed at UK MPs was aimed at her.
prawn 1 days ago [-]
For anyone else confused by the phrasing:

"Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott has apologised after a photo emerged of her sipping a can of M&S mojito on a London Overground train."

Meanwhile in Australia, the opposition leader visited a pub during his campaign and the crowd yelled at him to drink a beer out of his shoe.

ben_w 3 hours ago [-]
*In theory* the problem wasn't the drink, but that it was on the train. Even in the UK, Farage is famous for drink-related photo-ops.

I'm emphasising "in theory" because it took a lot of concerted pressure for Johnson to leave after actual pictures of him celebrating with alcohol during the pandemic, so of course it was more an excuse than an actual cause of the vitriol against Diane Abbott: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partygate

gadders 1 days ago [-]
There are no excuse for death threats but she is widely acknowledged as borderline competent at best.
xanderlewis 1 days ago [-]
(It’s easy if you try…)
mmooss 1 days ago [-]
Let's pretend you work for a non-US state intelligence agency. How would you find Hesgeth's personal computer in his office on the public Internet? A genuine thought experiment.
o11c 1 days ago [-]
Write an article that he's likely to be interested in reading, spread the link, then mine the browser data just like every other website.
JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
Literally just @ him on X. These are the moments of strategic ineptitude you hoard zero days for decades to score.
Teever 1 days ago [-]
I don't want to derail the conversation too much with this but this is the kind of thing that blows my mind with seeing obscenely wealthy/powerful people like Musk and Trump on social media.

At some level of wealth you reach a point where no one can get to you physically. You're completely physically safe and isolated and can't be hurt. That means that the only way someone can get to you is through communicating with you and making you hurt yourself.

That means that social media is your only weakness. This is how adversaries can affect your plans and goals and disrupt your mind. Yet so many of these people seem so oblivious to this and are as terminally online as your average 4channer or facebook mom.

Does this speak to some sort of weakness in these kinds of people or the addictiveness of social media?

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> Does this speak to some sort of weakness in these kinds of people or the addictiveness of social media?

They're online because their followers are online. Social media may be the actual lead pipes to our empire [1].

So yes, they are absolutely weaker than leaders with digital hygiene. But the reason they're there is because the American public is similarly weaker.

[1] https://penelope.uchicago.edu/~grout/encyclopaedia_romana/wi...

feisty0630 1 days ago [-]
> Social media may be the actual lead pipes to our empire [1].

In America, the lead pipes of their empire are the literal lead pipes still in use all over the country.

Teever 1 days ago [-]
Sure, I get that there's utility in having an online presence, but these people are wealthy/powerful so they can afford to have someone do that work for them with the public non the wiser.
sjsdaiuasgdia 1 days ago [-]
That wouldn't give that kind of narcissist the same level of satisfaction as they get from the army of sycophants clicking "Like" on their latest hot take.

I think that direct connection is particularly attractive to the right kind of narcissist. Might be the best drug they've ever had.

WhompingWindows 23 hours ago [-]
Sorry, you think it's impossible to hurt Trump? Are you forgetting the bullet that passed an inch from his brain? A crazy person with a gun can change history in a second, and it would've been a terrible violent occurrence throughout society if it had come to pass.
CoastalCoder 23 hours ago [-]
Agreed. As much damage as Trump is causing, I'm guessing that his assassination would increase the chances of an even worse scenario: civil war.

It would be a perfect psyop opportunity (I'm guessing) to trigger Trump's most enthusiastic fans.

davidguetta 20 hours ago [-]
Civil war when most people are hooked that much to medias and 60% obese is a really unrealistic development.
tastyface 18 hours ago [-]
I genuinely can’t tell if it would lead to civil war or a collective shrug, Brian Thompson style.

Life is a reality TV show.

mmooss 15 hours ago [-]
There are many, many other possibilities - all the possibilities that almost always happen. How bizarre to limit your options to those two things.
Teever 18 hours ago [-]
At his level of wealth it's a choice to be that exposed physically, just as it's a choice to be exposed at that level psychologically is my point.

Someone with Trump's level of wealth could retire to an island and be like Elvis in his later years only dealing through people with intermediaries. They could have the best doctors, the best fitness regime and the best diet, and the best security and hundreds of miles between them and physical threats.

1 days ago [-]
wmf 1 days ago [-]
Yep. The CIA uses these same techniques to track foreigners of interest (e.g. Putin's entourage) so we should assume other countries are attempting to use similar techniques on American officials.
punnerud 1 days ago [-]
You could locate the traffic to The White House using this triangulation trick: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42780816

Title:”0-click deanonymization attack targeting Signal, Discord, other platforms”

Maybe not 0-click anymore, but still applies if the user browsing the internet.

snowwrestler 1 days ago [-]
You would just send him a link in a Signal message. His phone number is widely known and he has Signal installed on his desktop computer.

Signal’s protocol secures the message in transit. But their desktop app may or may not have client-side vulnerabilities. And if he clicks a link, you’re out of Signal and into the browser. If the link downloads a file, you’re into the OS.

mmooss 21 hours ago [-]
There is a Signal social engineering vulnerability where the attacker gets people to click a link that links the attacker's device to the target's Signal account.
mrguyorama 18 hours ago [-]
There is a Signal social engineering vulnerability where you just happen to exist and have a Signal account and the SecDef invites you to what should be classified communications.

I don't know why people think these incompetent buffoons would need 0-day vulnerabilities to get. Trump just tweeted pictures from classified spy satellites. If you want to know a secret of America's right now, you can either purchase it for a small amount out of Trump's bathroom, or just needle him with a "I bet you don't know/have...." and he will tell you whatever you want to know as a "Brag".

At least one of the members of that chat was IN MOSCOW, I think even IN THE KREMLIN at the time.

Several Republican party leaders were in a meeting with Putin in Moscow on July 4th 2018. They aren't TRYING to keep info out of the Kremlin's hands. They are so incompetent they couldn't keep it out of Beijing's hands if they wanted to.

overfeed 1 days ago [-]
Compromise the device of one of his contact and send him a juicy link via telegram that renders "Error: Not viewable on mobile" when opened a phone. Bonus points if the link has 0-day malware dropper
mmooss 21 hours ago [-]
> Compromise the device of one of his contact ...

Yes, I should have thought of that old and obvious one. It opens up a universe of possibilities.

gilbetron 22 hours ago [-]
Drop a usb stick outside of his house. 100% he'll pick it up and plug it in. 1000% if you brand it with his favorite whiskey.
rasz 1 days ago [-]
I would make Witkoff sit on his ass in hotel for 8 hours while my team one room over wirelessly breaks into his phone and gets into those Signal chats.

https://news.sky.com/story/trumps-fixer-was-made-to-wait-eig...

His personal PC? Send Big Ballz his way to do some upgrades

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355896/doge-nlrb-elon-...

maybe a free Starlink dish

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/17/us/politics/elon-musk-sta...

CoastalCoder 23 hours ago [-]
This assumes that the patsy needs to never discover that his device was compromised.

I'm guessing there are a few scenarios where they could be tortured / blackmailed into compliance, even if it meant that the DoD would know about it in a day or two, and it would still be worth it.

E.g., shortly before a real fight over Taiwan began.

