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Whistleblower details how DOGE may have taken sensitive NLRB data

1171 points2 monthsnpr.org
acdha2 months ago

This part is really damning: a real efficiency audit might need a lot of access to look for signs of hidden activity, but they’d never need to hide traces of what they did:

> Meanwhile, according to the disclosure and records of internal communications, members of the DOGE team asked that their activities not be logged on the system and then appeared to try to cover their tracks behind them, turning off monitoring tools and manually deleting records of their access — evasive behavior that several cybersecurity experts interviewed by NPR compared to what criminal or state-sponsored hackers might do.

The subsequent message about Russian activity could be a coincidence–Internet background noise-but given how these are not very technically skilled and are moving very fast in systems they don’t understand, I’d be completely unsurprised to learn that they unintentionally left something exposed or that one of them has been compromised.

throw0101c2 months ago

> This part is really damning: a real efficiency audit

There were already people auditing departments, but they got fired early on:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inspector_general#United_State...

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_dismissals_of_inspectors_...

There's even an entire agency devoted to auditing:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Accountability_Offi...

Trying to find efficiency by bringing in the private sector is not a new thing:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Commission

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownlow_Committee

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoover_Commission

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Partnership_for_Reinv...

actionfromafar2 months ago

[flagged]

throw0101d2 months ago

> But bringing in the mob sector? Is that new?

No. But getting rid of cronyism/nepotism did happen at one point:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_service_reform_in_the_Un...

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoils_system

haugis2 months ago

[flagged]

rsynnott2 months ago

Not entirely, though under rather different circumstances: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Underworld

asciii2 months ago

We let the word PayPal Mafia get to their head

Aurornis2 months ago

> The subsequent message about Russian activity could be a coincidence–Internet background noise

These weren't random login attempts. It says the Russian login attempts had the correct login credentials of newly created accounts.

If the article is correct, the accounts were created and then shortly afterward the correct credentials were used to attempt a login from a Russian source.

That's a huge issue if true. Could be that someone's laptop is compromised.

acdha2 months ago

It certainly needs a full investigation but I don’t want to presume the results. It wouldn’t be the first time some tool reported a wildly incorrect location for an IP address and the focus should be on DOGE breaking a number of federal laws and doing things which no legitimate auditor ever needs to do.

lostlogin2 months ago

The login attempt was made by someone 115 years old, receiving social security payments and living in Russia.

jmcgough2 months ago

> That's a huge issue if true. Could be that someone's laptop is compromised.

Or perhaps someone got invited to the wrong group chat again.

Wololooo2 months ago

No need to have your laptop compromised if your just hand over the information...

not_kurt_godel2 months ago

Is it really a compromise if the opps (or should I say: "opps") are deliberately welcomed in with open arms? Granting Russians access here wouldn't even crack the top 10 gifts this administration has given to Putin in the last month.

Terr_2 months ago

Reminder that Trump wanted the US to partner with a foreign country to protect American elections (!?) and the country he wanted to help "secure" fair elections was the Russian dictatorship. (!!)

https://www.politico.com/story/2018/07/16/trump-putin-russia...

DrNosferatu2 months ago

Then not “opps”, but instead “ooops”.

egypturnash2 months ago

> Could be that someone is compromised.

ftfy

avs7332 months ago

>A real efficiency audit might need a lot of access to look for signs of hidden activity, but they’d never need to hide traces of what they did

In fact I would imagine they would do exactly the opposite because they would look at the mere ability to hide what they did as an audit finding.

Terr_2 months ago

"The new bank-manager has hired some friends of his to improve the security of the bank vault."

"We already have an audit from last year, we just need the funding to improv--"

"Oh, and they want to turn off all the security cameras next weekend. You'll know it's them because they'll be wearing masks."

"Sir, we have a responsibility to our customers, we can't ju--"

"Do it or you're fired."

avs7332 months ago

monday morning:

manager: "the auditors found all of our money missing"

::silence::

manager: "they are clearly doing an amazing job, and you are all fired for allowing such fraud waste and abuse"

z3c02 months ago

The use of DNS tunneling and skirting logs makes my head spin. Even if justification of exfiltrating 10GB of sensitive data could be made, there's widely available means of doing so that aren't the methods of state-sponsored hackers and the like.

codedokode2 months ago

"DNS tunneling" (abnormal number of DNS requests) actually might be caused by a software that doesn't use DNS cache. I was once banned by 8.8.8.8 (Google's DNS server) for sending too many requests because youtube-dl was making a DNS request for each tiny segment of a video (and there were thousands of them).

Well, maybe one shouldn't be using Google DNS server when violating ToU to download Google's video.

z3c02 months ago

But an abnormal number of DNS requests AND recorded outbound data totaling 10GB, with no other obvious indication of a less-subversive means of data transfer? I'd be very surprised if youtube-dl could come close to even 10MB of DNS requests at its chattiest

tjpnz2 months ago

Everything's going to have to be replaced and it's going to be hugely expensive. But that's not going to happen until at least 2029 - plenty of time for bad actors to get settled in and cause real damage.

c-linkage2 months ago

[flagged]

geoka92 months ago

Oh, there will be elections. After all, even USSR and Russia had/have elections of all kinds.

setsewerd2 months ago

Out of curiosity, since you appear to be very certain of this, what are you doing personally to deal with this? Are you leaving the country, moving into the hills, building a bunker, etc? I don't mean to sound antagonistic or anything, I genuinely would like to know.

+1
tastyface2 months ago
+1
mlinhares2 months ago
UncleMeat2 months ago

Not OP, but I'm seeking foreign citizenship through prior family history as a mechanism for legally escaping the US should it come to that.

johnnyanmac2 months ago

not OP: not sure. I'm in California so things can go crazy for a whole other litany of reasons if any single claim of Newsom starts to blossom. It's going to be a crazy ride if no one cheecks Trump early enough.

I'm waiting it out for now. I'm "close" enough to communte to Los Angeles, but otherwise on the outskirts of the county as a whole. It's a weird place for any federal service to go out of their way to exploit.

johnnyanmac2 months ago

Legit inquiry, do you think Trump will last to 2028? I personally don't, but it can go all sorts of ways.

As an aside, I also consider a civil war as "not making it". Having to wage war on the people you lead is fundamentally a failure of all systems.

+3
trealira2 months ago
aftbit2 months ago

[flagged]

+1
Angostura2 months ago
johnnyanmac2 months ago

>Do you honestly believe there have ever been _fair_ elections in America?

With a confidence level of some 99.9%+ of votes being legitimate, yes. with 155 million voters in 2024 nationals, that leaves a margin of about 155k illegitimate votes. Elections can be super close (see 2000), but any fraud that went undetected would not sway most American elections. At least not with this electoral college system.

>Do you honestly believe there will not be at least _some_ kind of election in 2028?

Yeah probably. I'm not even sure if Trump will get that far, though. we'll have to see how damning this SAVE act is on women first and if the courts strike this down in the next 18 months or so.

>Even if it's staged, form must be respected.

When has Trump ever done that? most other leaders I disagree with still did this. But not him.

jmyeet2 months ago

So NLRB handles confidential complaints. The complainant's idenity might be kept confidential. Exact details may be kept confidential.

Why aren't we to believe that this is Elon Musk going after anyone filing a complaint to the NLRB (from X, Twitter or SpaceX) or, worse yet (from Elon's POV), anyone potentially organizing any unionization effort?

There's absolutely no reason DOGE should have access to this information. There's absolutely no reason their activity, such as what information they accessed, should be hidden.

freejazz2 months ago

It also contradicts the idea that they are acting transparently.

Applejinx2 months ago

Compromised implies they're not the Russian team to start with. I'd be looking for one of them to lose nerve and betray that ALL of them are the Russian team.

dionian2 months ago

I'm going to wait a while and see if this information pans out. Remember when there was a huge scandal about Trump communicating with Russia but then it just turned out to be a spam email? https://theintercept.com/2016/11/01/heres-the-problem-with-t...

ndsipa_pomu2 months ago

> criminal or state-sponsored hackers

It looks to be both

tomaskafka2 months ago

It appears that “appearing dumb and clumsy while opening the doors for enemies” is a plausibly deniable mode of whole Trump’s administration.

atkailash2 months ago

[dead]

chrisweekly2 months ago

"Interviewed by NPR" -- ok we can stop right there. Remember, they're dangerous enemies of the state, along with PBS and Fred Rogers.

acdha2 months ago

Sarcasm isn’t appropriate for something this serious.

mindslight2 months ago

Sarcasm isn't the problem per se. But it's very important to remember Poe's law, and to avoid adding to the noise. If what you're going to say is just a parody of something a Kool-aid drinking anti-American destructionist might say, there's no need.

+1
chrisweekly2 months ago
bjoli2 months ago

I think it is. These people need to know we find them ridiculous. We should not, however, understate the danger of what they are doing.

+1
acdha2 months ago
decremental2 months ago

[dead]

DavidPiper2 months ago

(Non-American here.) If they weren't already, it seems like private businesses, security researchers, and I suppose the general public, should start treating US government agencies as privacy and security threats, just like you'd treat any other phisher, scammer, etc.

If government agencies are compromised - via software backdoors or any other mechanism - any data and systems they can access should be considered compromised too.

garte2 months ago

this sounds exactly like that's the goal behind all this.

exceptione2 months ago

Neoliberalism -> Corporatism -> Fascism/Autocracy

You are a Human Resource to be commercialized. Ad tech => Private Intelligence.

One is not a person. One has no rights. Unless one can free themself and their loved ones of neoliberal brainwashing.

tlogan2 months ago

The unfortunate reality is that a half of the US population sees the NLRB as a burden on small businesses—primarily because its policies shift frequently, making compliance costly and complex for those without deep legal resources. [1]

And the same half of the population do not trust anything what npr.org says.

Understanding the above dynamic is key to grasping the current state of discourse in the U.S.

[1] https://edworkforce.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?Docum...

the_doctah2 months ago

That's because NPR is pure left wing propaganda, run by an ex-CIA spook who thinks the truth is inconvenient.

axus2 months ago

Some may claim that NPR is retaliating for getting defunded for the next 2 years.

nilamo2 months ago

"Defunded" NPR gets less than 2% of their income from the government. Defunding them isn't as big of a deal as claims appear.

s1artibartfast2 months ago

I wish that were true. But 2% number is essentially disinformation. NPR gets a large portion of its budget from affiliate stations, which are funded by the government.

greenie_beans2 months ago

kinda true but also misleading without adding more facts. vermont public receives ~10% of revenue from the CPD ($2,044,000). they spent a total of $2,253,926 on "Program acquisitions" in 2024. it's not clear from their financial report how much of this goes to NPR license fees. so you are sharing as much disinformation as anybody. https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/5b/64/62bb42da4ec8b5f858176dc4...

brendoelfrendo2 months ago

An odd claim, since NPR getting defunded is itself a retaliation from the current administration for not reporting positively enough about Trump.

axus2 months ago

Oh yeah I'm predicting a claim will be made I disagree with. But I can imagine the mental gymnastics, post a prediction and watch for the outcome.

Usually there's a shakedown, did Trump ever make NPR an offer they "couldn't" refuse?

rbanffy2 months ago

Similar to the one he made to Harvard? Do they even have to make such a thing explicitly these days? I would just assume they won't fund anything that's critical to the current government.

bilekas2 months ago

This isn't really a shock to me, but what's more frustrating I guess is that absolutely nothing will come of this. I have zero confidence any of this will even be cleaned up, just the same ranting about "fake news".

Really feels like the fox is already in the coop.

stevenwoo2 months ago

That the intrusion came over Starlink from Russia with valid login credentials would be unbelievable in a tale from speculative fiction. Reality Winner looks like a hero compared to these clowns.

inemesitaffia2 months ago

Over Starlink from Russia. Very evident there's no networking knowledge here.

deepsun2 months ago

Politicians are only afraid of not being re-elected. So I see that the only way is to advocate voters to hold their representatives accountable. Start a campaign in you state about that, and I think you'll get an answer pretty fast, since they are very sensitive to popularity and competition matters.

casenmgreen2 months ago

Just read of this on BSky.

