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Reason: None provided.

That is interesting not because some company was "hacked", again, but because there suddenly exists some company nobody knew about that turn out to service SMS messages all over the world for many years without any mobile operator customers knowledge.

Interesting how it looks from the side of laws. Customers of mobile operators don't give access or permission to that company to deal with their SMS's, nor sign any agreement with it to handle that private correspondence. IDK, it is like you send a paper mail from USA using USPS to, say, Russia where it will be handled by Russian Post, thinking that there are only USPS and Russian Post will deal with your mail according to laws of Universal Postal Union and constitutions of both states that grants the privacy of correspondence and then discover that there is some unknown company with murky jurisdiction status owned by TPTB (Carlyle Group) who have full access to the contents of your paper mails.

PS: Possibly there is a tons of such shady international proxy companies owned by TPTB who have access to all private information you could imagine, some "dispatch" phone calls, some "take care" of your medical records, some "secure" your commercial secrets, some "store" states military info, etc. without any knowledge of end customers who think that they deal with white law-abiding services who signed privacy protection agreement with you. Since all that TPTB proxies have access to everything, all that wars, elections, bankruptcies, health care, economic crisises, nearly everything social, political or economical is just a directed by TPTB performance and never was anything more.

Interesting that for internet they had to create giant centralized honeypots like Facebook or Google/Apple to put their hands on peoples communications.

Never outsource anything critical.

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

That is interesting not because some company was "hacked", again, but because there suddenly exists some company nobody knew about that turn out to service SMS messages all over the world for many years without any mobile operator customers knowledge.

Interesting how it looks from the side of laws. Customers of mobile operators don't give access or permission to that company to deal with their SMS's, nor sign any agreement with it to handle that private correspondence. IDK, it is like you send a paper mail from USA using USPS to, say, Russia where it will be handled by Russian Post, thinking that there are only USPS and Russian Post will deal with your mail according to laws of Universal Postal Union and constitutions of both states that grants the privacy of correspondence and then discover that there is some unknown company with murky jurisdiction status owned by TPTB (Carlyle Group) who have full access to the contents of your paper mails.

PS: Possibly there is a tons of such shady international proxy companies owned by TPTB who have access to all private information you could imagine, some "dispatch" phone calls, some "take care" of your medical records, some "secure" your commercial secrets, some "store" states military info, etc. without any knowledge of end customers who think that they deal with white law-abiding services who signed privacy protection agreement with you. Since all that TPTB proxies have access to everything, all that wars, elections, bankruptcies, health care, economic crisises, nearly everything social, political or economical is just a directed show of TPTB and never was anything more.

Interesting that for internet they had to create giant centralized honeypots like Facebook or Google/Apple to put their hands on peoples communications.

Never outsource anything critical.

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

That is interesting not because some company was "hacked", again, but because there suddenly exists some company nobody knew about that turn out to service SMS messages all over the world for many years without any mobile operator customers knowledge.

Interesting how it looks from the side of laws. Customers of mobile operators don't give access or permission to that company to deal with their SMS's, nor sign any agreement with it to handle that private correspondence. IDK, it is like you send a paper mail using USPS to, say, Russia where it will be handled by Russian Post, thinking that there are only USPS and Russian Post will deal with your mail according to laws of Universal Postal Union and constitutions of both states that grants the privacy of correspondence and then discover that there is some unknown company with murky jurisdiction status owned by TPTB (Carlyle Group) who have full access to the contents of your paper mails.

PS: Possibly there is a tons of such shady international proxy companies owned by TPTB who have access to all private information you could imagine, some "dispatch" phone calls, some "take care" of your medical records, some "secure" your commercial secrets, some "store" states military info, etc. without any knowledge of end customers who think that they deal with white law-abiding services who signed privacy protection agreement with you. Since all that TPTB proxies have access to everything, all that wars, elections, bankruptcies, health care, economic crisises, nearly everything social, political or economical is just a directed show of TPTB and never was anything more.

Interesting that for internet they had to create giant centralized honeypots like Facebook or Google/Apple to put their hands on peoples communications.

Never outsource anything critical.

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

That is interesting not because some company was "hacked", again, but because there suddenly exists some company nobody knew about that turn out to service SMS messages all over the world for many years without any customers knowledge.

Interesting how it looks from the side of laws. Customers of mobile operators don't give access or permission to that company to deal with their SMS's, nor sign any agreement with it to handle that private correspondence. IDK, it is like you send a paper mail using USPS to, say, Russia where it will be handled by Russian Post, thinking that there are only USPS and Russian Post will deal with your mail according to laws of Universal Postal Union and constitutions of both states that grants the privacy of correspondence and then discover that there is some unknown company with murky jurisdiction status owned by TPTB (Carlyle Group) who have full access to the contents of your paper mails.

PS: Possibly there is a tons of such shady international proxy companies owned by TPTB who have access to all private information you could imagine, some "dispatch" phone calls, some "take care" of your medical records, some "secure" your commercial secrets, some "store" states military info, etc. without any knowledge of end customers who think that they deal with white law-abiding services who signed privacy protection agreement with you. Since all that TPTB proxies have access to everything, all that wars, elections, bankruptcies, health care, economic crisises, nearly everything social, political or economical is just a directed show of TPTB and never was anything more.

Interesting that for internet they had to create giant centralized honeypots like Facebook or Google/Apple to put their hands on peoples communications.

Never outsource anything critical.

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: Original

That is interesting not because some company was "hacked", again, but because there suddenly exists some company nobody knew about that turn out to service SMS messages all over the world for many years without any customers knowledge.

Interesting how it looks from the side of laws. Customers of mobile operators don't give access or permission to that company to deal with their SMS's, nor sign any agreement with it to handle that private correspondence. IDK, it is like you send a paper mail using USPS to, say, Russia where it will be handled by Russian Post, thinking that there are only USPS and Russian Post will deal with your mail according to laws of Universal Postal Union and constitutions of both states that grants the privacy of correspondence and then discover that there is some unknown company with murky jurisdiction status owned by TPTB (Carlyle Group) who have full access to the contents of your paper mails.

2 years ago
1 score