I really, really hope Hegseth gets his OPSEC act together, yesterday.

mmooss 21 hours ago [-]
Once they're in, often professionals will create many forms of hidden access and then remove evidence of the initial breach.
coryfklein 22 hours ago [-]
The contrast betweeen

a) beaurocrats' real comms setups (3 telephones, four monitors all sitting on the desk – versus mounted on arms/wall) full of clutter and sitting on an anachronism of a wood desk

and b) what you'd see in any "spy" movie with dark-mode graphics displaying fancy l33t charts displayed on quad-monitor setups mounted on arms, probably in a low-light setting and the beaurocrat doesn't look at the "small" monitors himself, his cronies do that, the only monitor he looks at is the single 136" on the wall used for teleconferencing with villains

is hilarious

actionfromafar 22 hours ago [-]
and c) looking at spy comms on their civilian phone while in Russia, probably taking a dump.
lwansbrough 1 days ago [-]
I think a pretty good show would be something written like West Wing, where everyone takes themselves very seriously, but with rampant, blatant incompetence. Like, not funny at all. Nothing tongue in cheek, no winks to the audience. A drama of morons.

Get me inside the minds of these freaks.

toomanyrichies 1 days ago [-]
That's basically "Veep". You might also enjoy "In The Loop", "The Thick Of It", or most of Armando Iannucci's oeuvre.
ryukoposting 1 days ago [-]
Veep. You're describing Veep. I guess that's more "assholes" than "morons" but there's plenty of both.
m_fayer 19 hours ago [-]
“Burn After Reading”: only adjacent to the halls of power, but a great portrayal of a majority of morons trying to impose themselves into a mostly-offscreen world of aghast professionals. It’s a harbinger.
jajko 1 days ago [-]
The office. In White house.
23 hours ago [-]
HDThoreaun 23 hours ago [-]
Veep is a documentary.
purpleidea 1 days ago [-]
I can only imagine two possible explanations:

1) He is avoiding some sort of corrupt signals intelligence folks from knowing what he's working on.

2) He is avoiding the government catching him in some corruption by avoiding the official records act.

Anything else?

vkou 1 days ago [-]
3) He's an idiot who hasn't given it a shred of thought, and was hired for loyalty, not brains.
hydrogen7800 23 hours ago [-]
I try to apply Hanlon's Razor to this administration, but it's hard not to occasionally entertain other explanations with the sheer volume of incompetence.
ozmodiar 21 hours ago [-]
I think that as someone's power and authority grows, the risks of applying Hanlon's Razor get too high. It's best applied to peers.
vkou 20 hours ago [-]
His power and authority prior to getting put in charge of the largest military in the world was being a talking head making bad calls on television, which is roughly a step above being a 'social media influencer'.
elsjaako 1 days ago [-]
The same reason teenagers might use Instagram DMs to communicate about school projects - It's just the platform he's familiar with.

Or the same reason I have Whatsapp - communication in my social groups happens there, and if I don't have it I get left out.

Your explanations assume there is some deeper meaning, looking at the tradeoffs for each communication platform, and then coming to some rational conclusion. I don't think there's much evidence for that.

The people around trump just happen to be used to using signal to communicate, and if Pete doesn't get on board he gets left out.

Loughla 1 days ago [-]
Incompetence only applies if you're not running the literal federal government.

We have to assume malicious intent. These people could start a nuclear war. They get zero flexibility or grace.

jcon321 1 days ago [-]
Like with a cloth right?
bunnie 21 hours ago [-]
I feel bad for the Signal devs. If they weren't personally targets for state level actors before, they are now.

Say what you want about the usability of DoD home grown solutions, but it was a military system backed up by military budgets and guns - civilians are less likely to be collateral damage in an attack against these systems.

Now, all the civilians using Signal are potential splash damage casualties in a military conflict.

I also suspect Signal does not have the budget, staffing, or desire to serve as a front line soldier in a cyber war; but this exposes them to military-grade risks, whether they like it or not.

entuno 20 hours ago [-]
Given it's usage in the past, Signal and it's developers have definitely been a target before now. Not to mention by law enforcement and forensic companies like Cellebrite, which lead to them hitting back in a rather amusing blog post a while back:

https://signal.org/blog/cellebrite-vulnerabilities/

1 days ago [-]
wmf 1 days ago [-]
If some tech geniuses wanted to improve government efficiency, one thing they could do is create secure yet easy to use collaboration software. Maybe give the app a catchy one-letter name.
cheschire 13 hours ago [-]
Q
Waterluvian 1 days ago [-]
Somewhat related: does there exist a technology where I can encrypt something in a manner that it can only be decrypted after a specific future date? If theoretically possible, what would it take for something like that to exist? ie. "We'd need an authority to broadcast some ongoing pseudorandom number generator that can be trusted" or whatnot.
enlyth 1 days ago [-]
What you're describing is a time-lock puzzle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-lock_puzzle) and there are ways to do it but none of them are perfect
23 hours ago [-]
layer8 17 hours ago [-]
Not necessarily requiring encryption: Shoot it into space on a carefully calculated trajectory. Alternatively, send it as a laser pulse towards something that will reflect it back at the right time.
TrapLord_Rhodo 1 days ago [-]
a smart contract on solana.
joncrocks 24 hours ago [-]
Surely you would have to store something off-chain in order for it to be inaccessible until a given point in time.

Unless you can predict the future, I'm not sure how you would generate a key that would be unknowable now but generally available in the future.

1 days ago [-]
fidotron 1 days ago [-]
You might be on to something there.

I was thinking of encrypting a secret in the structure of a Rust program so it can only be decrypted by compiling and running it.

andrepd 1 days ago [-]
? Where's the time component there
Waterluvian 1 days ago [-]
Compiling a rust program!
fmbb 1 days ago [-]
Can’t you just fork the chain?
nneonneo 1 days ago [-]
Site’s being hugged hard - mirror: https://archive.is/kMZ2A
Havoc 24 hours ago [-]
I get that he’s senior but surely someone else signed off this farce?
CoastalCoder 23 hours ago [-]
He's SecDef. AFAIK he calls all the shots within DoD's operations, as long as Trump allows it.

I guess the Treasury Department could stop transferring funds into DoD accounts, but that seems unlikely.

Perhaps he could be prosecuted for violating various laws, but that would require action by the DoJ, which also seems unlikely.

Congress could also hold Trump responsible for Hegseth's actions, but that also strikes me as unlikely.

The past 9 years have been a really good education in why the Separation of Powers is important, and what's at risk when it doesn't function properly.

flexorium 1 days ago [-]
I’m somewhat surprised to see that they use a KVM to switch between back and forth between a JWICS and SIPRNET. I would imagine it’s a special KVM as it’s essentially bridging the airgap between the two.

I’m guessing that’s the product in question: https://www.vertiv.com/490454/globalassets/products/monitori...

khaki54 1 days ago [-]
They use special secure KVM from the major vendors and they are tempest resistant meaning they are shielded from bleeding signals between devices. They also have devices that can use multiple levels on the same screen and keyboard! See Everfox TTC
codeulike 1 days ago [-]
Not a fan of the Trump administration but I imagine the official pentagon communications systems must be extremely clunky and annoying, and about 20 years behind civilian tech.

During the UK Covid-19 enquiry into gov decision making at that time it came to light that most of the UK cabinet were co-ordinating via Whatsapp groups. Again, I'm not a fan of Boris and Dom Cummings but this makes some sort of sense to me. I recognise the need for government teams to have quick convenient chat available to them. Things move too fast these days to wait for the next cabinet meeting or to arrange things via a series of phone calls.