Has some of the protected disclosure document from the whistleblower.

https://bsky.app/profile/mattjay.com/post/3ln2dgoksce2e

Looks like Elon's staff went in and made a copy of everything - which in this case NLRB, so sensitive stuff, but any state department going to have a ton of sensitive stuff - and sent it who knows where; this after disabling all logging and a ton of security, presumably to try to cover their tracks.

This is bad. These guys are looking like bad actors, with State-level authorization for access to everything.

Also looks like they're kids and don't have the hang of security, and the professional Russian State run APTs have hacked them.

jonnycomputer2 months ago

I think we should be trying to understand what NxGenBdoorExtract is. NxGen is a system for NLRB. Bdoor is pretty evocative of a back door. He took he git offline or made it private. I can't find it on archive.org.

snypher2 months ago

Or who has access to DogeSA_2d5c3e0446f9@nlrb.microsoft.com?

https://oversightdemocrats.house.gov/sites/evo-subsites/demo...

jonnycomputer2 months ago

On the other hand, there are two things about that screenshot of the repo which is a little weird. First, the timestamp of that repo is cutoff, but, the items seem to be in reverse chronological order, which would put that repo sometime in 2021-ish, or before.

The owner could, of course, just make it public again, or put it back up, and end all the speculation.

anthonygarcia212 months ago

I'm intrigued by the "Mission 2" notation. That suggests, perhaps, that DOGE has a "Mission 1" (its public, ostensible purpose) and a hidden "Mission 2" known only to Musk and his minions.

e2le2 months ago

archive.today has a snapshot taken on 28 Feb 2025, although it doesn't show any repository with that name.

https://archive.ph/fUa5Q

jonnycomputer2 months ago

This confuses me greatly. Comparing your link, I can find the repos in that screenshot in the archive snapshot, but as you say, the NxGenBdoorExtract repo is not there, and the repo where it would be is a tinder-react-native clone (updated Sep 20 2020)...

I'm trying to think through this:

1. if the screenshot is not doctored, then the implied ordering of last updated would have had it last updated before January 20, 2021; which would mean it has nothing to do with what is alleged in the article.

2. But in the archive.ph snapshot from 2/28/25 doesn't have it at all anywhere.

3. Archive.org's 3/21/25 snapshot shows the same thing as archive.ph

4. The article states that after this tweet (https://x.com/SollenbergerRC/status/1895609294810464390) dated 2/28/25 (the date of the archive.ph 2/28/25 snapshot), Berulis noticed NxGenBdoorExtract in the repo: "After journalist Roger Sollenberger started posting on X about the account, Berulis noticed something Wick was working on: a project, or repository, titled "NxGenBdoorExtract." Wick made it private before Berulis could investigate further, he told NPR.

Of course, if it really only was public for a very brief moment then it might not be in the snapshot, and the article isn't clear exactly how long after that tweet that Berulis supposedly discovered this.

All I can say is this: I can't figure out for the life of me what all this adds up to.

softwaredoug2 months ago

Some context as I understand it is DOGE employees are all temporary gov't employees whose employment expires (in June?). Assuming they follow the law there (big If), then they scramble around these agencies with tremendous urgency trying to please Elon (or the powers that be?).

And they absolutely should be resisted with this deadline in mind...

tootie2 months ago

They are using heavy-handed tactics. Per this article, the whistleblower was threatened. At the SSA, a 26-year veteran was dragged out of the building. Similar story at the IRS. DOGE has the backing of US Marshalls and the president. They can resist, but they'll just end up locked out.

deepsun2 months ago

Well, being locked up is not the worst thing that can happen, especially for a noble purpose. And maybe later someone would film movies about their [in]actions.

DrillShopper2 months ago

Until you get sent to an Salvadorian concentration camp or a Guantanamo concentration camp

_hyn32 months ago

If the CEO of your company empowers a team to audit your work, would you 'resist'?

And this Chief Executive was elected by the majority of the country, specifically to take these actions that he'd clearly stated he would take.

The resistance is actually the violation of federal law. It's no different from contempt of court; within the President's domain, he has a huge amount of power. The President can also modify existing policy (regulations) at any time and literally make new laws (Executive Orders have the force of law) as long as they don't conflict with current law, as well as overturning previous President's Executive Orders.

Of course, then the shoe will be on the other food someday, too, just as it was when Biden took over from Trump and then they switched places again.

As President Obama said, "I've got a pen, and I've got a phone."

https://www.npr.org/2014/01/20/263766043/wielding-a-pen-and-...

acdha2 months ago

> If the CEO of your company empowers a team to audit your work, would you 'resist'?

If he ordered you to break the law or professional standards, would you obey? This is not hypothetical for many people: if you’re a lawyer, professional engineer, healthcare professional, work in HR, etc. it is not at all uncommon to suggest legal ways to accomplish a goal.

According to the article, that’s exactly what happened here: they have various federal laws and regulations covering their work, but as at other agencies, DOGE decided they don’t need to follow those. This confirms that their stated purpose is not their true motivation but it remains to be seen whether there will be any consequences.

jjav2 months ago

> The resistance is actually the violation of federal law.

Your misunderstanding seems to be to think that the word of the president is the law, like in a dictatorship. In the US system of separation of powers, that's not how it is supposed to work.

+1
distortionfield2 months ago
pizza2 months ago

What would you do if your CEO tells you to do something illegal? What would you do if your CEO then tells you to intimidate people who refuse to carry out the illegal requests by tailing them and then taping the surveillance footage to their door as a threat?

nobody99992 months ago

>And this Chief Executive was elected by the majority of the country,

Except said "chief executive" was not elected by "a majority of the country."

He wasn't even elected by a majority of those who voted (~35-40% of the population), but rather a plurality of those who voted (~20% of the population).

Note that I am not claiming that there was anything nefarious (I have no evidence to support making such a claim), just that those who voted for that person represent only ~20% of the US population, not a "majority of the country."

jasonjayr2 months ago

The CEO of the company is bound by laws and rules that the same country enacted. We the people are the board. The CEO answers to the board.

There are procedures to do the things that he said he wanted to do, because we are well aware of how an unchecked executive can destroy our government by doing what they want however they want.

Allow me to illustrate Exhibit A, unfolding now.

_DeadFred_2 months ago

The only agencies the President gives orders to like this are the military ones. We don't have a dictator that dictates from on high. That is why we have the Administrative Procedures act, the executives 'executiving' needs to be consistent and based on logical reasons.

We used to have a government like this, a spoils system, and it didn't work. So both parties created the civil service. Both parties passed things like that Administrative Procedures act.

tootie2 months ago

President isn't CEO. Laws and budgets are set by Congress. EOs do not have the force of law and many have been invalidated by courts.

+2
_hyn32 months ago
jayd162 months ago

If the CEO brought in their friends as temps to screw around? Which they were only allowed to do until the next board meeting when they will very likely not be approved? Yeah, I'd probably resist any royal fuck ups until then.

iamdbtoo2 months ago

> And this Chief Executive was elected by the majority of the country

No, he was not. He was elected by ~30% of the possible voters in this country because most people chose no one and stayed home.

theteapot2 months ago

> ... DOGE employees demanded the highest level of access ... When an IT staffer suggested a streamlined process to activate those accounts in a way that would let their activities be tracked, in accordance with NLRB security policies, the IT staffers were told to stay out of DOGE's way, the disclosure continues.

But did they actually "turn off logging"?? How do you even do that? Anyone know what access control system they are talking about?

SpicyLemonZest2 months ago

It sounds to me like there's some application-level logging on this NxGen system, and DOGE obtained permissions to read the underlying storage without going through the application. But the article does also say later on that there are specific controls and monitoring systems Berulis did find turned off.

drooopy2 months ago

If there are elections again in the future and more sane, qualified people take office, the Justice Department will have its hands full for decades.

MysticOracle2 months ago

The whistleblower and his lawyer gave interviews on CNN & MSNBC:

CNN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TsqgXfrSksI

Mr_Eri_Atlov2 months ago

The only point of DOGE is to cause as much irreparable damage as possible to American infrastructure.

It will go down as the most successful assault on America since 9/11 once the true scale of the damage is understood.

ck22 months ago

That backdoor code is going to lurk for decades.

Not only will Musk be able to tap into it for years but foreign governments.

bilbo0s2 months ago

This is the real problem, and the reason we never should have allowed access to sensitive government and societal data in this fashion.

the_doctah2 months ago

Pure ridiculous conjecture.

DrNosferatu2 months ago

The “young and inexperienced” staffers narrative is very convenient to perform target operations on (specially) sensitive data.

DrNosferatu2 months ago

*targeted

tehjoker2 months ago

Makes sense, this is a lawless reactionary attack on the republic. Their purpose is to put capital ever more firmly in charge. That means attacking workers.

sherdil20222 months ago

Why isn’t this considered helping the enemy from within / treason?

Why are people being deported for no crimes or for far lesser crimes?

deepsun2 months ago

It is. But since citizens don't do anything about it, they don't need to care.

jokoon2 months ago

It's likely that this team was infiltrated by adversary countries

autoexec2 months ago

I'd always assumed that we had three letter agencies whose entire job was to keep this sort of thing from happening, but it seems that none of them are concerned about protecting our government's secrets or even our democracy. What good is the panopticon if the watchers are asleep on the job?

jokoon2 months ago

Those agency can do their security work as long as there are laws and mandates about that.

But those agencies cannot do anything if an elected/named official decides to work for an adversary, since those agencies are under command of the elected/name official.

That's why democracy is beyond the scope of those agencies.

Those agencies are "fences" to protect a teenager from doing mistakes. But it cannot protect the teenager from setting himself on fire.

In my view, democracy was always vulnerable if the people or elected official can be convinced of whatever.

autoexec2 months ago

> Those agency can do their security work as long as there are laws and mandates about that.

My understanding was that they routinely do their work far outside of the law. Because such agencies have demonstrated a willingness to violate the constitution of the US, lie to both congress and the president, overthrow the democratically elected leaders of sovereign nations, perform acts of torture, rape, human experimentation, assassination, etc. it seems odd that they'd suddenly shy away from taking any action now.

+1
timschmidt2 months ago
IOT_Apprentice2 months ago

They’ve all been either fired or out in a leash as musk collects all the PII and secrets in every agency & department and feeds it into a private subnet of his AI. His minions are certainly doing that.

pjc502 months ago

The template here is not Nazi Germany but Pinochet. The CIA have backed right-wing authoritarianism everywhere else in the Americas, why not in America itself?

"Supporting democracy" in Latin America always meant anti-communism, even to the extent of ending free elections.

therealpygon2 months ago

What is that saying they like to say all the time? “If you aren’t doing anything wrong, you should have nothing to fear.” Certainly seems like they are afraid of people seeing what they are doing for “not doing anything wrong”.

tyrrvk2 months ago

This coupled with the hot mike incident yesterday where Trump was saying how El Salvador needed to build more mega prisons for the "home grown..terrorists" is beyond concerning. Sure sounds like DOGE is compiling lists of 'less desirable s' that will soon be swept off the streets in unmarked vans. America has turned fully fascist.

the_doctah2 months ago

[flagged]

dekhn2 months ago

slippery slope isn't a fallacy, and we're discussing matters that can't be directly analyzed using purely logical arguments.

daveguy2 months ago

Nah. It's getting pretty blatant, comrade.

campuscodi2 months ago

DOGE staff are just behaving like a foreign cyber-espionage group at this point

92834092322 months ago

It should be clear at this point that DOGE is trying to create a unified database of all persons in the US for targeting. Every single bit of data that they can get about you from the government or social media will be tagged to you Minority Report style. They were clear about wanting to deport citizens to El Salvador as well. Once you are identified as the other side they will come for you. If you are waiting for it to get worse before taking action and getting involved, we are already at that point.

