Violent white extremists are Ashley Lopez Archivessick of getting doxxed on Discord, and will "likely" move their organizing efforts to an encrypted messaging alternative created by Gab, an alt-right favorite.
So claims a May 26 law enforcement bulletin leaked, along with 269GB of files from over 200 police departments, in late June by hackers and published by Distributed Denial of Secrets, a journalist organization specializing in the publication of leaked documents. The bulletin, designated as "For Official Use Only" and created by the Central Florida Intelligence Exchange Fusion Center, provides valuable insight into how law enforcement follows extremists around the web as their preferred communication platforms change with the times.
At issue is Gab Chat, an encrypted Discord alternative released in beta earlier this year. Unlike the perhaps more widely known Gab, which claimed to provide a "free speech" alternative to Twitter, but was in practice often overrun with antisemitism, Gab Chat is not an attempt to replace more traditional forms of social media.
"[Gab Chat is an] encrypted chat messaging service with public & private chat rooms," explains the site. "All messages in private rooms are encrypted on the user's device and cannot be read by Gab. Messages are deleted after 30 days."
The leaked Fusion Center document speculates that the privacy offered by Gab Chat's encryption and private rooms will entice "White Racially Motivated Violent Extremists (WRMVEs)" away from Discord.
Anti-fascists, notes the bulletin, had become adept at infiltrating white supremacists' Discord groups and dumping chat logs — leading to the participants' doxxing.
Gab Chat has been promoted as an encrypted alternative to Discord. Discord is a free communication app designed primarily for gamers. However, WRMVEs have used it extensively to establish their own custom servers which have been compromised on numerous occasions over the last couple of years. In 2018, Telegram was promoted as an alternative to Discord and WRMVEs were encouraged to stop using Discord due to frequent infiltration by anti-fascists networks who would release chat logs for the groups, enabling the identification of WRMVE users.
Indeed, leaked Discord screenshots and chat logs have caused headaches for white supremacists in the past. In 2018, the non-profit Unicorn Riot reported on scores of such documents from the neo-nazi Traditionalist Worker Party.
"With Gab's continued popularity with WRMVEs and the persistent infiltration of their chat groups on Discord, Gab Chat could become a viable alternative," warns the Fusion Center document.
When reached for comment on the possibility of Gab Chat being used by explicitly violent white extremists, Gab CEO Andrew Torba wrote via email that simply because a service is encrypted does not mean it is opaque to law enforcement.
"Encryption does not render law enforcement totally blind," wrote Torba. "Encryption doesn't cause a user to simply disappear. It doesn't prevent a service provider from seeing who is using its service or when that person is using the service."
Without specifically responding to our question about violent white extremists potentially flocking to Gab Chat, Torba instead argued law enforcement should turn its attention elsewhere.
"Widespread, unsupervised access to the internet, and the immoral distribution of pornography to young people by internet smut peddlers along with a plague of child exploitation on big tech messaging platforms are the larger issues here that law enforcement should be focused on."
SEE ALSO: Why you should absolutely worry about the anti-privacy EARN IT Act
Of course, it's worth pointing out that encryption is a vital tool that provides privacy and security to racists and non-racists alike. The encrypted messaging app Signal, for example, is used by journalists and human-rights advocates across the globe. Encryption alone does not make an app or service inherently problematic. In fact, much the opposite; a messaging service that does not work to protect the security of its users is far more worrisome than one which does.
As the leaked law enforcement documents show, however, authorities think violent white extremists may finally be waking up to that fact.
Topics Cybersecurity Privacy
A Letter from Our Paris Editor, Antonin BaudryRoger Caillois’s Fifteenth Arrondissement for PhantomsNotes on the Demise of Travel GuidebooksJohn Clare, Christopher Smart, and the Poetry of the AsylumYour Chrome tabs are a mess — and Google has a plan to fix themWhy Does the First Person Come First?Dan Stevens' brutal takedown of Boris Johnson makes BBC presenters audibly gasp18 of the internet's British boyfriends, rankedRowan Ricardo Phillips on Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors.Want to Keep People Away? Don’t Insult Them; Confuse Them.The 12 best and funniest tweets of the week, including a bloody hand and 'Ghostbusters'Staff Picks: Our Favorites from 2015Best Prime Day Peloton deal: 20% off Peloton Bike+Seeing the Sixties and Seventies Through 2001 and AlienBest Prime Day Apple Watch deal: $50 off Apple Watch SEHow to disable your InstagramWhy John Updike Loved ComicsBest Prime Day drone deals 2023A Letter from Our Paris Editor, Antonin BaudryLast Chance: Get a Free Copy of “The Unprofessionals” Porsche refreshes the Taycan with big range and power upgrade In a first for U.S., this bumblebee is now officially 'endangered' The Black Madonna by Aaron Robertson How TikTok changed the way Gen The Psychopathology of Everyday Café Life in Freud’s Vienna by Deborah Levy ESPN, FOX, and Warner Bros. Discovery are teaming up to launch one giant sports streaming service Mozilla Monitor will attempt to stop data brokers from selling your personal info on the internet Amazon is testing new driver safety features following shootings Bolaño in Girona: A Friendship by Javier Cercas This treaty has a massive, $19 trillion upside, but Trump may walk away anyway It's time to start thinking about cybersecurity for sharks. Yes, the fish. Making of a Poem: Mark Leidner on “Sissy Spacek” by Mark Leidner A Rose Diary by Walt John Pearce Do Dogs Know What Art Is? by Laura van den Berg Disney+ is now restricting password sharing in the U.S. Fourth Sleeper: Rachel Sindler by Sophie Calle India gives legal human status to two of its oldest rivers The Grimacer of Beaune by Karl On Writing Advice and the People Who Give It by Sheila Heti Toys in the TV by Isabelle Rea
2.295s , 10132.1015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Ashley Lopez Archives】,Steady Information Network