Similarly we can look back to Obama having to fight to keep his Blackberry in 2009 https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna28780205

upofadown 1 days ago [-]
The problem here is that the convenience is coming at the expense of proper identity management. SignalGate is a good example of the principle. Some Apple convenience feature helped the user by putting the phone number of the reporter into the addressbook under the identity of a government official. Signal then cheerfully used that incorrect phone number to add the reporter to the group chat.

That 20 year old tech is simply more secure... specifically because it is less convenient. By doing things the way they do them they can enforce access to desired levels of security by controlling physical access to the equipment. With something like Signal, that access is entirely the responsibility of the user. The user will inevitably mess that up, particularly when things get exciting. ... and Signal is not even really all that good at preventing the user from messing the identity thing up.

* https://articles.59.ca/doku.php?id=em:sg (my article)

codeulike 1 days ago [-]
You are right, but I'd also say that high security brings a lot of friction that slows down decision making. Irrespective of Trump and his friends (whom I dont like) as a point of principle I think world leaders have to choose between secure and slow vs fast and risk of leaks. For most purposes, fast and risk of leaks is going to be more optimal.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 days ago [-]
I hear you both. Frankly, I think we could use a little friction in communication to slow it and the resulting decisions down. I don't know about everyone else, but I don't make best decisions on the fly.
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
> quick convenient chat available to them.

And unarchived. It's very convenient to not have to do things in meetings with minutes where people might later question your decisions. Or report them to the police.

snowwrestler 1 days ago [-]
To be fair, quite a lot of in-person meetings among U.S. federal government leaders are private and do not produce minutes.
codeulike 1 days ago [-]
Yes you are right and these people probably are crooks. But in principle I think politicans should be able to have private conversations. These used to happen in literal back rooms but these days everyone is geographically spread out and thats not so possible. Formal decisions should be ratified in official minuted meetings but informal chat should also be possible. Because people need to actually talk to each other in an unguarded way to figure things out sometimes. At the moment the principle seems to be 'anything that a politican types to anyone else should be archived for later perusal' and I'm not sure that thats going to give us better decisions.
zimpenfish 22 hours ago [-]
> [...] politicans should be able to have private conversations. [...] Because people need to actually talk to each other in an unguarded way to figure things out sometimes.

Which works fine as long as there are no bad actors who may bribe, corrupt, blackmail, etc. Unfortunately that is not the reality we live in and one way[0] of counteracting the bad actors is to enforce transparency with things like "everything must be recorded and archived".

[0] Sadly not 100% effective.

codeulike 22 hours ago [-]
Right but what is the cost of insisting that "everything must be recorded and archived". Are you going to strap recording devices onto everyone in congress? You have to have a mix of safeguards but also practicality, surely?
twixfel 1 days ago [-]
That’s a different point. Currently it has to be saved. It doesn’t matter how you feel about it. It’s the law.
codeulike 22 hours ago [-]
"Is this politican bad" is not a very good conversation for HN, but "what technology should politicians be using to make them effective" is a good topic for HN, and thats what I'm trying to have a conversation about
lukeschlather 21 hours ago [-]
My kneejerk reaction is the same as yours, but the fact that they were using disappearing messages - they're using Signal to get around their legal reporting requirements. Even if they have other motivations, what they're doing is illegal.

Also, I complain a lot about Teams, but my understanding is modern DoD basically runs on Microsoft, AWS, (also Google?) just the same as private companies. Probably not Zoom, which is unfortunate from a usability perspective but also wise I think.

graemep 1 days ago [-]
The British government was officially using Zoom for cabinet meetings during lockdown which was a whole lot worse.
codeulike 1 days ago [-]
The whole world had to shift online with about 2 weeks notice, so I'll forgive them that. At the time I was kind of impressed to be honest that red tape didn't bring the govt machinery to a halt and that they were actually able to improvise a bit. But yes Zoom is not generally the platform I'd want them to use.
graemep 1 days ago [-]
There were better alternatives and they had more time than that (when lockdown was possible but not enforced) to prepare.

IIRC the French installed gov controlled Jitsi server. That plus a VPN would be a whole not more secure.

If you do not have things in place I think "we need to discuss state secrets securely" would have been clearly sufficient to justify an exemption to lockdown rules.

codeulike 4 hours ago [-]
Interestingly, this comment ended up getting a roughly equal number of upvotes and downvotes
fads_go 19 hours ago [-]
Behind, or aligned with different goals?

Can you name a popular civilian tech that blocks adding random journalists to small chat groups? That includes strong identity guarantees? That meets compliance requirements around logging calls?

Bloomberg might come the closest on this. Why don't you go out and price a Bloomberg terminal for yourself, at the grade that lets you trade options with other Bloomberg terminal owners over the chat interface?

twixfel 1 days ago [-]
> but I imagine

Do you know at all or are you just relying completely on your imagination to justify the Trump admin's actions?

codeulike 1 days ago [-]
I dont like Trump but I'm interested in the idea of what technology we want our politicians to use if we actually want them to be functional teams. This seems like a topic that might be good to talk about on HN.
insane_dreamer 19 hours ago [-]
Since NSA Waltz just got fired for this, shouldn't Hesgeth as well?
pessimizer 20 hours ago [-]
They're just going to keep hammering this dude until he bombs Iran, then MSNBC will say that he's finally grown into the role of a statesman and learned to make the hard choices.
netbioserror 1 days ago [-]
I'm simply going to point out the blaringly obvious that has somehow missed the armchair commentariat for this whole narrative debacle:

1) DoD and other departments have either tacitly or explicitly approved the use of Signal for internal matters for several years now, with proper opsec.

2) You cannot govern exclusively from a SCIF, hence 1.

mrbombastic 22 hours ago [-]
"With proper opsec" is doing a lot of work here, and I would presume one very fundamental piece is it is only to be used for non-sensitive conversations. Unless you are going to argue sharing attack plans ahead of the attack on a personal device is okay, which seems absurd on its face in a post-Pegasus world.
netbioserror 17 hours ago [-]
Did you read the transcripts?
mrbombastic 15 hours ago [-]
Yes, i am referring to Hegseth’s texts specifically
netbioserror 14 hours ago [-]
The beginning of the transcript is relevant. What do you think is happening there?
lantry 1 days ago [-]
Does "proper opsec" include adding random journalists to your chat, and sharing classified intel with your friends?
netbioserror 17 hours ago [-]
Did you read the transcripts?
lantry 15 hours ago [-]
If you're talking about the chat messages published by the Atlantic, yes, I did.
netbioserror 14 hours ago [-]
Okay. What's happening at the very beginning, in the first screenshots/messages?
cryptonector 17 hours ago [-]
> 2) You cannot govern exclusively from a SCIF, hence 1.

(1) doesn't have to be Signal. It should be some "enterprise" solution that DoD can own and operate, and it should federate with the same thing used in other executive agencies, and the WH itself. And it should have military grade authorization (meaning labeled, multi-level security).

That said, (2) is quite right: you cannot govern from a SCIF. SCIFs are mainly tools of control to access to long-ago classified information. New classified information cannot be born in a SCIF for the simple reason that SCIFs cannot scale to the needs of those who govern.

derektank 24 hours ago [-]
>2) You cannot govern exclusively from a SCIF, hence 1.

If you have the resources available to the SecDef, you frankly should be able to. Mobile SCIFs are something private companies can provide off the shelf for a few hundred thousand dollars. That's a drop in the bucket.