> And Berulis noticed that an unknown user had exported a "user roster," a file with contact information for outside lawyers who have worked with the NLRB.

Possibly looking for lawyers for Trump to target with EOs or blackmail.

ActorNightly2 months ago

If someone is incompetent enough to understand Cobol databases, I doubt they are thinking about it on this level.

Given all of Musks actions, he is probably wanting to destroy any agency that went against him, because he truly believes he is the humanities savior and his companies are doing things the right way.

wormlord2 months ago

How you are getting downvotes is beyond me. People are finally waking up to the idea that the whole point of the Trump admin is to privatize the government, but haven't woken up to the fact that we are entering an era of state terror. Keep your heads buried HN, you'll be dragged kicking and screaming into reality in a few months anyways.

giraffe_lady2 months ago

It's extremely frustrating and something I've thought a lot about over the years where we were pretty obviously building towards this outcome. A couple things:

First the "average" american is softly but ideologically committed to liberalism¹ & democracy as fundamental values. From that perspective the mind kind of recoils from accepting this. If this is really what's happening, what does civic obligation demand of me? How does that reconcile with my inability to keep my family safe in the face of a motivated & powerful state that wishes to harm me through them? Easier to believe this isn't what is happening, I don't need to take action yet. A powerful example of motivated reasoning.

Second a significant part of the userbase here, as with the general population, supports some or all of these actions. Simple as.

¹ Like in the traditional sense, ie "a political and moral philosophy based on the rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, the right to private property, and equality before the law" from wikipedia.

92834092322 months ago

> Second a significant part of the userbase here, as with the general population, supports some or all of these actions. Simple as.

People support what they claim to do doing and are naive enough to believe they are doing what they say without asking questions about why they seem to be going out of there way to avoid transparency or providing any real evidence to their claims.

ActorNightly2 months ago

If the administration was even remotely competent, this would be scary. There is EASILY a list of things that they could do if they truly cared about going full authoritarian.

But when they start doing stuff like tarrifs for no reason what so ever, to the point where even Musk thinks its stupid, the situation is sad more than scary. US has lost its edge for literally nothing in return.

92834092322 months ago

Ignoring court orders, grabbing people off the streets to disappear, and publicly wondering how they can deport citizens isn't scary to you?

ActorNightly2 months ago

I mean, scary is a relative term. Its just as scary as Trump being legally immune to anything he does, as granted by Supreme Court.

The Republicans are basically still at the mercy of the economy - Trump backed of tariffs real quick when Japan started selling off US debt on the cheap. So I don't think its going to get levels of Saddam Hussein authoritarian. But time will tell.

The thing is, just like in Russia, smart people will know when to leave, and will leave, which is good. As soon as it becomes economically better to work in EU, you will have lots of talented people immigrating there which will bolster their economy.

const_cast2 months ago

They're downvoting it because it feels bad. And well, it does! This sucks major ass.

Part of me is sympathetic to them because a lot of these people are people who live privileged lives and have never before been in any political pressure. These people have previously been able to just detach from politics because they knew, no matter what, they would end up on top. And now, that assumption is no longer true and they have the enter a world that a variety of minority groups have already been living in. They have to face the reality that politics isn't just something on the TV, but something that affects their lives.

gotoeleven2 months ago

[flagged]

mplanchard2 months ago

Not all illegal, no. While Abrego Garcia originally came to the country illegally, he was granted the ability to stay here legally, is married to a citizen, and had been dutifully checking in with his immigration officer yearly.

MyOutfitIsVague2 months ago

Yesterday, Trump was talking about sending "homegrown criminals" to El Salvador, asking for 5 prisons be built for the purpose.

Xlythe2 months ago

Including anyone Trump still considers a "criminal" even after they've been acquitted by the courts.

pesus2 months ago

And somehow doesn't apply to actual criminals like his cronies, supporters, or himself, despite being found guilty of 34 felonies.

rimunroe2 months ago

A) Trump wants to send “home grown” people there

B) You can’t know if someone is here illegally if they don’t have a way to challenge that claim. They could easily abduct you or anyone else and ship you off without allowing you to challenge it in court

keepamovin2 months ago

I think it's obvious that some of those affected by these reforms, or by fraud/abuse cutting, are going to come at DOGE with everything they got, so while I think people should review and monitor DOGE's actions, accusations should be taken with a grain of salt (and maybe a kickback).

tssva2 months ago

What reforms or fraud/abuse cutting? I haven't seen any signs of either coming from DOGE. I have seen plenty of signs of DOGE creating and participating in fraud/abuse.

amai2 months ago

DOGE might have hired too fast without the necessary background checks. So DOGE might now employ a lot of foreign spies (Russian, Chinese, etc) which take their chances.

VagabundoP2 months ago

You say its a bug, but maybe thats a feature.

jonahbenton2 months ago

Every single DOGE access to any level of protected government data is a security breach. Not snark. None of them have clearances.

jki2752 months ago

what do you mean by "clearances"?

If they're accessing data that requires clearances, they have the required clearances. That's mandatory, and no one is going to show them anything without them.

My guess, based on the fact you use terms like "protected government data" is that you don't even know enough about this topic to make up words about it.

watwut2 months ago

No, access to data does not imply clearance. And they are forcing access to data. No it is not legal, but neither Trump nor DOGE nor Musk care about legality.

jki2752 months ago

You're making broad blanket statements that have no basis in anything other than media BS.

There is no "forcing access". It simply doesn't work that way.

If the President clears them, they are cleared. That's perfectly legal. The President is the federal government's OCA.

jonnycomputer2 months ago

And what is NxGenBdoorExtract?

g42gregory2 months ago

Here is the thing that blows my mind: why is there an implicit assumption that this article is an honest reporting and not a propaganda piece? Don't get me wrong, I am not saying that it is. What I am saying is that, at the very least, this question should always be asked first about any reporting.

Llamamoe2 months ago

Because this would be very in line with how DOGE has conducted itself so far.

zelon882 months ago

NPR is a public entity. It's funding, governance, and leadership structure are well known and well trusted. From Wikipedia...

.....Regarding financing;

>Funding for NPR comes from dues and fees paid by member stations, underwriting from corporate sponsors, and annual grants from the publicly funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting.[4] Most of its member stations are owned by non-profit organizations, including public school districts, colleges, and universities. NPR operates independently of any government or corporation, and has full control of its content.[5]

.....Regarding governance;

> NPR is a membership organization. Member stations are required to be non-commercial or non-commercial educational radio stations; have at least five full-time professional employees; operate for at least 18 hours per day; and not be designed solely to further a religious broadcasting philosophy or be used for classroom distance learning programming. Each member station receives one vote at the annual NPR board meetings—exercised by its designated Authorized Station Representative ("A-Rep").

Now, I do question the authenticity of your question. Everyone knows that NPR is reputable and everyone knows why. Their reputation precedes them. But I entertained your charade and now I implore you to entertain one of mine.

Can you provide me the same detailed information which demonstrates why someone should trust OAN? How about Breitbart? How about Newsmax? Can you please pick one and demonstrate why they are trustworthy using a similar format that I provided for you?

timschmidt2 months ago

> NPR is a public entity. It's funding, governance, and leadership structure are well known and well trusted.

Ehhhh... I remember vividly a moment during the Iraq war in which NPR's ombudsman spent 20 minutes justifying the network's use of the euphemism "enhanced interrogation" when speaking about torture conducted by the CIA and others. It was terminology being pushed by the then-current administration, which NPR chose not only to parrot, but to justify. To the benefit of the administration and the detriment of human rights. I haven't had illusions about the network's accuracy, neutrality, or journalistic integrity since.

24 years?

I guess you could call that well known. Not in a good way.

sitkack2 months ago

> So what that data spike correlated with was data that was transferred off of an internal record-keeping device that was only used for internal case data. So this system only has the private information about union organizers. The privileged business proprietary, technologies, competitors, those kind of things are in that system only. There's no other data. There's nothing else except that.

...

> This is a difficult topic for Dan to discuss, but prior to our filing the whistle-blower disclosure this week, last week, somebody went to Dan's home and taped a threatening note, a menacing note on his door with personal information.

> While he was at work, and it also contained photographs of him walking his dog taken by a drone. So…

cratermoon2 months ago

DOGE is a significant security breach.

pnutjam2 months ago

This checks out because all those DOGE hires appear to be hackers, and they are now state sponsored. Most of them could never pass a basic background check, much less a TS or even public trust from one of the more invasive Federal agencies.

matthewdgreen2 months ago

It is worth pointing out that many of these people are probably violating Federal and possibly even some state laws. Violations of Federal laws can be pardoned, if the President is so inclined. State laws can't. No prosecution will occur during this administration, but this administration will not last forever.

tremon2 months ago

This administration will last as long as the People allow it to. There is no other way this will end.

flanked-evergl2 months ago

cite?

ceejayoz2 months ago

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/doge-staffer-big-balls-prov...

> The best-known member of Elon Musk's U.S. DOGE Service team of technologists once provided support to a cybercrime gang that bragged about trafficking in stolen data and cyberstalking an FBI agent, according to digital records reviewed by Reuters.

BurnGpuBurn2 months ago

> Reuters could not independently verify EGodly's boasts of cybercriminal activity

flanked-evergl2 months ago

[flagged]

+3
ceejayoz2 months ago
+1
randunel2 months ago
bryanrasmussen2 months ago

a basic background check would invalidate someone with the described background.

boesboes2 months ago

[flagged]

_hyn32 months ago

Those darn hackers. They probably hang out and get their news... someplace.

1970-01-012 months ago

More evidence the current POTUS is in cahoots with Russia.

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...

ajross2 months ago

I've said this repeatedly, but write this down: before this administration is out we are going to have a major (probably multiple) scandal where DOGE staffers get caught with some kind of horrifying self-enrichment scam based on the data they're hoovering. It could be simple insider trading, it could be selling the data to a FBI sting, it might take lots of forms. But it's going to happen.

These are a bunch of 20-something tech bro ego cases convinced of their crusade to remake government along libertarian axes they learned from Reddit/4chan/HN. These are simply not people motivated out of a genuine desire to improve the public good. And they've been given essentially unsupervised access to some outrageously tempting levers.

f38zf5vdt2 months ago

Personal enrichment? There's already an enormous amount of evidence here to indicate that DOGE is working on behalf of a foreign nation state. It is seeming more and more likely that members of the DOGE team are simply secret agents for a foreign military.

> Within minutes after DOGE accessed the NLRB's systems, someone with an IP address in Russia started trying to log in, according to Berulis' disclosure. The attempts were "near real-time," according to the disclosure. Those attempts were blocked, but they were especially alarming. Whoever was attempting to log in was using one of the newly created DOGE accounts — and the person had the correct username and password, according to Berulis.

JohnMakin2 months ago

or even worse, they’re compromised in some fashion and don’t know it

ajross2 months ago

FWIW, that's getting too far out on the spy novel spectrum. Yes, they could be compromised. But to my point above, if they're indeed working for Putin or Xi or whoever, it's FAR more likely (given the demographic) that it's just because they took a fat bribe.

JohnMakin2 months ago

Not saying they’re compromised by foreign agents, although, I wouldnt put that out of the realm of possibility - but that either they and/or theyre tooling/setup is pwned

this is exactly what you save a zero day for, and something gives me the vibe about some of these guys that they dont take opsec very seriously, probably would not even need one

ndsipa_pomu2 months ago

I think it's worse than that as the DOGE staffers are presumably picked according to Musk's preferences and he's not going to be looking for generous, well adjusted do-gooders, but selfish, arrogant, greedy racists. Presumably, they're also going to be targetted by other countries intelligence services with a mind to getting hold of the same data.

potato37328422 months ago

Doesn't matter if they're good people or not "given essentially unsupervised access to some outrageously tempting levers" that scandal WILL happen eventually.

pjc502 months ago

> horrifying self-enrichment scam based on the data they're hoovering.

