Alberta privacy breach

NTSB Regrets Audio Reconstruction from Crash PDF

Following the extraction and public dissemination of cockpit voice recorder audio from a still image within the UPS flight 2976 crash investigation docket, the National Transportation Safety Board has taken the rare step of temporarily suspending public access to nearly all its investigation dockets. This action was necessitated by the realization that advancements in image recognition technology allowed individuals to reconstruct audio approximations from visual representations, thus compromising privacy and the integrity of ongoing investigations. The NTSB emphasizes that cockpit voice recordings are typically withheld due to federal law and out of respect for victims and their families, and this incident highlights a new avenue for potential privacy breaches.

Read More

US Operatives Built Alberta Separatist App in Coordinated Canadian Destabilization Plot

The Centurion Project, an app developed with US funding and political strategists, was launched in Alberta by a Canadian separatist organizer. This app loaded the personal data of 2.9 million Albertans onto a platform that mimicked a US tool, allegedly used in American elections, raising concerns about Canada’s most significant privacy breach. The operation’s depth, its connections to the Trump orbit, and its potential impact on Canadian sovereignty are under investigation.

Read More