Obviously, nobody can or should spend all their time in one unless you're some kind of watch officer, but when handling TS/SCI material, there really is no reason for a principal to not have access to a SCIF within a moment's notice if they make it a priority. And there's no reason to be sharing TS/SCI with anyone that is not themselves in a SCIF. We have a declassification/reclassification process if information needs to be more widely disseminated.

cryptonector 17 hours ago [-]
This is nonsense. The government simply could not function if all classified data had to be born in SCIFs and kept in SCIFs.
cryptonector 15 hours ago [-]
More likely the government would simply stop classifying information.
khaki54 1 days ago [-]
Exactly. Signal and Wickr are widely used, and default installed in some orgs.
jmyeet 1 days ago [-]
Where is the "but her emails" crowd now? There are three main issues here:

1. The Defense Department bans the use of Signal for everybody else. Why is that? Why is the Secretary exempt?

2. As we've seen it's pretty easy to add unauthorized people to what should be secure communication channels where classified information is shared; and

3. There are laws around the preservation of governmental records. Expiring Signal messages seems like it's intentionally meant to circumvent these legal requirements ie it's illegal.

We're only 100 days in. We've got 1200 more days of this.

sokoloff 1 days ago [-]
Re: 1. If a team at work has a long-standing policy implemented by and applying only to that team and I come in as the new team lead, I can change that policy.

NB: I’m not arguing that this change in policy was done after a careful Chesterton’s Fence analysis and weighing of all relevant factors, but it would seem stranger if a new leader couldn’t change any policies than if they can.

sjsdaiuasgdia 1 days ago [-]
But did they change the policy, or did they do whatever because they felt like it regardless of what the policy said?
Supermancho 1 days ago [-]
> Where is the "but her emails" crowd now?

Same place everyone else is now. Nobody cares about the flagrant violations by the executive. This is the foxes walking around freely now.

nonethewiser 1 days ago [-]
Nobody? Including yourself?
jmull 1 days ago [-]
That’s a common idiom which isn’t literal. (Obviously?)
nonethewiser 21 hours ago [-]
The implication is that either he doesnt care, or he does. So I guess he does. I just didn't get the vibe that he wanted Hillary to be held accountable for her emails.
iszomer 1 days ago [-]
Because this is my United States of Whatever!
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 1 days ago [-]
Huh? I am still here and I am still annoyed by both. If anything, people who opposed 'but her emails' crowd to sufficiently penalize Hillary, made the current situation possible to begin with.

edit: To the lazy down voters. Address the 'my side never does anything wrong' issue and I might concede.

eastbound 1 days ago [-]
[flagged]
semi-extrinsic 1 days ago [-]
> Sounds like locking her up for bypassing the governmental emails would have been a win, now.

Under what basis should one have "locked her up"? All legal experts agree that there was no crime committed which could result in a prison sentence. This is specifically because none of the emails were classified.

eastbound 1 days ago [-]
Please correct me if I’m wrong:

She bypassed the requirement to communicate with all her contacts through secure and auditable channels (things people accuse the Trump admin of now doing), including foreign diplomats, by giving them her private email, which was effectively an email server stored under her desk, in simple SMTP, not SMTPS, which means all hostile entities could hack into it. When caught, she deleted the 19,000 emails and wasn’t sued for destruction of evidence.

That “all” of your legal experts (all 100% of them) found that perfectly legal is non sequitur: As a Secretary of State, practically her whole life can be used as ransom to make her do things contrary to state interests; and as a Secretary of State, she’s even responsible for making her subordinates set up the security rules to make it physically impossible to do what she did, if not legally impossible. She should not only have known, but she should have set up the rules for others.

Sounds like 100% of your legal experts may have been accessory to a scheme. Maybe she abided by the letter of the law but not the spirit, maybe the law has a hole, maybe everyone is lying because they’re afraid saying she cheated would benefit Trump, maybe anything else.

I’m genuinely interested in understanding if the story was wrong; But I’m not interested in understanding whether your take on the low importance of just a few emails from just a basic secretary, “nah don’t worry it’s just emails with her friends, she can have a private life”. No she can’t?

jmull 1 days ago [-]
> No she can’t?

Why in the world would she be generally obligated to provide her personal/private emails to the government or public? It seems bizarre to suggest otherwise.

eastbound 1 days ago [-]
Because she’s at a position where she can be blackmailed and is holding a lot of the US secrets. There is no privacy when you run for high public positions.

“Sir you received a suitcase full of banknotes!

— That’s my private life!”

—said no honest person ever.

jmull 22 hours ago [-]
You're demanding a standard of radical transparency for government officials that isn't supported by the law and has never been applied before or since.

It seems to be based on a presumption of guilt, which is a pretty severe departure from common principles of law and justice.

If you're sincere, I suppose you've been demanding that current members of the executive in leadership positions make all their personal communications public too?

The laws around this all generally exempt personal communications. You're Presuming people guilty is also not grounded in law.

eastbound 20 hours ago [-]
Assuming I drop all pretense of wanting elected official to be auditable by “We the People”,

They complain about government officials using Telegram or Signal to communicate. Do you agree that they argue on the same line as me, just opposite clan, dismissing their own faults and pointing at others like it’s never been done before?

viraptor 1 days ago [-]
> Sounds like locking her up for bypassing the governmental emails would have been a win, now.

This is getting stupid to bring up, but at least we've got a canonical long response to that with a proper legal analysis. https://youtu.be/cw1tNTIEs-o

collingreen 1 days ago [-]
It seems like bad faith to be rabid about Clinton emails and silent about the use (and overwhelmingly sloppy use at that) of signal. Do you care about following security procedures or not?

It's also weird to see you seem to take so much pleasure in lashing out - how can you feel vindication thinking your opponents should have done something about emails but not have that same feeling now? How do you hold both views (and with such vitriol) at the same time?

The hypocrisy is why folks find it hard to take these complaints at face value since we show time and time again that they appear more "my team should win the game" than anything consistent and built on principles.

I'm struggling to not write more details here but generally I think the whataboutism and completely ignoring degree is absurd. I remember when the big complaints about Obama were wearing the wrong color suit, saluting with a coffee cup, and allowing a military strike on a us citizen actively working with Al queda. If you want to be convincing (you may not want this- if you just want to feel self righteous and vengeful then carry on) then I think a better path would be explaining why this current situation is a good thing (or at least the same level of bad as the things you hate).

eastbound 20 hours ago [-]
> Do you care about following security procedures or not?

I care. Therefore she should have been jailed, and the world comes back to its correct order. Once she is, jail Trump all you want.

But it doesn’t work like that and you know it. It’s always “just do it to the opposite party” and close your eyes on your own.

After you jail Hillary:

- Repel Title IX. It’s an incorrect regulation.

- Revert the 2020 vote,

- Publish the stats about women in STEM and black criminality,

Then all is transparent and we can have a working democracy again. What I’m saying is: You didn’t do it, and now you have a dysfunctional democracy. But you have to suffer it through to understand the evil of manipulating the country, so that you’ll want to do it right the next time.

Transparency is not just for the others.

croes 1 days ago [-]
They vote this to get it worse?

Strange logic.

mschuster91 1 days ago [-]
> It is remarkable to what great lengths Hegseth went to use the Signal app, because as defense secretary he has his own communications center which is specialized in keeping him in contact with anyone he wants. This center is commonly called SecDef Cables and is part of Secretary of Defense Communications (SDC) unit.