Did you miss the presidential cryptocurrency?

DOGE guys will probably end up wiring money directly to their own bank account, proudly brandish the receipts on national television, and no Republicans will make a move against them.

olyjohn2 months ago

Also it's right there in the name DOGE. It's Elon's favorite coin and of course he's trying to pump it by naming a goddamn government department after it. It's plain as day.

IIsi50MHz2 months ago

Still a pseudo-department, isn't it? I believe its name makes the ersatz claim of being a department, but is in fact a private entity.

LadyCailin2 months ago

Sounds like they need to file a CVE.. oh wait.

AIPedant2 months ago

Even by the standards of this administration...... yikes:

  Meanwhile, his attempts to raise concerns internally within the NLRB preceded someone "physically taping a threatening note" to his door that included sensitive personal information and overhead photos of him walking his dog that appeared to be taken with a drone, according to a cover letter attached to his disclosure filed by his attorney, Andrew Bakaj of the nonprofit Whistleblower Aid.
92834092322 months ago

This is exactly what I expect from this administration. Mob tactics. Take the silver or get the lead.

404mm2 months ago

I’d not want to be a whistleblower during this presidency. Whistleblowers tend to have really bad luck crossing the street on a good day.

92834092322 months ago

That's what they want. Now is when we need whistleblowers the most so they want to put the fear into them.

Kapura2 months ago

[flagged]

404mm2 months ago

That’s just uncalled for. Hope your day gets better.

Der_Einzige2 months ago

[flagged]

fooList2 months ago

[flagged]

gooseus2 months ago

Really?

Seems way more obvious to me that Thiel/Vance/Musk would have Trump whacked... probably in the 2nd or 3rd year so that Vance can take power during a Reichstag fire with enough time left till elections in order for them to consolidate power.

Trump is primarily an actor pretending to be a gangster/president on TV to serve as a front for the real gangsters pilfering our government, at some point he will better serve those people by becoming a martyr in a way which transfers his power to someone else they control.

DrNosferatu2 months ago

Hypothesis:

The tariffs are a “reichstag fire” lighter - assume extra powers as things go down in flames.

+1
brendoelfrendo2 months ago
+1
thatguy09002 months ago
Applejinx2 months ago

The trouble with that is that they're all fronting Russia's efforts to control the US government. This is why prosperity isn't exactly in the cards: that's the promise, but all the actions lead directly the other direction in conclusive ways.

Because that's the background, it explains Trump's prominence. He is trusted by Russia in ways a Musk or Thiel can never be, so if we're talking mysterious falls from balconies, it would be Musk, Thiel et al who are more in danger. They have to work with Trump, because Trump is the one Russia trusts, and that's because Russia made him. His wealth has never been real: he's an op from way back.

The Kremlin absolutely will not trust Elon Musk, nor should they. He's more capable, but he is most certainly scheming against them or even looking to supplant/eject Putin and replace him. Thiel is on less drugs and has the sense to stay out of the spotlight, so he will be trying to offer eternal life to Putin or something like that. Whether there's any truth to that is moot: it's whether Putin believes there is.

None of them are safe replacements for Trump, because they all hold power of their own. Trump stays so long as he lives, because he doesn't hold power of his own, and is therefore safe to use as the puppet.

CaptWillard2 months ago

[flagged]

rfrey2 months ago

What does this mean? You sound pleased the administration is doing things like this.

+2
CaptWillard2 months ago
Zamaamiro2 months ago

What kind of response is this?

+3
pc862 months ago
potato37328422 months ago

[flagged]

92834092322 months ago

DOGE aren't federal agents. They are cyber criminals doing Elon's bidding.

AIPedant2 months ago

The reason you are being downvoted to smithereens is that Bryan Malinowski was credibly accused of serious crimes (arms trafficking) wheres Daniel Berulis is accused of reporting serious crimes. You're making a preposterous and immoral false equivalence.

+2
pc862 months ago
the_doctah2 months ago

[flagged]

techright752 months ago

[flagged]

daedrdev2 months ago

?????

guntars2 months ago

It’s a bot. They’re everywhere these days.

+1
techright752 months ago
techright752 months ago

[flagged]

+1
cosmicgadget2 months ago
zombiwoof2 months ago

Welcome to Elon Musks America

JohnMakin2 months ago

This seems important and incredibly relevant on a site called hackernews. It's credible and from a credible source. Why are we flagging it?

asveikau2 months ago

JD Vance is a poster boy for Y Combinator adjacent fascists. Marc Andreessen, when he is not cheering on opiate overdoses in his hometown and praising the British Raj, loves what's going on. We need to accept that Silicon Valley has major culpability here. After all, how much do you see on HN that you should ignore the law because it's better to ask forgiveness than permission?

computerthings2 months ago

[dead]

remarkEon2 months ago

"Fascism" today just means "right wing politician I do not like" or "conservative who is successful at pushing back the left".

Plenty of people here can have a problem with this administration and Vance himself, or not, without those who disagree pretending that we're a week away from goose stepping down 5th Avenue in NYC.

mikeyouse2 months ago

There’s lots of fascism before the goose stepping but in the past week the President confirmed he’d like to send US citizens to a foreign gulag, he continues to ignore a Supreme Court ruling to bring home a previously and illegally deported man, he threatened Harvard that he’d strip their nonprofit status since they resisted his inane demands for conservative-DEI, he initiated several investigations using the state security apparatus of former government employees he deemed enemies and the richest man in the world (who donated 9 figures to get the President elected) continues to illegally impound funding from across the government including every organization that regulates the companies he runs. Oh and they’re planning a $100M military parade for the president’s birthday. Things aren’t great!

autoexec2 months ago

Considering the amount of nazi salutes being thrown around I wouldn't be surprised to see goose stepping at the parade.

pjc502 months ago

The Abrego Garcia case is one of those critical lines of actual fascism: Pinochet-style disappearances. Not really connected to DOGE though, they're the administrative wing of fascism.

hooverd2 months ago

If by "successful at pushing back the left", and by "the left", you mean the rule of law and due process itself, then yes, I am against fascism. The executive is not a king and everyone within our borders deserves due process.

asveikau2 months ago

Plainclothes officers are hijacking people on the street without showing any credentials, then sending them to Salvadorean gulags without any court hearing.

Your lack of paying attention to this or lack of understanding how bad that is is not a problem in the rest of us.

Before you give me this nonsense of "they are criminals", number one this is still an inhumane way to treat convicted people, and number two they have not been convicted of anything, number three there have been tons of reports of the accusations made against these people being total BS.

Earlier this week, Trump was on microphone telling El Salvador's president that he wants him to build five more gulags and that we will send American citizens there.

hooverd2 months ago

Hypocrisy is a virtue to fascists. It's about signalling power.

AlecSchueler2 months ago

[flagged]

arunabha2 months ago

I am not sure how it's possible to defend the kind of stuff DOGE is doing anymore. Even the veneer of looking for efficiency is gone. There have only been claims of 'fraud' with no real evidence backing up the claimed scale of fraud.

At this point it simply looks like DOGE is yet another attempt to use a popular trope (Govt fraud and waste) to push through changes specifically designed to give unchecked power to one individual.

This much concentrated, unchecked power opens up vast opportunities for fraud and corruption and there are pretty much no instances in history where it turned out be to a good thing in retrospect.

Also, very surprised this story made it to the front page. Typically, stuff like this gets flagged off the front page within minutes.

GolDDranks2 months ago

> Typically, stuff like this gets flagged off the front page within minutes.

Why would that be, because it's too "political" for tech news? Or are there actual DOGE sympathies within the HN population?

ethbr12 months ago

> Or are there actual DOGE sympathies within the HN population?

I wouldn't mind that so much, except they're minimally-active in the comment section and instead use flagging. At least defend your beliefs.

Switching to https://news.ycombinator.com/active (/active) with showdead is a better HN experience, nowadays.

kayge2 months ago

The /active page is helpful, thanks! I also just recently realized that the 'hckr news'[0] interface doesn't hide or remove flagged stories if you're using the Top 10/20/50 view options, so if something is getting discussed/upvoted it will be there.

[0]https://hckrnews.com/

ivewonyoung2 months ago

> I wouldn't mind that so much, except they're minimally-active in the comment section and instead use flagging. At least defend your beliefs.

From what I see, even good comments with facts and sources that go against the prevalent narrative are either downvoted or flagged a good chunk of the time, which discourages people from commenting(as it's meant to be) because of lack of visibility. It can also make the commenters unable to post comments for hours because HN's rate limiter kicks in, so they are effectively silenced.

Also, many times they're attacked personally and those comments violating HN's etiquette are not downvoted or flagged. Not to mention very low quality Redditesque are also not downvoted or flagged, but are upvoted, which lowers the quality of HN as a whole.

+1
outer_web2 months ago
hintymad2 months ago

I used to discuss my different views and presented data or facts that I gathered The facts, of course, could be wrong, as I have limited faulty to verify everything. Yet, instead of pointing out what I said was wrong, I got angry posts attacking my motives and my posts were flagged. So, now I know the game, and for such politically charged posts, I know what I can do easily: flag it away.

throwworhtthrow2 months ago

It's true that HN has shown itself _mostly_ incapable of having a useful discussion on topics that involve the current US president. (But sometimes a useful thread of conversation emerges!) Users that are frustrated by a flagged topic will retaliate by flagging comments they disagree with. And vice versa.

I think retaliating like this just makes HN worse. If you stop flagging perfectly good stories, HN will be a marginally nicer place for discussion. I'll say the same to anyone here who admits to blanket flagging of comments.

Please keep trying to discuss your views. Sometimes they'll get smacked down unfairly, but other times they'll stick around. The more you try, the more they'll stick, and hopefully it can shift the tone of discussion here.

+1
outer_web2 months ago
+1
SpicyLemonZest2 months ago
ethbr12 months ago

110%, people can be braindead assholes in their replies, and fail to substantially engage with comments.

Or just drive-by up/down according to if they agree with you or not.

Sorry that was your experience, and hopefully we can all be less... that... together.

mvdtnz2 months ago

I don't need to defend it. I flag this stuff because I don't care. I'm not American and I'm tired of seeing American politics on this site. It's not what I come here for.

bmacho2 months ago

> Or are there actual DOGE sympathies within the HN population?

AFAIK a small number of them is enough to hide stuff from the front page. I don't know why is this the case, honestly I don't see any benefit over full time-moderators hiding problematic stuff, only negatives. Like why should a small political group be able to distort the news on the front page?

rbanffy2 months ago

> too "political" for tech news?

Politics are everywhere. It’s how we negotiate consensus and make collective decisions. From what a government should do down to what features will be worked on this sprint and where are we having lunch today.

Tech being apolitical is an illusion, and a very dangerous one.

_DeadFred_2 months ago

Sahil Lavingia founder of Gumroad is DOGE. Joe Gebbia co-founder of Airbnb is DOGE. Not sympathetic to, they are DOGE. Those are just the ones I know off the top of my head from listening to basic reporting. The All In podcast is super pro-Trump/DOGE, with Sacks being the Trump regime's crypto czar (bringing that cohort on board). Peter Thiel. Musk. That's a lot of pro-DOGE headspace in HN related circles. A lot of people that HN related circles look up to and aspire to emulate. A lot of people that HN circles network with/have perverse incentives to support.

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”

GolDDranks2 months ago

That's chilling. I always thought HN as a kinda level-headed corner of the internet.

tomhow2 months ago

I'd hate for you or others to read the GP comment and for your perception of HN to be altered, without any further detail or nuance to be presented for consideration.

Gumroad is not a YC company and its founder has no influence over HN or YC. Joe, whilst being one of the most successful, is still just one YC-backed founder out of more than 10,000, and doesn't represent YC. Paul Graham, YC's co-founder (who, whilst retired, is still actively involved and is very influential at YC) heavily criticises the current U.S. administration almost every day on Twitter. The other figures named in the GP comment have no involvement or influence on YC, and indeed some have had very hostile disputes with YC partners and notable founders in the past.

