>A former employee with the so-called Department of Government Efficiency allegedly claimed he tapped into two sensitive Social Security Administration databases and intended to share the information with his private employer, according to an anonymous whistleblower complaint.
>The complaint — filed with Social Security’s internal watchdog and first reported by The Washington Post — alleges that the U.S. DOGE Service staffer accessed two protected databases containing personal information, including Social Security numbers, for more than 500 million living and dead Americans.
>The employee allegedly told the whistleblower who filed the complaint that he intended to move the data from a thumb drive to his personal computer “so that he could ‘sanitize’ the data” before taking it to his private employer.
>After leaving the agency, he allegedly told colleagues he retained “God-level” security access to the Social Security’s systems and told another coworker at the agency that he expected to receive a presidential pardon if his actions were considered illegal, according to the whistleblower.
Tigerbutton831 on
Who’s the private employer? Musk??
Radically-Peaceful on
Musk is responsible for this.
bobcat116 on
Palantir?
supernova_tiger on
People voted for this.
BillieBlanus on
I imagine Joe Rogan will be quick to talk about this issue soon. I hear he’s big on conspiracies! … right guys? … right?
Constant-Brief3410 on
McDonald’s?
DefNotReaves on
I don’t even want to begin to think of the implications of this.
superteed on
This sounds like BigBallz.
ocwilly on
All DOGE employees, including Musk, need to be charged for stealing highly sensitive information without having top secret clearance!
Ill_Situation4107 on
This is a coup, plain and simple.
pimpampoumz on
> A spokesperson for Social Security said “the allegations by a singular anonymous source have been strongly refuted by all named parties — SSA, the former employee, and the company.”
“We asked the guy accused of murder if he killed anyone and he said no, so we closed the case”
Helpful-Wolverine555 on
Can we all sue the federal government for 10 billion for a data breach? There’s precedent for that.
wallyrules75 on
If there’s any good left in this country the minute the dems win the next election the conservative justices would step down so real justices can be appointed to rule on pardons
14 Comments
>A former employee with the so-called Department of Government Efficiency allegedly claimed he tapped into two sensitive Social Security Administration databases and intended to share the information with his private employer, according to an anonymous whistleblower complaint.
>The complaint — filed with Social Security’s internal watchdog and first reported by The Washington Post — alleges that the U.S. DOGE Service staffer accessed two protected databases containing personal information, including Social Security numbers, for more than 500 million living and dead Americans.
>The employee allegedly told the whistleblower who filed the complaint that he intended to move the data from a thumb drive to his personal computer “so that he could ‘sanitize’ the data” before taking it to his private employer.
>After leaving the agency, he allegedly told colleagues he retained “God-level” security access to the Social Security’s systems and told another coworker at the agency that he expected to receive a presidential pardon if his actions were considered illegal, according to the whistleblower.
Who’s the private employer? Musk??
Musk is responsible for this.
Palantir?
People voted for this.
I imagine Joe Rogan will be quick to talk about this issue soon. I hear he’s big on conspiracies! … right guys? … right?
McDonald’s?
I don’t even want to begin to think of the implications of this.
This sounds like BigBallz.
All DOGE employees, including Musk, need to be charged for stealing highly sensitive information without having top secret clearance!
This is a coup, plain and simple.
> A spokesperson for Social Security said “the allegations by a singular anonymous source have been strongly refuted by all named parties — SSA, the former employee, and the company.”
“We asked the guy accused of murder if he killed anyone and he said no, so we closed the case”
Can we all sue the federal government for 10 billion for a data breach? There’s precedent for that.
If there’s any good left in this country the minute the dems win the next election the conservative justices would step down so real justices can be appointed to rule on pardons