KoCo, “Micul Guccifer, RSC, Asesoft, Teamnet”, tot corespondenţă academică a lui Maior au rămas ? … pe siteul SRI … Maior decît să ne plictiseşti cu “Incertitudine” mai bine le scrii lui KoCo “Coincidenţă” ! … poţi doar să o semnezi că tot o scriem noi…

maior-guccifer-kovesi-coldea-vlade-ghita-hillaty-moraru-vartic-artoMarcel Lazăr Lehel, – Micul Guccifer – cum il alinta din “Coincidenta” George Maior – , un infractor, faimos in intreaga lume datorita mai multor motive la care vom reveni, se plinge ca Maior din prostie si incompetenta l-a avertizat sa isi distruga telefonul mobil si calculatorul “special”, primit de la un serviciu de contra informatii strain cu care opera mai multe siteuri localizate in Rusia, distrugind astfel probele care il puteau incrimina pe Maior, care opera informatii secrete utilizind mijloace de comunicare nesecretizate si criptate, la fel cum facea si Hillary Clinton, o alta victima a infractorului Micul Guccifer.

Departamentul de Stat si Departamentul de Justitie ancheteaza cazul, si in prezent Lehel este incriminat in mai multe cazuri penale in SUA referitor la mai multe crime, inclusiv cibernetice, ceea ce inseamna ca vom mai auzi despre acest caz pe care Maior il doreste uitat. Nu se va intimpla, mai ales ca acest caz este deosebit de important pentru a intelege “Cresterea si Decaderea” Organizatiei criminale Microsoft – EADS – Siemens – RSC – Asesoft – Teamnet in timpul Domniei lui George Maior la SRI.

Maior si SRI nu neaga ca Maior a primit, incepind din anul 2010, mai multe avertizari referitor la acte de frauda, coruptie structurala si crima organizata comise de Sebastian (Vladescu + Ghita) atit pe teritoriul Romaniei cit si in Moldova si la Bruxelles.

Avertizarile foarte precise si bine formulate sunt confirmate de fapte comise atit anterior cit si ulterior de catre cei mentionati. Exista “aparente Incertitudini” referitor la cine este autorul avertizarilor deosebit de serioase, dar nu mai exista nici un fel de incertitudine sau/si dubiu referitor la acuratetea celor relatate. http://riscograma.ro/8280/aparati-nelu-neacsu/ . A ramas doar frica de a clarifica un caz care expune crime deosebit de serioase comise de catre George Maior, Sebastian (Vladescu + Ghita) si multi altii timp de un deceniu, astfel acoperiti de Parchete si Justitie… se aude KoCo ?

FUD (Fear Uncertainty Doubt) Frica Incertitudine Dubiu, sunt in fapt definitia exacta a ceea ce este definit drept TERORISM ! Exista doua feluri de terorism, la fel cum exista doua feluri de tortura : alb si negru, respectiv cu sau fara violenta fizica. Specialistii considera ca tortura psihica practicata pentru perioade extinse, este mai daunatoare pe termen lung decit tortura fizica.

Maior a invatat de la Microsoft si altii metode specifice, dezinformarii si propagandei prin utilizarea Incertitudinii si Dubiului in vederea initierii si propagarii unei stari permanente de insecuritate si Frica, respectiv Maior este in conformitate cu definitiile din care citeaza fara sa le inteleaga, un TEORIST !, astfel incit toti cei care il ajuta sa calce legea si sa continue cu practicile tortionare si teroriste devin complici cu sau fara voie, in cunostinta sau nu de cauza.

Vom reveni cu un material mult mai amplu astfel incit cei care doresc sa invoce in continuare “credible deniability” – negarea credibila a implicarii lor pasive sau/si active sa nu mai beneficieze de Incertitudinea promovata, atit de pueril dar eficient de Maior si masina de dezinformare operata de catre acesta si partenerii lui.

Guccifer had the audacity to use Maior’s own compromised address to contact him directly on his SRI email, calling the top man in Romanian intelligence a ‘skunk’ and asking him for money in jest. Maior, the very man who was chasing him, kept silent. Guccifer posted everything online.

http://pando.com/2015/03/20/exclusive-interview-jailed-hacker-guccifer-boasts-i-used-to-read-hillarys-memos-for-six-seven-hours-and-then-do-the-gardening/

Lehel still felt invincible but, in December, Maior made a public statement which derailed the hacker’s confidence. “Micul Guccifer will be caught,” he said, alluding to the hacker’s previous pseudonym, Micul Fum. It translates as Little Smoke, inspired by the psychedelic drug used in Carlos Castaneda’s books. “This was hugely dumb of him, alerting me,” Guccifer says now, implying it was a slip. (Maior told the NY Times it was a coincidence.) Either way, Guccifer took the bait — calculating it was now either death by CIA black op or prison he decided to publish everything, fast. That fit of paranoia would turn out to be his undoing.

He took the axe to his laptop and phone, a scene he would later describe to me, in vivid detail, from prison. “It was a special laptop which was passed to me by a French intelligence connection, who had it from the Pentagon.” Despite knowing it was tapped, he used his landline to offer journalists stolen data. If he got assassinated by a death squad, at least Guccifer would live online – or maybe a burst of fame would keep him safe. The calls gave police enough to move in. In the first week of 2014, Lehel was arrested in a dawn raid by a team of armed and masked police. Cryptome posted the seven-and-a-bit gigabyte Guccifer Archive online shortly afterwards.

Since their TV moment, Lehel has regarded George Maior as his nemesis. He blames him for his struggles with prison life – a violent assault, a skin disease, and the general uncooperativeness and chicanery of the penitentiary’s management. “It’s clear to me that all the trouble is based on the intervention of the chief of the SRI, George Cristian Maior, who was a victim in my court case,” he says. “Maior is a stupid, incompetent man. He’s lucky he doesn’t talk much.” He claims Maior was keeping “about 350 MB” of secret documents on his Yahoo account. Why not release them? I ask. “I didn’t think it was ethical to transfer them on a storage device,” he says. Viorel Badea, the prosecutor on Lehel’s case, begs to differ: all Guccifer found was Maior’s casual correspondence and messages related to his teaching work. Any stolen secret documents would have been reflected in a more serious charge, relating to state security, but this was “never in question,” Badea says.