This is not to claim that we moderators are perfectly impervious to every influence and incentive at every moment. Awareness of our own potential to be biased and influenced is essential to being able to do this job effectively.

I just think it's important to point out that things are not nearly as simple as the GP comment purports.

rozap2 months ago

Easy to think that until you start viewing /active and see all the stuff that's flagged and doesn't appear on the front page. Any article, even those explicitly about tech, science and academia are flagged if they have even the gentlest suggestion that this administration is flawed.

+1
i80and2 months ago
+1
malachismith2 months ago
+2
deckard12 months ago
pjc502 months ago

There's always been a right wing / libertarian contingent here. These days I recognize most of the top 20 or so usual suspects. Says nothing about how many flags happening though.

GuinansEyebrows2 months ago

i would love for this to be true but it's hosted by a venture capital firm. hard to ignore possible conflicts of interest since tech/VC culture is so intertwined with american rightwing politics.

int_19h2 months ago

I don't think it's that simple. If you look at the comments here, and in general on political stories, it's the comments defending DOGE and Trump that tend to be downvoted.

archagon2 months ago

The name is ironic given that the site was founded by a venture capitalist.

Founders are (generally) not hackers and not your friends. They are money men and will always follow the money.

leotravis102 months ago

It's censorship plain and simple.

And the admins/mods are still refusing to admit it.

pjc502 months ago

sigh it's just how any site with algorithmic ranking works: some things are going to get down voted. Politics is one of them, for a bunch of reasons articulated in this thread. Complaining about censorship is not going to make any difference.

Things have stabilized on roughly one thread on the evils of Republicans per day. Unfortunately they're managing a lot more evil per day than that.

zzleeper2 months ago

You really don't need many users to flag a post. Get five users constantly flagging anything that makes Trump look bad (and a complicit mod that doesn't undo this) and that's all you need.

knowaveragejoe2 months ago

Anyone who knew anything about the public sector knew there were already efficiency initiatives. USDS(which became DOGE) was this, and they were doing a great job. If you care about efficiency this is what you would support, not taking an axe to everything and having a near-singular focus on lower headcount.

JohnMakin2 months ago

It’s flagged now - pretty embarrassing for a site called “hacker” news

leotravis102 months ago

Yep, it's blatant censorship and the admins/mods are still refusing to admit it.

dang2 months ago

The admins/mods turned off the flags on this story as soon as we found out about it, restoring it to HN's front page.

+1
SamLL2 months ago
JohnMakin2 months ago

I don't know if there's anything to admit from their public stance on this kind of stuff, and I'm certainly not wanting this account to receive retaliation for whatever I post regarding this - they've mentioned that they do get swarms of downvoting groups on particular topics and have taken steps to un-flag things that fall victim to it. I'm not sure what that mechanism is, or if they've seen it, or maybe it's auto-flagging off certain keywords - giving massive benefit of the doubt as possible. Regardless though I've seen this trend on similar news, I think a lot of my favorites contain flagged submissions that are highly relevant for a site like this.

Particularly the argument "these types of posts don't warrant good discussion and turn into flame wars" or generate too many comments per up-votes, a signal for bad thread quality - this has really none of that. If this remains flagged after a time it is a statement.

If this story is true, this is potentially the biggest breach of all time. It's tremendously relevant and that's why I'm annoyed.

JohnMakin2 months ago

seems like it was unflagged. This story is horrifying, thank you.

buttercraft2 months ago

Who, exactly, is being censored?

bedane2 months ago

[flagged]

dang2 months ago

hn staff turned off the flags on this story as soon as we found out about it, restoring it to HN's front page.

exe342 months ago

most of this stuff is getting flagged within minutes.

computerthings2 months ago

[dead]

tonetheman2 months ago

[dead]

consumer4512 months ago

It is hilarious what does, and does not, get flagged on this website in 2025.

The other day on /active, there was a story about a French politician being banned from running for office, due to being convicted of outright fraud for the second time. Absolutely nothing to do with technology or business, nothing to do with the USA. Pure politics in a foreign country. Not flagged.

There was a story directly below which involved the USA, technology and business, but had an uncomfortable narrative for some users. Flagged.

As someone who still likes this site a lot, this just makes me laugh at this point. I don't know how else to react.

dang2 months ago

There's always a ton of randomness with these things. People tend to underestimate how that affects nearly every aspect of HN. That is, they misinterpret a random outcome as some sort of meaningful thing and then attribute a meaning to it.

If you assume that rhyme or reason is involved, then of course the results seem bizarrely inconsistent and the only models that fit will be Rube Goldberg ones. Simply understand that randomness plays the largest role, and the mystery goes away. (But I know that's less internet fun.)

In terms of all these political stories getting flagged: it's a simple consequence of there being a huge influx of intense political stories while HN's capacity remains "30 slots on the frontpage" (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...). If these stories mostly didn't get flagged or otherwise moderator, HN would turn overnight into a current affairs site, which it is not and never has been.

That still leaves room for some stories with political overlap, though not nearly as many as the politically passionate would prefer. Btw, this is a special case of a more general principle: there are not nearly as many stories on any topic X as the X-passionate would desire. The front page, in that sense, satisfies no one!

But back to the politics thing—here are some links to past explanations about how we deal with that:

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&so...

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42978389 has a good list of more.

For those who are up for a more complex explanation, this is really how I think about this problem: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42787306. The basic idea is to avoid predictable sequences: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que....

consumer4512 months ago

Thanks Dan, I never mean to point fingers at moderation here. I always assume it's users. Not sure if that's the correct assumption, but it's one I stick with.

dang2 months ago

Oops, I hear you! Well, maybe the explanation is helpful to others who are worrying about the moderation side.

But of course there's no rhyme or reason to "users" either, since that's really just a statistical cloud (https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...).

(Also, if anyone is weary of my inveterate self-linking: sorry, I am too. It's just somehow the only semi-efficient way I've found to give enough background information on various points of HN.)

thaumasiotes2 months ago

> Not sure if that's the correct assumption, but it's one I stick with.

Now that dang has confirmed it's incorrect, maybe stop sticking with it.

consumer4512 months ago

Follow-up: I should add that in 2025, deleting stories with a tinge of US politics is highly detrimental to the HN user base’s understanding of what is happening in the business world.

Case in-point: a US-based family member employed at a FAANG just told me that his Canadian coworkers now reset their phones prior to entering the USA, then restore from backup. This is somewhat similar to what happens when they go to China.

This is terrible for business. This kind of information should not be ignored.

dang2 months ago

These stories aren't being deleted—there was quite a large thread (in fact maybe two large threads?) about precisely that, within the last couple weeks. I'll see if I can dig up the links, or maybe someone else remembers?

The problem isn't that the major stories are deleted; it's that even if a story spends hours on the front page, the set of users who actually see it still has measure zero [1]. Then inevitably a few of the rest assume that they didn't see it because it was sinisterly suppressed, whether by mods or user flags.

Where this ends up getting us is the 'nobody goes there anymore it's too crowded' theory of HN threads! [2] It's always been like this—it's baked into the fundamentals of how HN works (the limited frontpage space, the dynamics of the internet, the fact that most people don't use HN Search). It's just showing up more intensely these days because the times are more intense and we've been in a tsunami phase for a few months now.

[1] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

[2] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

---

Edit: I found these ones. Admittedly most weren't on the frontpage for all that long:

EU issues US-bound staff with burner phones over spying fears - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43680556 - April 2025 (46 comments)

How to lock down your phone if you're traveling to the U.S. - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43630624 - April 2025 (338 comments)

Cell Phone OPSEC for Border Crossings - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43555597 - April 2025 (36 comments)

How to protect your phone and data privacy at the US border - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43480730 - March 2025 (98 comments)

Is it safe to travel to the United States with your phone? - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43452474 - March 2025 (164 comments)

EFF Border Search Pocket Guide - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43441895 - March 2025 (32 comments)

Ask HN: Are you afraid to travel to US to tech conferences? - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43422350 - March 2025 (198 comments)

consumer4512 months ago

I meant "deleted" from by being flagged, which is a deletion from the lurkers. And yes.. absolutely I have seen some of these stories get through the gauntlet.

I am really not complaining about moderation, just attempting to appeal to the users who I have assumed are doing the flagging, in general.

+1
pvg2 months ago
Alupis2 months ago

[flagged]

int_19h2 months ago

I can assure you that it has not been the standard corporate advice when I had to regularly travel from Canada to US for business meetings on a regular basis 15 years ago while working at a big tech company. Nor do I recall anyone else who was traveling doing that on their own. If it is the standard procedure now, then yes, that is definitely a reason to be concerned.

j-bos2 months ago

So I've had this in mind for ages, but my coworkers have only just realized it and started implementing it. Thus for most people, it's *new*s.

+1
Alupis2 months ago
consumer4512 months ago

> What shouldn't be ignored? Some small subset of foreign workers decided to take security seriously?

That FAANG employed Canadians are suddenly taking these precautions when entering the USA, as standard practice, when coming to a meeting. Nobody can gaslight me into believing that this is a not a new thing.

+3
Alupis2 months ago
Capricorn24812 months ago

Because, naturally, people on here want to harm you. We can't say it out loud, but that's where the U.S. climate is right now. HN is not immune from it, and is likely more susceptible to it given the demographic. They flag to keep people from saying it.

leotravis102 months ago

Indeed, I'm sure there's a LOT of people, especially in the HN space are pro-fascist.

belter2 months ago

"I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible."

   - Peter Thiel
"We will coup whoever we want! Deal with it."

    - Elon Musk
"Our present society has been subjected to a mass demoralization campaign for six decades – against technology and against life – under varying names like “existential risk”, “sustainability”, “ESG”, “Sustainable Development Goals”, “social responsibility”, “stakeholder capitalism”, “Precautionary Principle”, “trust and safety”, “tech ethics”, “risk management”, “de-growth”, “the limits of growth”."

  - Marc Andreessen
"Democracy is to power as a lottery is to money. It is a social mechanism that allows a large number of hominids to feel as if their individual views affect the world, even when the chance of such an effect is negligible."

   - Curtis Yarvin
the_doctah2 months ago

[flagged]

johnnyanmac2 months ago

I mean, there were Tesla earnings calls this year flagged, which would be front page news even a year ago. Tech earnings calls are almost never flagged otherwise.

I'm mostly convinced a lot of stuff is flagged and the mods work overtime to pick and choose what to unflag. On what metric? No clue, if I'm being honest.

consumer4512 months ago

This is a fair take from my POV. I am very happy not to be modding any forum these days.

edit: and to be clear, I was not originally critiquing the modding here.

taeric2 months ago

Honestly looks like a fairly heavy handed bot. Is very close to the "if it has trans" decisions we know they did in the search for things to cancel.

linkregister2 months ago

Several users have stated in political threads that they spend the day flagging political stories. I don't think there's any reason to believe a bot is doing it.

+1
consumer4512 months ago
taeric2 months ago

Fair. It doesn't have to be a bot to look like one. Is certainly a hive mind behavior that is not any less heavy handed than "see a word, click flag button."

jmyeet2 months ago

Welcome to the Internet.

Many forums (including this one) have bans on "politics" or topics that are "inflammatory". 95% of the time what constitutes either is simply "things I disagree with".

For US politics in particular, as much as the right-wing cries about being censored, social media in particular bends over backwards not to silence such views whereas anything critical of those right-wing positions gets flagged or downranked as being "political" (eg [1]).

Typically this process isn't direct. ML systems will find certain features in submissions that get them marked as "inflammatory" or "low quality" but only on one end of the spectrum. For sites such as HN, reddit and Tiktok, right-wing views have successfully weaponized user safety systems by brigading posts and flagging them. That might then go to a human to review and their own biases come into play.