... but unlike Signal, SDC respects laws requiring accurate record-keeping. And that's why this bunch of lawbreakers want to use Signal. They want to evade any and all accountability once this administration is over.

mcfedr 1 days ago [-]
Why are your police not investigating this? The guy is actively breaking the law
foota 1 days ago [-]
If you're not aware, these are federal laws, and the force responsible for investigating and arresting people who break them are a part of the executive branch.
hypeatei 1 days ago [-]
And the attorney general just confirmed in a cabinet meeting that the U.S. marshals would not be arresting any of them (marshals handle court orders, e.g. if you're in contempt)
Morizero 1 days ago [-]
And the top executive is arguing that they are only accountable to him
woah 21 hours ago [-]
If you really want to blow your mind, think about the fact that Hunter Biden was being prosecuted by the DOJ run by Joe Biden, just a few months ago. Can you imagine anything like that happening in the Trump administration if a Trump family member was accused of a crime?
idle_zealot 1 days ago [-]
Judges are investigating and holding trials. The Executive is being obstructive and outright ignoring court orders. Rule of law and the balance of powers have collapsed. Turns out that running a decade+ long misinformation campaign to sow distrust of all legal institutions, as well as expertise and professionalism in general is sufficient to topple the world's oldest democracy. If only there had been any effective counter-messaging things may have been different, but that's impossible with our "left" hollowed out by capital.
t-3 1 days ago [-]
How many politicians have you seen blatantly breaking the law like this and having no problem? It happens over and over again. A lower-level flunky would be in prison, but a political appointee is going to be just fine, forced resignation is the worst that could possibly happen to him. Our system is just that corrupt. The same thing happens with leaks - politician or cabinet member leaking is normal, rando bureaucrat leaking is enemy of the state.
SubiculumCode 1 days ago [-]
Because Trump does not investigate himself, and the once independent Attorney General is now just another political arm of Trump, but with prosecutorial power and discrtion. We are in dark times.
jdminhbg 1 days ago [-]
> the once independent Attorney General

This has never been the case; JFK appointed his little brother AG. The problem is that the Congress should be investigating and prosecuting the president but will not.

intermerda 1 days ago [-]
> This has never been the case;

Independence of the Justice Department has been the norm since and because of Watergate.

jdminhbg 1 days ago [-]
It's been a nice kind of fig leaf, but constitutionally the president is the AG's boss, so it doesn't make any sense for the AG to investigate the president. There's an entire branch of government given this power in the Constitution, they've just decided they don't want it.
xp84 1 days ago [-]
Exactly. Congress doesn’t want any of their duties. War declaration? Nah, let the President do it and call it “not a war.” Budget? Well, technically we’ll appropriate funds, but we’ll only do a big CR once in a while. Tariff policy? Nah, let the President do it all with the “national security” loophole, no matter how absurd. Impeachment and removal? Well, not when it’s your party’s guy.

For all the hate Trump gets, it’s Congress who’s created and who props up this monarchy.

vkou 1 days ago [-]
Except that this Congress was hand-picked by him, since he purged anyone who would push back.
sokoloff 1 days ago [-]
Could you point to say 3 concrete examples where he purged a legislative candidate or removed an elected legislator?
DFHippie 1 days ago [-]
I believe "purged" here means primaried or threatened to primary. I'm sure you know of certain famous examples. Here are some recent headlines:

https://www.scrippsnews.com/politics/president-trumps-first-...

https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/06/politics/cornyn-texas-senate-...

This list will contain more examples:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Republicans_who_oppose...

1 days ago [-]
slt2021 1 days ago [-]
always have been, its just current admin is less subtle about it
Loughla 1 days ago [-]
And you have hit the nail on the head for how Trump is operating this term.

How can he do these things?

Turns out they all could've, they just chose not to.

Maybe we should strengthen the checks and balances, and Congress shouldn't abdicate ANY of its authority to the president. Maybe the system should work how it's supposed to instead of how is easiest.

kube-system 20 hours ago [-]
> How can he do these things?

> Turns out they all could've, they just chose not to.

That's not really the case, there are plenty of actions which he has tried to implement but have been blocked by courts.

SubiculumCode 1 days ago [-]
So you say, but I've seen plenty of independence...see Trump's first term for some examples.
JohnTHaller 1 days ago [-]
Of course, there will be no consequences for his complete lack of... everything
mlinhares 1 days ago [-]
Oh there will be, just not for him. We’ll never know how many state secrets have been leaked through these shenanigans.
JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> there will be, just not for him

Everyone in this administration has to know they’re spending the decade after Trump in front of the Congress and various investigators.

gmac 1 days ago [-]
Let’s hope so. But of course this is also a heavy incentive for all of them to make sure their regime never leaves power.
lobotomizer 21 hours ago [-]
I'm sure they're absolutely terrified. I mean look at what happened to James Clapper, straight to the gulag of a cushy CNN gig.
xp84 1 days ago [-]
Nah, because the Dems can’t win elections, and Republicans will never hold any Trump ally accountable.
JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
This is probably what the DOGE kids are being pitched. There is a reason the most wantonly criminal conduct is coming from those too stupid or naïve to understand we haven't transitioned to a one-party state.
xp84 18 hours ago [-]
We haven’t? What power do the Dems hold, and what power do they have a serious chance of getting back in ‘26 or ‘28?

The DNC would have to make some serious changes, because the 2024 election was a perfect opinion poll on whether they have enough voters onboard the platform they’ve adopted to win a national election or a swing-state election. Running against a joke of a man, they lost. And the entire Democratic Party still hasn’t admitted to themselves why that happened.

I do hope a good third party moves into the massive power vacuum left by the DNC when it chased itself out of the mainstream into irrelevancy.

CapricornNoble 1 days ago [-]
Can't Trump just pull a Biden, and toss a blanket decade-long pardon to his entire staff? Would anyone bother to investigate them after that?
collingreen 1 days ago [-]
He can do that - presidents have a long history of abusing pardons. Trump has shown he is happy to pardon people without much thought either for media attention (j6?) or for money (levandowski?).

On the other hand trump isn't very loyal to his people so far - remember the wasteland of trump advisors and officials in the first term getting convicted of various frauds without getting pardoned (or the lawyer on tape saying he needs a pardon for trying to overturn the election and him not getting it).

Not that it matters but I don't think Biden gave a blanket pardon to his entire staff I think he pardoned people who he thinks are dangerously and unfairly targeted by some extreme media like fauci and Bidens son hunter.

At the end of the day pretty much all of the limits of presidential power come from restraint, especially (but not exclusively) in todays world of a tame judiciary. If the president cares about or wants to be seen as caring about the rule of law it is a bad look to wantonly disregard it too often.

Yes, there are a lot of folks who want to believe everything their chosen guy does is absolutely right but realistically each bad thing chips away at their ability to ignore the evidence. I know several people who have lost faith in trump as the evidence continues to absolutely pile up that he doesn't match the values they were told to appreciate (rule of law, respect for the constitution, human rights, fairness, Christian values, intelligence). If he gives a blanket pardon to everyone that worked for him a few more people will say "wait, maybe the other side was right and this IS a huge abuse" so it's possible, especially if we continue to have elections, that we won't see this kind of thing.

mmooss 1 days ago [-]
There will be none if you do nothing.
flerchin 1 days ago [-]
But what about her emails. /s
pessimizer 24 hours ago [-]
That throught-terminating cliché propaganda line generated by a bunch of campaign strategists at a whiteboard is what got us into this situation.

