Massive Personal Data Breach Revealed

Hacker 2

A hacker group called USDoD successfully broke into the records from the National Public Data system and stole EVERY social security number. The media first reported that 2.7 billion records, including physical addresses, were stolen but now intelligence agencies believe that government data on every resident of the US, Canada, and the UK were confiscated by hackers.

The hacking group allegedly asked for $3.5 million to return the database, but the leak has already occurred. There have been more instances of hacking in the past few years than ever before. It seems as if elite hackers can break into just about any government data source. That is unless you attempt to assassinate a former president. Then, not even the highest-ranked intelligence officers in the US can unlock your phone or learn of your personal information.

Government incompetence and weak security could be to blame. But perhaps a more sinister motive is at hand. The US, UK, and Canada all have one thing in common – they’re working toward the Great Reset and Build Back Better agenda. The goal is to eliminate hard currencies to create CBDC and digital IDs for every citizen that will include things like social security numbers and social credit scores.

Digital Identity Chart

I know multiple people who have had their identities stolen, and it took years to undo the damage. They are still required to file their taxes using a special PIN number as their number and personal information are permanently in the hands of criminals.

This data breach occurred in April, but thanks to a class-action lawsuit, the company failed to notify the public until August. The company told the Los Angeles Times in an email that “we are aware of certain third-party claims about consumer data and are investigating these issues.” Neither the company nor any government agency is validating the severity of this massive hack.

The push for digital IDs and CBDC has been led with the pretense that the government can safely keep our data secure. Governments have been utterly incapable of keeping our data secure since the dawn of the internet, and now we are to trust them with a centralized data source that will contain absolutely every piece of personal information?

If this was an inside job to highlight the need for added security, it absolutely failed. I would not trust the government to take my trash to the curb, let alone keep my data safe. They are now loosely advising the public to check their bank accounts and change their passwords – what will any of that matter when our information is fully in view for any criminal to take?

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