As for France vs the US, I'm sorry but France is irrelevant. As we've seen in the last 2 weeks, what the US does impacts the entire world. All the big social media sites are American (barring Tiktok) so American politics impacts what can and can't be said on those platforms.

Twitter has become 4chan, a hotbed for neo-Nazis, racists and homephobes.

And which French politican are we talking about? Marine Le Pen? If so, the relevance is the rise of fascism in Europe between National Front in France, Reform in the UK, AfD in Germany and, of course, Hungary.

[1]: https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/leaked-data-israeli-censorshi...

thegreatpeter2 months ago

[flagged]

Shekelphile2 months ago

It's the opposite, actually. This place has always been owned and operated by a musk crony. Musk only got his paws on reddit recently, and has barely had any success besides getting the admins to shut down r/cyberstuck.

Here on HN anti-musk/regime posts get deleted automatically, TERF and other bigoted posters are allowed to post through spam filters from freshly made accounts, and everything else that isn't clearly delineated as 'liberal media' but negative for the regime just gets flagged or deranked from listing.

js22 months ago

"Please don't post comments saying that HN is turning into Reddit. It's a semi-noob illusion, as old as the hills."

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

alephnerd2 months ago

Rules made in the late 2000s might not necessarily hold on HN in 2025.

HN has shifted into a lagging Reddit, and preemptively shutting down any discourse about the falling quality of discourse on HN is ludicrous and plain annoying.

HN has changed, and A LOT of Reddit does leak onto HN, and this absolutely deserves conversation.

regularjack2 months ago

I wouldn't be so quick to jump to conspiracy theory territory, it could just be that people get tired of reading the same bullshit everyday.

soco2 months ago

I'm not american so can somebody please explain me, how is deleting logs and every trace of your actions helping with government efficiency?

rsynnott2 months ago

Nothing they are doing is related to government efficiency. You can't really put too much faith in names.

XorNot2 months ago

The basic rule of government naming: the more of GOOD THING in the name, the less of that it will be.

FireBeyond2 months ago

This quote (from Lord of War) really encapsulates a lot of what you say:

> Yuri Orlov: [Narrating] Every faction in Africa calls themselves by these noble names - Liberation this, Patriotic that, the Democratic Republic of something-or-other... I guess they can't own up to what they usually are: the Federation of Worse Oppressors Than the Last Bunch of Oppressors. Often, the most barbaric atrocities occur when both combatants proclaim themselves Freedom Fighters.

viraptor2 months ago

That generalises to a lot of naming. Papers like Fakt or Pravda, country DPKR, political parties that mention law, justice and order, etc.

rsynnott2 months ago

I always particularly liked the Committee of Public Safety, for this (they're the ones who did the Reign of Terror, which doesn't seem _particularly_ public-safety-oriented.)

pchristensen2 months ago

Don’t forget Truth Social

+1
JKCalhoun2 months ago
_heimdall2 months ago

In the same way that finding waste while increasing the federal budget isn't efficiency.

Technically, maybe you can squint and find small pieces that are more efficient but in the grand scheme of things they goal doesn't seem to be a smaller government.

croes2 months ago

How is firing people helping government efficiency?

_heimdall2 months ago

Well you have to put context around what is being made more efficient.

Reducing headcount reduces labor costs and can be a form of financial efficiency. Reducing headcount also usually reduces the sheer number of people involved in any project, much like a small startup can move drastically quicker than a large, established org.

That said, there goal here doesn't seem to be clear as to what is being made efficient and they definitely aren't reducing the budget or size of government (outside of literal headcount, most people complain instead of red tape and regulations).

2OEH8eoCRo02 months ago

Yes, how?

lesuorac2 months ago

Log storage is expensive.

skeeter20202 months ago

It's not the storage, but processing with NR and DataDog is what's expensive. That's why the efficiency team asked to not have their actions logged in the first place.

phanimahesh2 months ago

I can honestly not tell if this comment was intended to be taken seriously, or if it was tongue in cheek.

+2
const_cast2 months ago
alistairSH2 months ago

Nothing about DOGE or the Trump administration is about efficiency. It's just a label they use to con gullible voters.

Their real goal is more likely a combination of grift and settling grudges.

Edit - typos

dandanua2 months ago

The next administration won't be able to spend time and money investigating crimes of the current one /s

delusional2 months ago

That way they can save some money litigating Elon and his goons. It's not like that litigation would get anywhere anyway, so better to save the public the waste /s

actionfromafar2 months ago

To more efficiently rout trouble-makers and unions.

indoordin0saur2 months ago

[flagged]

outer_web2 months ago

The "looking at" process is still subject to federal law.

Sonnigeszeug2 months ago

I fixed it for you: "Whistleblower details how a temporary group of very young people, who would never get access to sensitive data, are disabling/hiding what they are doing with highliy sensitive data of an executive, potentially circumventing safety mechanism in place to protect the data of all americans".

Btw. there is NO reason why they couldn't do all of that in a sincere way. Trump was voted in for 4 years.

janice19992 months ago

... very young people, of which at least one is affiliated with cyber criminals (and also happens to be the grandson of a KGB spy).

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/02/teen-on-musks-doge-team-...

dboreham2 months ago

[flagged]

josefresco2 months ago

[flagged]

yodsanklai2 months ago

> This is like 947 on a list of terrible things happening because of this administration.

This is on purpose. Trump has been slowly pushing the Overton window. It seems everything is fair game and US citizens are largely apathetic, scared or favorable to Trump's action.

etchalon2 months ago

There are basically weekly protests at this point.

US Citizens aren't apathetic. Our representatives on the other hand...

bruhwait2 months ago

[dead]

mistrial92 months ago

[flagged]

josefresco2 months ago

> rampantly false

Is Abrego Garcia not real?

JumpCrisscross2 months ago

[flagged]

+1
HelloMcFly2 months ago
veridies2 months ago

Supreme Court justice Sotomayor notes that nothing in the government’s reasoning about not returning Garcia is unique to noncitizens. President Trump says he wants to send “homegrowns” to the gulag in El Salvador, and is exploring his legal options. In court, the government has argued that they have no recourse to force the return of any prisoner from that gulag. This is neither false nor inflammatory; it is the administration’s stated goal.

freen2 months ago

Some of us work in tech and have skin colors that are similar to the person in question, and are deciding on the level of risk we are willing to take.

That this is not obvious to you is a clear indication of the fact that this isn’t something you personally worry about.

phanimahesh2 months ago

It is probably not a bad idea for people that don't fit in to consider obtaining citizenship elsewhere for their safety. Some non citizens are returning, though many who are considering this are tied down by their work or other constraints.

giraffe_lady2 months ago

[flagged]

marcosdumay2 months ago

> it'll start with sure actual criminals

Have they targeted any single criminal yet? Because they have sent two planes of people here to Brazil and nobody there was wanted by either country.

Also, Brazil has a list of wanted criminals at Interpol with known addresses in Florida that they aren't arresting.

thrance2 months ago

They've already sent an innocent man there and acknowledged he was innocent, then refused to bring him back when the courts, the opposition and finally SCOTUS each commanded them to bring him back.

This was just a test, and it was successful. They can now disappear and deport anyone they want with no repercussions whatsoever. The GOP is a criminal organization and their followers share the responsibility of what happens next.

xnx2 months ago

> then refused to bring him back when the courts

It was extra ridiculous/insulting/terrifying to see the heads of both countries in the same room saying that there was nothing they could do about the situation.

tromp2 months ago

SCOTUS granting the president far reaching immunity was an invitation for the president to be in contempt of SCOTUS whenever it pleases him, and to just piss on the constitution he took an oath on defending.

rescripting2 months ago

It’s possible he is already dead, as he was basically sent right in to the arms of the gangs he fled from.

defgeneric2 months ago

The fact that no charges have ever been brought against him by the Salvadoran government, yet they still claim to be holding him there lends credence to this. Why would they not simply release him? If he's dead it would be a major problem for Bukele's government as well as the US government. So evidently we're in "disappeared" territory now.

DaiPlusPlus2 months ago

> This was just a test, and it was successful

It's too soon to say it's "successful": SCOTUS was 9-0 against and that was still only a few days ago, so far from being a success it's now turning into a constitutional crisis... assuming the administration doesn't fold, or flip-flop, or some combination of the two - which we've already seen plenty of[1].

----------

[1] the seemingly arbitrary and capricious tariff changes announced almost every day ever since the-day-after-April-fools-day.

thoroughburro2 months ago

So, he’s being brought back then?

+1
ben_w2 months ago
dionian2 months ago

If you read the SCOTUS ruling, all it upholds from the lower courts decision is that the USG must 'facilitate', not 'effectuate' his release. AFAIK the Court doesn't have a way to order El Salvador to do so

avhception2 months ago

Wasn't the argument for the right to bear arms always that it would prevent a criminal government from having it's way?

Now, how's that working out so far?

alabastervlog2 months ago

Not “always”. It wasn’t the reason that became an amendment, national defense was. People later emphasized that rather off-label justification when state militias were nationalized and the main purpose of the amendment became wholly obsolete.

+1
vonmoltke2 months ago
+1
avhception2 months ago
wormlord2 months ago

America's gun culture is very closely tied to its settler culture. Most right wing gun nuts are barely able to conceal their fears/hopes for a race war in all but name.

That said, there are plenty of examples of progressive forces arming themselves. The Black Panthers are a good example. Without their armed militancy I think the US government would have been a lot less likely to capitulate to the demands of the peaceful civil rights activists.

watwut2 months ago

No. It was what peoppe who want to use guns to force own autocracy say.

The people with guns support these measures.

DFHippie2 months ago

This. The 2A absolutists want guns to pacify their neighbors, not the government.

readhistory2 months ago

This is nonsense. Plenty of nonviolent, peaceful groups carry arms.

Leftists (e.g. Anarchists, Marxists, Socialists, Communists, Queer Liberation, Black Liberation, etc.) groups typically are pro-firearms. Not always, but plenty are. The Black Panthers, famously, were armed, but so are are orgs like the Pink Pistols. Martin Luther King Jr. had many guns for self defense, and carried a revolver at times. Marx famously said that workers should be armed.

Centrists (e.g. Democrats, some Labour parties) typically abhor guns, and value the decorum and principle of the instution to keep us all safe. They are a "if society is well ordered, then there's no need for arms" group.

Right wing folks (e.g. Republicans, Proud Boys, KKK, etc.) are the folks who you are describing -- by and large supporting these measures and also want to use firearms to exert control.

It's really, really important if you consider yourself to be a progressive to ask, "Who will gun control laws in America be used to prosecute? Will that be minority groups dispraportionately?"

Historically and presently, armed minorities are more difficult to oppress, and many many leftist groups have historically and presently been armed for the purposes of community defense. By suggesting that arming oneself is a right wing position you erase history and erode current efforts for folks to build community safety systems.

bavell2 months ago

All* the people lamenting the current administration are scared of or want to ban firearms... whoops!

Now, imagine if those people had gotten their way, and how much easier it would be for the administration to do some of the things people claim it wants to do (e.g. gulags).

*Broad generalization

krapp2 months ago

>Now, imagine if those people had gotten their way, and how much easier it would be for the administration to do some of the things people claim it wants to do (e.g. gulags).

Given that none of the people with firearms have done a damn thing to stop this and how many of them even voted for Trump and support his policies, because American gun and militia culture has been infested with Nazis since forever, I don't see how it could possibly have been any easier. There has been and continues to be no resistance to Trump of any significance. When he does open up the gulags for real, it's going to be America's armed patriot militias who round people up for the regime.

pnutjam2 months ago
gotoeleven2 months ago

[flagged]

_DeadFred_2 months ago

Funny, because the administration testified in court that it was a mistake that he was sent. Claiming the stay was illegal was retconned after the fact, not the cause for the deportation.

