Forwarded from 𝗣𝗮𝘂𝗹 𝗙𝗹𝗲𝘂𝗿𝗲𝘁 (𝗔𝗯𝘀𝗼𝗹𝘂𝘁𝗲𝟭𝟳𝟳𝟲) ✝️🗽🇺🇸 (Absolute Conviction)
The awakening is happening. Right now. One day, we will all look back and realize exactly how strong we’ve been and exactly how much we fought through. The veil is only beginning to lift. Wait until you see how this ends. To quote someone we all know; “It will be Biblical”.
Our Faith has carried us. Our Faith shall deliver us. Amen. 🙏🏻
Our Faith has carried us. Our Faith shall deliver us. Amen. 🙏🏻
Forwarded from GEORGENEWS
SAVE AMERICA
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP
OCTOBER 7, 2021
BEDMINSTER, NJ
ICYMI: Tweet by Steve Scalise
Thank you to Steve Scalise and Family. Fake News never ends!
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https://news.1rj.ru/str/georgenews | @GEORGENEWS
PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP
OCTOBER 7, 2021
BEDMINSTER, NJ
ICYMI: Tweet by Steve Scalise
Thank you to Steve Scalise and Family. Fake News never ends!
###
https://news.1rj.ru/str/georgenews | @GEORGENEWS
Forwarded from GEORGENEWS
Accidentally unsealed warrant reveals Google served up data on anyone who searched sexual abuse victim’s name - media
Searching for “suspicious” terms, like the names of crime victims, may have snarled you in a massive online dragnet - according to a controversial warrant recently made public by accident.
So-called “keyword warrants” allowed authorities to slurp up the Google user data and IP addresses of anyone who so much as typed the terms into a search engine.
Feds ordered Google to serve up the private data during a 2019 investigation into the trafficking and sexual abuse of a young Wisconsin woman, who claimed she’d been kidnapped. Anyone who’d searched for info about her – including her name, two separate spellings of her mother’s name, and her address – across a 16-day period, had their details handed over by the tech giant. (Forbes)
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http://t.me/georgenews | @GEORGENEWS
Searching for “suspicious” terms, like the names of crime victims, may have snarled you in a massive online dragnet - according to a controversial warrant recently made public by accident.
So-called “keyword warrants” allowed authorities to slurp up the Google user data and IP addresses of anyone who so much as typed the terms into a search engine.
Feds ordered Google to serve up the private data during a 2019 investigation into the trafficking and sexual abuse of a young Wisconsin woman, who claimed she’d been kidnapped. Anyone who’d searched for info about her – including her name, two separate spellings of her mother’s name, and her address – across a 16-day period, had their details handed over by the tech giant. (Forbes)
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http://t.me/georgenews | @GEORGENEWS