@suzianne saidApparently Vivify and Kev share your same confusion. I am writing about 27 IPhones that were wiped clean, either by osmosis or by an action of their 27 owners, who were part of Mueller's team, and investigators who are about to expose Hillary and the others would like to see their contents, to tie up a few loose ends.
WTF are you talking about?
It gets harder to tell every day.
You see, Vivify and Kev make loose comments above, like 'why did they do it,' such as that. But the point is that there is chicanery and collusion on Mueller's $30M team that was trying to tie Trump to the Russians. Why they did it is irrelevant. Anyway, this is a good exercise/thread to show the diff in liberals who ignore the crux of the matter and blow smoke, and conservatives, who LOVE the meat of any matter. No need to respond, esp if you respond like the haphazard Vivify and Kev.
@averagejoe1 saidStill haven't read Mueller's report then?
Apparently Vivify and Kev share your same confusion. I am writing about 27 IPhones that were wiped clean, either by osmosis or by an action of their 27 owners, who were part of Mueller's team, and investigators who are about to expose Hillary and the others would like to see their contents, to tie up a few loose ends.
You see, Vivify and Kev make loose comments abov ...[text shortened]... E the meat of any matter. No need to respond, esp if you respond like the haphazard Vivify and Kev.
You have no room to talk about it.
I wrote this on another thread, but I'll post it here as well.
I used to work for Blackberry in their MDM sector. Mobile data management is when an entity has the ability to control information sent from mobile devices.
Each company is able to determine what level of control they want over their mobile devices. This level of control can also include controlling the phone itself, and even locking or completely wiping their devices.
How this works is a company would download the app into their phones and then determine what level of control they want over their phone. They would have the ability to lock the phone after incorrect passwords or even completely wipe the data. And this is determined by what the security needs of the company is. In the case of the government, they have set their phones to be completely wiped if certain conditions are met.
For example too many incorrect password attempts can be seen as someone trying to hack a phone, or if a phone hasn't been accessed after a certain amount of time, that can be seen as a lost device, in which case the data would be wiped.
In other words there's lots of reasons why phones in MDM can be wiped. It's actually quite easy. You need to understand that the users of the mobile devices are not actively wiping the phones themselves; they are meeting criteria set by the government for the conditions to wipe their phones.
One of the clients I worked with was the U.S. navy, on a fairly frequent basis. They used MDM with similar restrictions.
Without being aware of this I can see how conspiracies can be concocted. But the simple truth is that devices under MDM can very easily be wiped just for simple human error like incorrectly entering passwords.
@vivify saideach user gave their own excuse for wiping...mdm was never a factor
I wrote this on another thread, but I'll post it here as well.
I used to work for Blackberry in their MDM sector. Mobile data management is when an entity has the ability to control information sent from mobile devices.
Each company is able to determine what level of control they want over their mobile devices. This level of control can also include controlling the phone ...[text shortened]... under MDM can very easily be wiped just for simple human error like incorrectly entering passwords.
@mott-the-hoople saidMott makes a good point, that MDM was not mentioned, but rather lame reasons or excuses were given, all in tandem, and obvious misrepresentations . But the REAL standout is how well the explanation of Vivify above is written. Very good. And, we learn. Head to the front of the class....well, maybe to the 2nd row!!
each user gave their own excuse for wiping...mdm was never a factor
?Did you write that ?!?!? 🙂
@mott-the-hoople saidWow !!! Damaging stuff !!
they were wiped because, unlike blackberries, iphones can be cleared of data without the need of hammers.
This could really hurt Hilary’s election campaign !! 😆😆😆😆
@mott-the-hoople saidFrom Averagejoe's OP:
each user gave their own excuse for wiping...mdm was never a factor
"The staff said some wiped themselves, other members said they had forgotten passwords, and tried to enter it too many times and were locked out, and then the phones wiped themselves".
AJ clearly points out the phones "wiped themselves". How does a phone do that by itself? MDM. That, or the phones were programmed to do so, which makes sense for government phones.
@averagejoe1 said"Upon review a draft of this report, the Office of the Deputy Attorney General told the OIG that the Department routinely resets mobile devices to factory settings when the device is returned from a user to enable that device to be issued to another user in the future."https://www.justice.gov/oip/foia-library/general_topics/communications_strzok_and_page_09_04_20/download
https://www.nationalreview.com/news/at-least-27-phones-from-special-counsels-office-were-wiped-before-doj-inspector-general-could-review-them/
I thought this may be worth a post, as it hs dawned on me, and I am serious here, that many of our posters do not seem to be aware of some of the goings on. Truly, the liberal media does not post stuff that would harm the Dem c ...[text shortened]... about. Surely you prefer facts to a Sonhouse type crashing thru your monitor into your living room!
p. 37
@no1marauder saidAnd this thread is done.
"Upon review a draft of this report, the Office of the Deputy Attorney General told the OIG that the Department routinely resets mobile devices to factory settings when the device is returned from a user to enable that device to be issued to another user in the future."https://www.justice.gov/oip/foia-library/general_topics/communications_strzok_and_page_09_04_20/download
p. 37
@vivify saidYes, it WOULD be done, if it has been concluded and confirmed that that is what happened. But, It has not been concluded and confirmed. Oh, what a kettle of fish. And the fact remains, as Mott said, this reason of an agency reset has never been given as an answer.
And this thread is done.
@averagejoe1 saidOf course not, as these people were not lost from the agency so their phones will
Yes, it WOULD be done, if it has been concluded and confirmed that that is what happened. But, It has not been concluded and confirmed. Oh, what a kettle of fish. And the fact remains, as Mott said, this reason of an agency reset has never been given as an answer.
not be reset and reissued by the agency. It's all a smoke screen.
The reason for the mass wipeout: A whole bunch of peeps scared witless of indictment.
Full stop.
@earl-of-trumps saidIs that the official party-line opinion?
Of course not, as these people were not lost from the agency so their phones will
not be reset and reissued by the agency. It's all a smoke screen.
The reason for the mass wipeout: A whole bunch of peeps scared witless of indictment.
Full stop.