+1
flanked-evergl2 months ago
flanked-evergl2 months ago

[flagged]

VoidWhisperer2 months ago

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9vedkm7w2do

I'm assuming the response to this is going to be along the lines of 'oh this doesnt prove he was innocent, they say he was a member of ms-13 etc etc etc' because evidently innocent until proven guilty (which they provided no proof of) isn't a thing anymore

+3
flanked-evergl2 months ago
ziddoap2 months ago

If you google "innocent man sent to el salvador" you'll get dozens on dozens on dozens of results from which you can pick your favorite news site to catch up.

+3
flanked-evergl2 months ago
viraptor2 months ago

Check any website with news from the last few weeks.

+1
flanked-evergl2 months ago
atkailash2 months ago

Cite? Really? I haven’t seen an article about the situation or the visit that didn’t mention it.

ltbarcly32 months ago

This is not an accurate account of the situation. While I don't agree with the actions the government is taking here, I also don't think we are entitled to our own private facts about it.

Mr Garcia does not have a criminal record, but he was ordered to be deported years ago. He was able to get a temporary reprieve from this by hiring lawyers and working through the legal process, but he did this by almost certainly committing perjury by claiming there were criminal gangs who would kill him if he returned to El Salvador. If you believe the filings in immigration appeals you would have to believe that 99% of the people in the world are being personally pursued by criminal gangs. Perhaps you believe this but I don't find it to be credible. Regardless, whether the legal process is effective doesn't matter here, it IS the legal process and must be followed. My point is the fact Mr Garcia was deported is not itself the issue, it's that it was done in a way that ignores the rule of law (even though it did respect due process). Legally Mr Garcia should be deported eventually, he was only allowed to stay temporarily until he is not "at risk for his life" if he were deported, but the legal process must be respected.

SCOTUS did not command anyone be brought back. They declined to issue an emergency decision blocking an order to 'facilitate' his return, but specifically sent back to the lower court and took issue with the order to 'effectuate' his return. So they are not commanding the government to bring him back, rather they are commanding the government to not prevent his return. Yes this is tedious but reality is often tedious.

> They can now disappear and deport anyone they want

I think you have not made any case that it is valid to assume that we would go from "one person who has already been ordered for deportation by a federal court" who was very publicly deported to "anyone they want" and "disappear".

I basically agree with your sentiment inaccuracy and hyperbole doesn't benefit anyone.

defgeneric2 months ago

This is a lot of words to say "I don't believe him". None of us really knows, and it's not worth speculating about, because the case is about something much bigger now. It's about the limits of executive authority, separation of powers, and rule of law.

> he did this by almost certainly committing perjury by claiming there were criminal gangs who would kill him if he returned to El Salvador

What evidence is there for this "near certainty"? Your argument here should be with asylum laws, not this individual.

For what it's worth, the situation in El Salvador at the time he left (when he was a minor) does make the claim somewhat credible. There's plenty of evidence that the choice for male youths at that time was leave or join whichever gang controlled your area. The idea that everyone is an "economic migrant" ignores the reality of the situation, which is far more complex.

ltbarcly32 months ago

I don't know in his personal case if he is lying. However, you can get to what the probability of a random applicant for an asylum being truthful very easily. You just need a good estimate of the % of migrants that had to flee gangs or other risk of death (gangs that are still in control of their communities), then compare that to the % that claim they had to flee for those reasons, then subtract.

I don't know what that % is, but we have courts that are deciding these cases every day. The actual court cases are more complex to analyze because lack of adequate council or other factors might influence outcomes. However, of people who attend their interview, about 44% are determined to not have a credible fear.

_DeadFred_2 months ago

Protection rackets are pretty big in central america. Look at the publicity about the avocado industry. Protection rackets only work when you go after those people that escape your 'protection' payments. So yes, it's reasonable to assume every person that said no to the racket and fled to the US becomes a pretty big target, it's part of the founding principles/business model of running a protection racket.

+1
ltbarcly32 months ago
actionfromafar2 months ago

Combined with "oops can't get them back" it's very powerful. Combine it with not advertising faces of snatched people on broadcast TV, and it's a very useful tool inded. People will just disappear. It won't be legal or illegal, just a thing that happens from time to time. Police won't search too hard for the missing people, because no good can come out of finding out.

practice92 months ago

Kinda similar in a way to China or Russia “disappearances”

mevin_kitnick2 months ago

[flagged]

mevin_kitnick2 months ago

[flagged]

billy99k2 months ago

[flagged]

crowselect2 months ago

The security community didn’t ignore hard evidence - the “hard evidence” didn’t stand up to basic scrutiny.

These claims may well be false, but they deserve scrutiny, and waving them away while perpetuating a much repeated lie isn’t helping anyone except criminals and corruption.

Bottom line: this deserves investigation.

gibsonf12 months ago

[flagged]

grandempire2 months ago

[flagged]

pavel_lishin2 months ago

> > The small, independent federal agency

> I still don’t think this notion holds up.

What notion doesn't hold up? That a federal agency can be small & independent?

> Which branch are they under, who do they report to?

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

> The NLRB is governed by a five-person board and a general counsel, all of whom are appointed by the president with the consent of the Senate. Board members are appointed for five-year terms and the general counsel is appointed for a four-year term. The general counsel acts as a prosecutor and the board acts as an appellate quasi-judicial body from decisions of 36 administrative law judges, as of November 2023.[4] The NLRB is headquartered at 1015 Half St. SE, Washington, D.C., and it has over 30 regional, sub-regional, and residential offices throughout the United States.

> Why would real Russian hackers not do anything to obscure their ip?

Why would the fox bother hiding the hole someone dug for it under the henhouse?

_heimdall2 months ago

Its also worth noting that the NLRB has a proposed budget of $320M for the the 2025 fiscal year and a total of around 1,300 employees [1].

I'm a strong proponent of small government and don't know enough about the NLRB to say if I would find them useful, but that is well within the range of a small federal department today.

[1] https://www.nlrb.gov/sites/default/files/attachments/pages/n...

const_cast2 months ago

NLRB is a very important agency that I have known others to personally utilize because abuses of labor laws in the private sector, particularly poorly paid labor, is fairly common. These workers may face unfair treatment or wage theft, and the reason companies do it is because workers have very few genuine avenues of recourse. The NLRB is one of those few avenues of recourse.

grandempire2 months ago

> That a federal agency can be small & independent?

Yes. They are either in the legislative, executive, or judicial branch.

And before you send more Wikipedia links, be aware there is a long history and chain of Supreme Court cases about this question.

> Why would the fox bother hiding the hole someone dug for it under the henhouse?

Still spreading the Russian asset conspiracy theory? Why wouldn’t they want to hide their crimes from future enemies?

kasey_junk2 months ago

Yes. And the current precedent is very clear that these independent agencies are constitutional.

The current court has not, yet, overturned that precedent. There is lots of reason to believe they will, in an extremely contentious ruling. But for now they haven’t.

We are going to find out one way or another though because this admin is pushing hard up against the question.

Of course it’s also pushing hard up on the question of if the courts can constrain it at all so the grade school understanding of separation of powers is real.

StopDisinfo9102 months ago

> Yes. They are either in the legislative, executive, or judicial branch.

That’s not what independent means here.

Most independent agencies are part of the executive branch (some are part of the legislative and judiciary but they are the exception).

They are independent because congress gave the president limited power in their ability to dismiss the agency head and its members. These agencies have some regulatory authority which Congress has vested them on purpose.

You might argue under the unitary executive theory of law that these agencies are actually under the control of the president and the current Supreme Court (for what it’s worth) might even agree with you.

I might argue that it’s a complete travestissement of the constitution spirit and intent pushed forward by people who wish to dismantle the American republic and replace it by an authoritarian regime. But that’s on me.

+1
grandempire2 months ago
pavel_lishin2 months ago

> Still spreading the Russian asset conspiracy theory?

If something smells like shit everywhere you go, it's not a conspiracy to suggest checking the bottom of your shoe.

AIPedant2 months ago

The NLRB is one of many independent agencies of the executive branch created by Congrees, and they don't report to anyone except for their own boards. The president and Congress have influence over the boards but no direct control over the agency. The idea that the president can just ignore these laws because of a "unitary executive" theory is authoritarian bullshit.

And the concern probably isn't Russian hackers, it's American hackers spoofing their IP address. Also you are ignoring that DOGE made the server public when it wasn't supposed to be.

grandempire2 months ago

> The idea that the president can just ignore these laws because of a "unitary executive" theory is authoritarian bullshit.

The question of whether the president is violating congresses power by downsizing or neutering an agency they have created is something democrats should pursue.

But no - there are no people outside the org chart. That’s just dysfunctional, no man can serve two masters, etc.

If it were true than congress can create agencies for themselves with more power than is granted them in the constitution.

etchalon2 months ago

The Congress can make laws. That's like ... their whole thing.

AIPedant2 months ago

This is still authoritarian bullshit. Your argument is that you think independent agencies are a bad idea, and therefore it's a-okay for Trump to simply ignore 80 years of law and Supreme Court rulings.

More generally, nobody in the executive branch serves any master. They serve the law and are legally obligated to refuse and report illegal orders. The idea that they serve Master Donald Trump (or Vizier Elon Musk), and that illegal orders must be enforced because it is Trump's will, is precisely why Kilmar Abrego Garcia was illegally deported and why Trump is musing about doing the same thing to US citizens.

grandempire2 months ago

I think a lot of Supreme Court cases will come out of this administration, I just don’t think the sovereignty of independent federal agencies is going to be one of them.

I guess we will wait and see.

howmayiannoyyou2 months ago

[flagged]

kemotep2 months ago

Well it would help if there weren’t numerous issues with the data as presented on that site. Specifically now they are only claiming somewhere around 28 billion saved in cancelled contracts when in early February they claimed like 55 billion. Seems odd that over time the amount saved would go down despite the alleged number being of cancellations going up.

Also it is concerning that the largest amount from an individual contract saved is a cancelled deportation facility contract. Seems at odds with the Administration’s goals to ramp up mass deportation but cancel the contract for building a holding facility for unaccompanied minors.

My suggestion would be if the goal is to eliminate debt we would need to target social security reform such as raising the retirement ages and eliminating the cap on the payroll tax. Additionally, but far less realistic would be implementing a Land Value Tax. Not cancel random contracts that amount to a tiny fraction of the budget and propose massive tax cuts like the current administration seems to be doing.

fads_go2 months ago

The parent's russian propoganda post does not mention that the posted savings are full of inaccuracies.

Nor does the propoganda define "waste", if one looks at the actual cuts, it seems to be focused on "things Herr M. doesn't like". which is not a good definition of "waste".

BLKNSLVR2 months ago

Clinton / Gore did it, properly, well though out, effectively, in the mid-late 90's. I'm not sure if you'd consider that "modern times" though.

https://youtu.be/lG9pxvpGY-Q?si=cii2iggD-9hAj0ms&t=900

I've timestamped the above video to where it mentions the Clinton / Gore bit, but the whole video is enlightening.

alabastervlog2 months ago

There are also constant ongoing efforts at improving efficiency, which is why they keep going “ah ha! We found it!” then poor bureaucrats who are trying to do their fucking jobs while these idiots run around messing things up have to explain, “no, you’re seeing an artifact of record-keeping practices that exist because [very good reason], you’re wrong yet again, maybe try asking literally anyone who knows about these data sets”

They also love to throw around the word “fraud” while bringing no charges. Despite the DOJ being in Trump’s control. Same pattern as other lies (“rampant voter fraud! We have proof” ok so when you’re in change you’ll prosecute, right? You should! That’s bad if true! I mean I’ve looked at your proof and it doesn’t appear true, but maybe you have more proof you haven’t shown! “Uhhh… [smoke bomb]”)

Plus, we have the GAO and CBO. Trump won’t want to listen to them because they’ll say “our #1 problem is we keep cutting taxes”, and “there’s not much waste to be eliminated cutting government workers”, because that’s true at this point, but they exist. It’s not like nobody’s been looking at these kinds of things. That’s just bullshit.

nova220332 months ago

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6L1AYL6oxlU

The 8 billion saving that turned out to be a 8 million saving?

ipython2 months ago

Realistic alternative? How about starting by reading tfa? I’d say you don’t need to physically threaten people who ask for basic security practices to be followed, for one.

djaychela2 months ago

"The people voted for major reform."