The extreme bipartisan view is that government business done by public officials should be hidden from the public record at their whim, even with the explicit goal of avoiding FOIA. Democrats believe that this is not only justified but virtuous, because Hillary Clinton lost an election.

unit149 1 days ago [-]
[dead]
good-luck86523 1 days ago [-]
[flagged]
zelon88 22 hours ago [-]
He should probably be investigated. He's giving off major "Russian Asset" vibes.
JensRantil 1 days ago [-]
Of course the guy needs to have an end-to-end encrypted direct line to the president. It's the president that runs the show and all decisions must go through him.
gotoeleven 1 days ago [-]
My understanding is that the use of signal started during biden's term. Is this not true?
cosmicgadget 1 days ago [-]
Are you being intentionally nonspecific? The use of Signal for some purpose doesn't somehow mean it is appropriate for any purpose.
TiredOfLife 1 days ago [-]
During Obama they used a shared Gmail account by passing messages using the drafts feature.
collingreen 1 days ago [-]
Who is "they"?
vkou 1 days ago [-]
The director of the CIA sending sexts (and as it later turned out, classified materials) to his mistress.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petraeus_scandal

He was fired the day after it reached Obama's desk, and eventually got a slap on the wrist and two years' probation.

collingreen 1 days ago [-]
Thanks for the link! It looks like this affair over webmail sparked a lot of investigation and resulted in a firing, two years probation, and a $100,000 fine. That sounds like a great start for this kind of thing and they were just talking dirty, not actively sharing mission details!

Overall, yes let's please investigate and appropriately punish wrongdoing at all levels.

whattheheckheck 1 days ago [-]
Nope
mmooss 1 days ago [-]
Do you have any evidence?
gotoeleven 22 hours ago [-]
mmooss 21 hours ago [-]
Very different. See my response here:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43859373

intermerda 1 days ago [-]
Not true at all. The use of Signal started during Obama's first or second term. While the app's first release was during his second term, it existed under various names and forms way back. Wikipedia has a great article on its history.

I personally started using signal some time around 2018 and I'm sure there were millions of users by the time Biden began his term.

rcbdev 1 days ago [-]
You must be intentionally acting dense.
intermerda 16 hours ago [-]
You must be used to not getting a clue.
mmooss 1 days ago [-]
I thought the GP means that goverment officials such as the Secretary of Defense started using Signal during Biden's administration (though with no basis for that offered, yet).
gotoeleven 22 hours ago [-]
mmooss 21 hours ago [-]
Right. They also use cell phones and send emails. The difference is, from the Snopes article:

"... it explicitly did not allow use of Signal to communicate "non-public" Department of Defense information, which would have included the conversations Trump administration officials had in their group chat."

Aeolun 1 days ago [-]
Maybe just let the man use Signal?

If someone gave me a whole set of locked down _windows_ computers and a bunch of achaic phone lines and told me to use them in 2025, I’d also try to circumvent such inconvenience.

bdangubic 23 hours ago [-]
I think they should just use X and post publicly, I don't see what the fuss is all about :)
Loughla 1 days ago [-]
Are you in charge of federal secrets?
mikeyouse 23 hours ago [-]
Those pesky archiving requirements put in place after the wanton criminality of the Nixon administration are likely unnecessary as well, right? Surely nothing’s being said or planned in the auto-deleting threads that would be criminal, right?
iambateman 1 days ago [-]
I wish more people, especially media writers, would start with the presumption that "circumventing the state-approved security machine" is a _feature_ of this administration.

Not to pick on this in particular – nearly all the reporting on this starts and ends with "Signal is insecure" as if that was all it took to be wrong. And in other eras, that was enough.

The man likes Signal. For better or worse, he is the Secretary of Defense...The man we've entrusted to help coordinate our national defense.

There's so many questions I genuinely don't have an answer for...

Has Congress made it illegal to use an off-brand messaging app for secure communications? _Why_ is it insecure? What is the probability that China is reading these messages in real-time? 100%? 25%? 0.2%?

We need to start from the presumption that the people-in-power don't care that it's always been done this way...in fact, they have a ton of pressure to be different. But, in some cases, these people may be willing to listen to reasonable arguments which clearly establish _why_ using Signal is unreasonably worse than using US Government Issue messaging.

glaucon 1 days ago [-]
> What is the probability that China is reading these messages in real-time

Real-time might be nice but there's value in reading material at this level with almost any delay.

In 1949 a US counter-intelligence program(me), the Venona project[1] decrypted Soviet cables from 1945 which made it almost certain the First Secretary to the British Embassy in Washington DC [2] was a Soviet asset. That wouldn't have happened if the Soviets hadn't misused their channels of communication.

[1] https://www.osti.gov/opennet/manhattan-project-history/Event... [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Philby

bcrosby95 1 days ago [-]
It doesn't only matter if its secure or not.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidential_Records_Act

patrickhogan1 1 days ago [-]
He is not the president or vice president. This law would be more relevant https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Records_Act

Here, his signal comms are likely top secret and we would have no way of knowing if his office followed the legally allowed step of forwarding after the fact for many years.

godelski 1 days ago [-]
There's similar record keeping for lots of officials. Government loves keeping records
collingreen 1 days ago [-]
And now we won't know, ever. Which is exactly the point of avoiding the system.
intermerda 1 days ago [-]
I don't understand it either. It's not as if you can accidentally message war plans to unauthorized parties on Signal.
ineedasername 1 days ago [-]
“We are currently clean on OPSEC.” -Pete Hegseth
mitthrowaway2 1 days ago [-]
I think one of the issues is that at least some of the Signal war-plans chat group participants had their messages set to auto-delete. If that's the reason that they're using Signal, it is indeed a problem, even if Signal is secure.
sudahtigabulan 1 days ago [-]
nitpick: disappearing messages are either enabled for everyone in the group or for no one.
grimpy 1 days ago [-]
> There's so many questions I genuinely don't have an answer for...

> Has Congress made it illegal to use an off-brand messaging app for secure communications? _Why_ is it insecure? What is the probability that China is reading these messages in real-time? 100%? 25%? 0.2%?

Is your point that, in the space of your own lack of knowledge, that reasonable rational may exist? Could you share what gives you trust in this administration to be so generous?

iambateman 1 days ago [-]
Great question, thanks for asking.

My point is that “make liberals sad” is also a stated policy goal of this administration.

I think this article is about one of two things…either there is a possibility that SecDef using Signal represents an ongoing, material national security crisis that should be a concern for all Americans…or it’s really the author grieving for a time when they felt safer because the strict protocols of confidentiality signaled (pun intended) a sense of seriousness about government secrets.

If this is a material security threat, I need a lot of writers to explain why because most people don’t know. If it’s a sad liberal, the result will be counter-productive and large numbers of people-in-power will read this article as a win for their team.

billiam 1 days ago [-]
Clown take. The use of Signal or any app on a non-secure device by SecDef for what we know he messaged about in his office is absolutely a primary national security threat. Firing offense for any senior Pentagon official dealing with highly classified traffic. Nothing to do with politics.
CapricornNoble 1 days ago [-]
Agreed. I thought Lloyd Austin should have been fired for going into surgery without advising his deputy or any of his staff of the risks, and his deputy should have been fired for taking over for him.....without leaving her vacation in Puerto Rico.

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/timeline-key-figures-found-l...

