Categories: Free Speech Issues

Roger Stone Suggests Mueller & Thugs Reading His Email

Photos courtesy Stone Cold Truth.

  • Published on Instagram January 14, 2018

  • rogerjstonejrSo I guess Mueller and his thugs are reading my e-mail. Not surprising since the Obama Justice Dept asked the FISA court to put me under surveillance in 2016 simply because of my relationship with Donald Trump and long before I tweeted anything about Wikileaks – all of which was based on things Julian Assange had already said in public – and no libtards I never said John Podesta’s email would be published by Wikileaks while accurately predicting his shady business dealings exposed in the Jan 2016 Panama papers would come under scrutiny @infowars_com@adamkokesh @infowars_crew@dailycaller @breitbart_news


Photo courtesy Stone Cold Truth.

While this warning from Google is legitimate, Google will “never indicate which government-backed attackers we think are responsible for the attempts.” Here is what Google has to say about these warnings:

Reassuring our users about government-backed attack warnings

March 24, 2017

Since 2012, we’ve warned our users if we believe their Google accounts are being targeted by government-backed attackers.

We send these out of an abundance of caution — the notice does not necessarily mean that the account has been compromised or that there is a widespread attack. Rather, the notice reflects our assessment that a government-backed attacker has likely attempted to access the user’s account or computer through phishing or malware, for example. You can read more about these warnings here.

In order to secure some of the details of our detection, we often send a batch of warnings to groups of at-risk users at the same time, and not necessarily in real-time. Additionally, we never indicate which government-backed attackers we think are responsible for the attempts; different users may be targeted by different attackers.

Security has always been a top priority for us. Robust, automated protections help prevent scammers from signing into your Google account, Gmail always uses an encrypted connection when you receive or send email, we filter more than 99.9% of spam — a common source of phishing messages — from Gmail, and we show users when messages are from an unverified or unencrypted source.

An extremely small fraction of users will ever see one of these warnings, but if you receive this warning from us, it’s important to take action on it. You can always take a two-minute Security Checkup, and for maximum protection from phishing, enable two-step verification with a Security Key.

——————

Gretchen Mullen

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