What they got was a pocket-lining idiot, and genuinely one of the most morally bankrupt people I've ever known of as his tech right-hand man. Musk is a moral imbecile, a 13-year old incel trapped in the body of an overweight mid-50s mess. Yes, he's been involved in some great things (SpaceX and Tesla), but he thinks that translates into a god-like ability to do anything and that he's right about everything.

These numbers don't even stand up to casual scrutiny. And I'm from the UK so it doesn't really directly affect me (although the orange idiot's shenanigans have done so to a small degree). But if you really believe this site, you're divorced from reality, and maybe drinking the same kool-aid that the tech muppets who are on DOGE are.

timschmidt2 months ago

> but he thinks that translates into a god-like ability to do anything and that he's right about everything.

Like when this space youtuber suggested a change to his Mars rocket and he understood, accepted the validity of the idea, and decided to implement it on the spot? Er, I guess that's the opposite of what you said.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/WY73exaVpyw

djaychela2 months ago

That's a single example (which I'm aware of and pretty sure it wasn't just them that said it - I was thinking the same when they took the original route) compared with the thousands of counter examples of bad ideas, such as completely unserviceable batteries, vehicle structures which are easy for the factory to make but can't be repaired for moderate-level damage (due to the megacastings rather than individual elements for the same structure), removal of ultrasonic parking detectors, etc....

timschmidt2 months ago

> That's a single example

> megacastings

Wow, you brought your own counterexample! Cast frames were suggested to Elon by Sandy Munro. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNWYk4DdT_E

To quote Sandy: "These guys at Tesla, they take everything you say literally, and then they go basically implement! It's amazing! It is truely to me amazing that these guys can do so much in such a short period of time."

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

cedws2 months ago

DOGE results according to DOGE. We all know what kind of track record Elon Musk has as a bullshitter.

piva002 months ago

Not only that, Trump has already spent US$ 155B more than Biden, DOGE claims to have shaved US$ 150B, overall this administration has already increased spending by US$ 5B even after firing a lot of civil servants.

The worst is that the effects of this shaving off will only be felt over time, when National Parks start crumbling, when ATCs start quitting, the government machine of the USA has been eroded, inevitably it will fall into a landslide.

Peritract2 months ago

Do you have a more independent/reliable source?

acdha2 months ago

First, every objective audit has found many problems with that data, ranging from taking credit for things which were terminated under the Biden administration to listing the maximum ceiling on a flexible contract (IDIQ) as the total savings even though the amounts actually spent were far lower (like canceling your credit card and saying you saved the limit), and even counting the same contract multiple times.

Second, you have to look at the cost of their actions. They’ve disrupted the functioning of the entire federal government and doing in a very haphazard manner. That means that a lot of current spending is wasted by DOGE _and_ that the business of the government isn’t getting done. For example, whether or not you think the U.S. should engage in foreign aid, under DOGE they paid money to send people to help in Myanmar only to lay them off after they arrived on site, squandering all possible value. That story is being repeated all over the country right now and in many cases the loses are permanent: if they choose to waste payroll having people come back to an office where they can’t work, the job isn’t getting done and there’s no way to recover the wasted payroll. As they keep losing lawsuits, it’s also likely that the amounts cut will be exceeded by the cost of settlements when they breach contracts or fail to provide a service required by statute.

One really big area is tax collection: the IRS is already estimating revenue reductions on the order of half a billion dollars, and since they’ve been sacking a lot of the law enforcement for businesses and high-net wealth individuals, that will get worse as people feel confident cheating more aggressively.

Lastly, you have to look at the economy. Estimated have each federal job supporting 2-3 other jobs, and federal spending drives the economy in many parts of the country. They’ve already cut growth of the entire economy into the negative (from +2.5% in January to -2-3% now - see https://www.atlantafed.org/cqer/research/gdpnow) and a lot of that is driven by federal cuts.

Sonnigeszeug2 months ago

You do understand, that the upcoming tax cuts for rich people will throw the USA Debt above defence savings?

And it will increase the debt significantly?

All of that while DOGE, some random dudes without any understanding how things work, stop things which are globally agreed on (global aid) or just not even worth mentioning in the grand schem?

But hey if you prefer to defend DOGE ssaving 160 Billion while the tax cut for the rich adds Trillions to debt, yeah do a happy dance. Be proud. Or whatever your comment is trying to do.

Funny that IRS also gets defunded. But hey taxes right? :D

hypeatei2 months ago

There were already people called "inspector generals" which handled waste, fraud, and abuse but Trump fired about 17 of them in his first week. Deploying tech bros to solve the problem is naive at best and malicious at worst. The arrogance in assuming that no auditor before them looked into the SSA database and saw DOB records going back to 1875 is outstanding.

vaxman2 months ago

They didn't use StarLink?! ROFLMAO

I hope he doesn't think Trump is his boy and will keep DOJ off his back. The problem is that the institutional funds and market makers will not support this level of Watergate/Enron/WorldCom-like risk and Trump isn't going to become entangled in that (since it means the corporate death penalty as far as public equity and access to bank capital is concerned).

BUT the Report is from a super controversial NGO that has long been targeted by Republicans and may soon be DOGEd, so it could be filled with speculation, half-truths, innuendo and lies.

Still...They didn't use StarLink?! I mean, is that not the greatest evidence you could ever hope for of an obvious NSA backdoor in StarLink? They were willing to risk obscure premises-based (bandwidth) monitoring over holding a mini-dish out the window for a few seconds..Too much! I feel like I owe someone $20 for a ticket.

vaxman2 months ago

Not even 24 hours later, I called it --the Administration IS asking Congress to de-fund NPR:

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-administration-p...

Meanwhile NPR has new reporting that DOGE has sent two of its boys back to NLRB, but they're going to work remotely. Is the hope here that this will provide ongoing justification for DOGE remote data access as the Feds sort out what they did in the first visit? Like even though NPR's first report stated that Russia has tried to login remotely using valid DOGE credentials just after DOGE personnel left the first time?

https://www.npr.org/2025/04/16/nx-s1-5366851/doge-nlrb-whist...

grandempire2 months ago

> particularly when those staffers noticed a spike in data leaving the agency. It's possible that the data included sensitive information on unions, ongoing legal cases and corporate secrets

This entire article appears to be speculation about data they MAY have taken with no evidence besides large file size that they are misusing something.

The discussion with the “whistle blower” and other experts is only about how serious it would be IF they misused it.

Am I reading it wrong?

JumpCrisscross2 months ago

There is evidence DOGE went out of its way to illegally conceal what it was doing. That, alone, is enough to put these kids in jail one day.

flanked-evergl2 months ago

What law would they have broken?

grandempire2 months ago

My original comment here has not been flagged - but all my responses to other comments have. This is distorting the conversation. There is only one DOGE narrative allowed on this site.

DustinBrett2 months ago

Indeed and sad, it's becoming like Reddit. There is no discourse going on here or nearly anywhere. Sadly on X it's the opposite but equally one sided.

Robotbeat2 months ago

Agreed entirely. The comments in this article read exactly like Reddit, the tone, the downvoting, etc. and I agree about your comments on X being a sort of rightwing mirror of that, too. Super disappointed in Hackernews.

muddi9002 months ago

I came from a mobile app to the site just to see your flagged comments.

I would say you were treated with far more respect than you deserve. If i didn't know any better, I would say you were paid to act this stupid.

None of your arguments were in good faith, you constantly moved goal posts, and actively disregard every piece of eveidence that was presented.

You can claim I am biased. I would agree with you. I am biased against this blatant display of imbecilty.

jasonlotito2 months ago

Yes. You claim:

"This entire article appears to be speculation about data they MAY have taken with no evidence besides large file size that they are misusing something ...[and] is only about how serious it would be IF they misused it."

This paragraph makes it clear it's not just about misusing data and large file sizes.

> Those forensic digital records are important for record-keeping requirements and they allow for troubleshooting, but they also allow experts to investigate potential breaches, sometimes even tracing the attacker's path back to the vulnerability that let them inside a network.

Let's be clear:

> Those engineers were also concerned by DOGE staffers' insistence that their activities not be logged, allowing them to probe the NLRB's systems and discover information about potential security flaws or vulnerabilities without being detected.

Neither of these have to do with "large file size" or misusing data.

"Am I reading it wrong?"

Yes. Now, before you go moving goal posts, you made claims, and I've debunked those claims with quotes you said you needed. Because clearly the article is ALSO talking about these other things as problematic as well, so it's not "the entire article". (Also, the "entire article appears"? Appears? Just read it, it talks about numerous things, and is very clear on the different elements it's talking about.)

This isn't the only stuff mentioned, so be careful about claiming "oh, I just missed that" or some such because there are other things that can be referenced, such as the massive amount of text spent on the whistleblower issues and the threats made to them.

And before you talk about this just being "speculation," that's why we have the process we have, so people can make claims that can then be investigated. And that's what's being stopped.

Finally, "no evidence besides large file size" is also not true.

"Am I reading it wrong?"

As someone said, it's more likely you didn't even read it.

arunabha2 months ago

I am genuinely curious as to what your point is. Not saying it's wrong, but a succinct summary might be useful.

grandempire2 months ago

[flagged]

Sonnigeszeug2 months ago

There were already news from weeks ago how they started to put servers on the internet with access to systems, which should not have access to/from the internet for security reasons.

This is just on top of all the other things. happened.

92834092322 months ago

Someone exfiltrated sensitive data. That isn't in question. The only question is who did it and why. As far as DOGE's involvement, there is no proof but there is plenty of evidence.

grandempire2 months ago

[flagged]

bhouston2 months ago

The issue is we don't know what they took and they took steps to hide their tracks. This is whacked territory we are in. You can defend it but normally there are checks and controls in government for a reason. The fact that we are normalizing that certain very ideologically groups in government do not have checks and balances is pretty strange - based on nothing more than a "trust us, we are the good guys." This never works out in the end.

+1
grandempire2 months ago
92834092322 months ago

> Then, Berulis started tracking sensitive data leaving the places it's meant to live, according to his official disclosure. First, he saw a chunk of data exiting the NxGen case management system's "nucleus," inside the NLRB system, Berulis explained. Then, he saw a large spike in outbound traffic leaving the network itself.

> From what he could see, the data leaving, almost all text files, added up to around 10 gigabytes — or the equivalent of a full stack of encyclopedias if someone printed them, he explained. It's a sizable chunk of the total data in the NLRB system, though the agency itself hosts over 10 terabytes in historical data. It's unclear which files were copied and removed or whether they were consolidated and compressed, which could mean even more data was exfiltrated.

> Berulis says someone appeared to be doing something called DNS tunneling to prevent the data exfiltration from being detected. He came to that conclusion, outlined in his disclosure, after he saw a traffic spike in DNS requests parallel to the data being exfiltrated, a spike 1,000 times the normal number of requests.

> And Berulis noticed that an unknown user had exported a "user roster," a file with contact information for outside lawyers who have worked with the NLRB.

And more if you actually read the article. About a third of it is about the data that was taken.

+1
grandempire2 months ago
insane_dreamer2 months ago

> Am I reading it wrong?

Yes

grandempire2 months ago

Good comment.

intermerda2 months ago

> Am I reading it wrong?

Based on your comments, you're not reading the article at all.

grandempire2 months ago

[flagged]

dashundchen2 months ago

Stop sealioning. Anyone can read the article. The evidence of suspicious behavior is clear and according to the article corroborated by a dozen experts.

The fact that someone tried to intimidate the whisteblower by posting threatening and stalking messages on his door shows there is something not above board here.

grandempire2 months ago

[flagged]