I think SecDef Hegseth is actually an even bigger disaster than SecDef Austin. That said....I think the Deep State/ military industrial complex/ Israel lobby is trying to get Hegseth fired because he's one of the Big 3 (Vance/Hegseth/Gabbard) opposed to going kinetic with Iran. But he's making it really easy for his adversaries, because he legitimately sucks at some foundational skills for management at his level.

ineedasername 1 days ago [-]
The fact that everyone in the country knows specific details of what and how he communicates, is a national security crisis. If signal was secure and/or he was following reasonable precautions, no one would know anything about this issue.
rl3 1 days ago [-]
>If this is a material security threat, I need a lot of writers to explain why because most people don’t know.

Because personal smartphones aren't considered secure for protecting classified information. Signal in and of itself might be fine when used properly, but it doesn't matter when the underlying platform is consumer-grade security. The risk of side-channel attacks is astronomical.

>My point is that “make liberals sad” is also a stated policy goal of this administration.

>If it’s a sad liberal, ...

I'm not sure any of that furthers whatever argument you're trying to make. Signal being used in that manner didn't only violate a myriad of established protocols, but it was straight up illegal on top of it. In any normal political climate we would've seen resignations from day one, regardless of party.

zmgsabst 1 days ago [-]
I see this as partisan:

- one side ignored Clinton using a private server as sec of state

- this one ignores using Signal

I haven’t seen arguments about what the standard is supposed to be or why this in particular is egregious. That would be more convincing than hyperventilating.

Edit:

If you read the article, there are both classified/secured and unsecured lines available at the station. So what specifically is the problem the administration uses Signal together with unsecured comms?

I don’t follow the allegation its mere presence is problematic, when discussing general communications with other parts of the administration. Especially when accessed via separate/dedicated machine (distinct from secured systems).

If you want to talk about the specifics of, eg, the Yemen war plans then do that — but this article does not.

freddie_mercury 1 days ago [-]
How was an FBI and DOJ and investigation by the Obama administration "one side ignoring it"?
collingreen 1 days ago [-]
This. So much this. The fantasy land behind these "Clinton's emails" takes is bizarre enough to seem intentional.
zmgsabst 22 hours ago [-]
How did Democrats respond to that information?

> Federal agencies did, however, retrospectively determine that 100 emails contained information that should have been deemed classified at the time they were sent, including 65 emails deemed "Secret" and 22 deemed "Top Secret".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillary_Clinton_email_controve...

That sounds a lot worse than what Hegseth is accused of, but didn’t derail her nomination nor draw widespread condemnation from Democrats.

That’s what I mean by “ignoring it”: the conclusion was bad but largely ignored by the party.

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> what specifically is the problem the administration uses Signal together with unsecured comms?

The DoD kit makes it a little bit harder to add randos to chats where one needlessly posts tactical air strike details.

zmgsabst 22 hours ago [-]
Like emails?
godelski 1 days ago [-]
What if you believe both Clinton and Hegseth are in the wrong?

I hold this position and I don't think it's uncommon. Plenty of people think if something is wrong then it doesn't matter who does it.

There's definitely perception bias. Usually conversations are short when we're in agreement. Doesn't create engagement. Doesn't make for good news

watwut 1 days ago [-]
There was whole massive campaign against her comparatively much milder infraction. It is crickets now. It was huge.

So, maybe 10 of you care, but the assymetry is beyond apparent.

For that matter, I remember when Obamas tan suit was horrible unpresidential infraction amd lack of respect. Same people voted for Trump not a peep about respectability.

sokoloff 1 days ago [-]
How many people were complaining about “her emails” 28 days after the first one was sent? You’re looking at two very different points on the timeline of each event and concluding that everyone thinks they’re different because of the difference in magnitude of discourse on the topics.

Do you think the difference will remain at this level through the next election cycle?

I think plenty of people see massive amounts of equivalence and are more caught up in other, more urgent piles in Washington’s reinvention of the Augean Stables.

watwut 23 hours ago [-]
Donald Trump literally said she should be in prison her for the email server thing. Literally during campaign. It was cheered on.

The emails scandal was on for months and got invoked during election by conservative pundits, politicians. Again and again and again and again. They made it a whole big thing, pretending to care about security.

So yeah, it matters. The consistent track record of just extremely one sided care for security, respectability, lies and what not actually matter a lot. Now we know that conservatives complaining about X does not mean they care about X. They dont, they are ok when one of them does worst. It is just hypocrisy.

sokoloff 21 hours ago [-]
That's almost exactly my point. Four weeks into scandal B, it's not getting as much coverage and discussion as scandal A did during a campaign.

None of that is surprising, and I expect the current $SHITSTORM_DU_JOUR to get a lot more amplification in 2028 than in May of 2025, which is the same pattern as happened in scandal A's emails.

She was Secretary of State from 2009 to 2013. We heard a ton about the scandal in the 2016 election cycle [when it was convenient and useful politically], not in 2009-2013.

I'm friends with several retired military officers. They tend towards red, but they're absolutely incensed over the Hegseth topic, especially the ones who flew pointy jets.

N-gram viewer: https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=Clinton+email+...

2419410794 1 days ago [-]
> If you read the article, there are both classified/secured and unsecured lines available at the station. So what specifically is the problem the administration uses Signal together with unsecured comms?

There are two issues. First, official communications about the workings of government ought to occur on government platforms, so that there's a permanent record for the communication. (As others have mentioned, this is required by the Federal Records Act.)

Second, the Pentagon has limited phone service and limited public internet access by design. The other computers in the office, while for unclassified material, are not (as I understand it) connected to the public internet like Hegseth's personal laptop is.

That said, I have no issue if Hegseth wants to use Signal to make dinner plans with other government officials.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> First, official communications [..]

Unfortunately the list of politicians who either don't care about records of their communications being properly kept, or who went out of their way to keep their comms "off the books" is long.

We should want to hold all of them to account, not just this one.

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> We should want to hold all of them to account, not just this one

We should and do. FBI investigated Clinton because of her emails.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> FBI investigated Clinton because of her emails.

Correct, and this was the outcome:

[FBI director James Comey said] "Clinton had been 'extremely careless' but recommended that no charges be filed because Clinton did not act with criminal intent, the historical standard for pursuing prosecution"

Is '[not] acting with criminal intent' really the standard we think we want to hold our elected officials to?

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> Is '[not] acting with criminal intent' really the standard we think we want to hold our elected officials to?

Yes, mens rea is a deeply-precedented standard that's a good default.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mens_rea

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> Yes, mens rea is a deeply-precedented standard that's a good default

(From the other side the pond) it does seem that legal standards such that one are applied very selectively in the USA, apparently depending heavily on the political leanings of those involved in any (potential) case.

On the other hand, at least you do actually run elections to pick your POTUS, this side of the Atlantic we get the President of the European Commission based on a back-room deal and a Soviet-style "vote" in the Parliament with no choice. To top it off, when she first got the job in 2019, VdL wasn't even a candidate for it during the immediately preceeding European elections.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> We should and do

The European Commission ended up in court trying to keep Ursula von der Leyen's messages secret 'claiming that the texts were “by [their] nature short-lived” and were not covered by the EU’s freedom of information law'

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/feb/10/i-aske...

https://www.politico.eu/article/ursula-von-der-leyen-eu-comm...

Outcome? A(nother) nothingburger.

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> European Commission ended up in court trying to keep Ursula von der Leyen's messages secret 'claiming that the texts were “by [their] nature short-lived” and were not covered by the EU’s freedom of information law'

Sure. They still wound up in court. Hegseth hasn't had to go to court to defend himself because he hasn't even been investigated. You really have to go back to the Austro-Hungarian Empire to find these levels of exploitable ineptitude at the highest ranks of a major military structure.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> Sure. They still wound up in court.

That case was brought by the New York Times, not any oversight body or investigative function of the EU, which makes it even more cringe-worthy.

"The European Commission faced an embarrassing grilling for almost five hours on Friday as top EU judges cast doubt on the executive’s commitment to transparency on the Covid-19 vaccine negotiations. The EU institution defended itself in a packed EU court in Luxembourg in the so-called Pfizergate case, brought by the New York Times and its former Brussels bureau chief Matina Stevis-Gridneff."

The NYT is presumably welcome to try to take Hegseth to court?

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> The NYT is presumably welcome to try to take Hegseth to court?

The Times sued to get Von der Leyen to share information. Hegseth already does that because he's an idiot. To my knowledge, SecDef isn't subject to FOIA in a meaningful way.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
> The Times sued to get Von der Leyen to share information

...and failed

> To my knowledge, SecDef isn't subject to FOIA in a meaningful way

...and as it turned out, neither is VdL.

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
The case didn't succeed in producing the records. But the process uncovered a lot of shit.

But again, you're comparing non-disclosure to irresponsible disclosure. VdL didn't send highly sensitive scramble times to a rando.

logifail 1 days ago [-]
(With apologies if this appears provocative)

Is there evidence that SECDEF 'acted with criminal intent'?

We've already clarified that '[being] extremely careless' is not enough for a court case.

[I have a mental picture of a Venn diagram with three circles: "Politicians", "Idiots" and "Criminals"...]

JumpCrisscross 1 days ago [-]
> Is there evidence that SECDEF 'acted with criminal intent'?

Tough to say if there’s no investigation!

> We've already clarified that '[being] extremely careless' is not enough for a court case

Investigation.

jorts 1 days ago [-]
Sharing details as he has done would put my brother who works for the Navy in the brig. As someone in his role he should know better but he’s only in his role as he will do whatever Trump asks him to. He was a O4, there’s a zero percent chance of him being knowledgeable enough to be competent in his role.
collingreen 1 days ago [-]
He knew better when saying Clinton's behavior amounted to treason.

We don't need to argue about if he knew better; he did, from his own mouth. We need to argue about if it is ok and if it is ok for the people in power to do nothing about it because it's "their team".

At some point soon we need to realize we the people are on one team and everyone saying otherwise is trying to hurt us.

trealira 1 days ago [-]
> At some point soon we need to realize we the people are on one team and everyone saying otherwise is trying to hurt us.

This might be good for a generic politician running for an election to say, but it's not true. We're not on the same team; we're different groups of people with different values who hate each other. Our politicians are the people we've voted to represent us. It's not like Trump, for example, hoodwinked Republicans; they like everything he's doing, and have for ten years, and a lot of it is because people like me hate him. We're not on the same team.

CapricornNoble 1 days ago [-]
I know some pretty competent O-4s...but also a TON of mouth-breathing field grade officers too. Hegseth sucks on his own merits (or lack thereof) as a person.

SecDef Lovett only rose to O-4 before going into the NYC business community and then becoming a Special Assistant to SecWar Stimpson in 1940. https://history.defense.gov/Multimedia/Biographies/Article-V...

SecDef McElroy came up through Proctor & Gamble, no government or military experience. https://history.defense.gov/Multimedia/Biographies/Article-V...

Just as a few examples of adequately-successful SecDefs coming from "unimpressive" paper resumes.

jandrewrogers 1 days ago [-]
The issue is much deeper and more concerning. They’ve been using Signal like this across multiple administrations because the “official” tools are broken to the point of being almost useless. Signal has been one of the major workarounds.

It isn’t enough to say “don’t use Signal”, at some point they need to address the reality that there are no functional alternatives.

troyvit 21 hours ago [-]
The article dissects what's on Hesgeth's desk behind him. First, there's a personal computer there connected to the open web. The article says, "He wanted this computer to use the messaging app Signal, which is the preferred method of communication among Trump's government officials."

Right next to that computer is a "Cisco IP Phone 8851 with a 14-key expansion module." That phone "connects the President, the National Security Council, Cabinet members, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, intelligence agency watch centers, and others." IOW everybody ostensibly on that Signal chat except the editor of The Atlantic.

So now I'm questioning what "functional" means in this context. Does it mean "A thing I can type into while I'm at my desk and can continue to use while I'm taking a dump as long as I poop in public wifi", or does it mean "a thing that brings all top staff together to truly "have op-sec"?

Reading further it looks like he also had access to "SecDef Cables", which provides " interoperable, certified and accredited, multi-security level voice, video, and data services."

So there are functional alternatives, especially considering the functions I personally thought our government was looking for. Maybe they prioritized a safe space for Waltz to use his favorite emojis instead?

patrickhogan1 1 days ago [-]
Bingo. If a hacker did this it would be understood as a sign that the comms aren’t secure and praised. He was clearly briefed on Salt Typhoon.

The thing I am more bothered by is why would he take a picture of his desk, thereby narrowing the attack profile.

2419410794 1 days ago [-]
> Has Congress made it illegal to use an off-brand messaging app for secure communications?

Yes. The law requires that classified information be handled under certain standards.

> _Why_ is it insecure?

Classified data is being transmitted on an unsecured device. If Hegseth's personal phone has Uber, Tinder, ... whatever apps installed, that software is running on a device that's contains national secrets.

Systems which handle classified data are meant to be airgapped from the normal internet/normal software.

The issue is not that signal is insecure, but rather that sensitive government information demands additional precaution (e.g. airgapping).

There's a separate issue that there are legal requirements for maintaining records of government communication. Using a personal device (especially with disappearing messages) is illegal since it doesn't maintain this documentation.

Additionally, classified information is tracked to see who read it and when. In the event of a security leak, this can help isolate where the leak happened. If the information gets posted on Signal, then there's nothing more that can be tracked.

> For better or worse, he is the Secretary of Defense...The man we've entrusted to help coordinate our national defense.

That's not the way rule of law works. The Secretary of Defense doesn't get to _decide_ we're doing things differently now. His actions, as well as the actions of his staff, are bound by the laws that congress has passed.

> We need to start from the presumption that the people-in-power don't care that it's always been done this way...in fact, they have a ton of pressure to be different. But, in some cases, these people may be willing to listen to reasonable arguments which clearly establish _why_ using Signal is unreasonably worse than using US Government Issue messaging.

The onus should not be on the general public to convince the Secretary of Defense to adhere to bog standard requirements for handling sensitive information. If he has an idea, "I think using Signal on my personal phone to discuss imminent military actions is better than using a secure line," he could push that idea forward. Have the Pentagon's security staff evaluate the idea. Instead, he simply did it.

h4ck_th3_pl4n3t 1 days ago [-]
Regarding Signal:

Check out what happened to the Signal FOSS fork.

Then check out what Molly is doing, and why.

Personally I'd favor Briar over Signal any day.

vkou 1 days ago [-]
Anyone in the military who did this, and didn't have the president personally protecting him would be cooling his heels in an 8x8 cell in Fort Leavenworth for a very long time.
SubiculumCode 1 days ago [-]
The issue is that it has all been done with great incompetence, and with apparent glorification of ignorance as a sign of bravado. I, for one, want serious people in charge of my defense, not sycophants more concerned with their stage makeup, hair, fitted suit, and with 'owning the libs' than defending our nation.
curiousgal 1 days ago [-]
> help coordinate our national defense

I mean, thinking the DoD is actually defending the U.S. is where you went wrong. The stakes are so incredibly low that none of this actually matters.