The dog just get hot.
It is April and the United States is experiencing a self -taught trade war and a constitutional crisis on immigration. It is too much that it is even enough to forget you for a while the so -called Foreign Ministry’s efficiency. You should not
For clear expression: DOGE is still there and disappears at the base of government infrastructure. It may be a little obvious, perhaps that the DOGE project has recently entered a new phase. The siege of workers and federal contracts will continue, where there is something to collect. But from now on, everything is about data.
A few creatures in the world have as much access to sensitive data as much as the United States. From the outset, Dow has used it as much as he could, and has gained more of his way through a series of resignation, firing and court cases.
In many cases, it is still unclear what DOGE engineers have done or intend to communicate with the data. Despite the opposite of Elun Mask’s protests, the dog is as matte as Vantablack. But recent reports of wired and elsewhere are starting to fill out the image: for DOGE, data is a tool. It is also a weapon.
Start with internal revenue services, where the DOGE Associates put the best and brightest agency business engineers in a room with Palantir people last week. Their mission, as previously reported, was to build “Mega API”, which makes it easier to view previously compartment data from across the IRS in one place.
In isolation that may not seem too worrying. But in theory, an API for all IRS data allows for any agency – or any party outside the right permits, to access the most personal and valuable US government data for its citizens. The blurry of the DOGE mission begins to draw attention. Even more, since we know that the IRS is currently sharing its data in unprecedented ways: a deal recently signed with the Home Department of Security provides sensitive information about immigrants without evidence.
This is the synergy of black mirror companies and puts taxpayers’ data to the cross of Donald Trump’s deportation.
It is also beyond the IRS. The Washington Post reported this week that representatives of DOGE across government agencies – from the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development to the Social Security Office – are presenting data that is typically serving immigrants without evidence. At the Ministry of Labor, as Wired reported on Friday, DOGE has access to sensitive data on immigrants and farm workers.
And this is only the data that remains within the government itself. This week, NPR reported that a female whistle on the National Labor Relations Board claims that employees saw spikes in the agency’s Turkish data after accessing DOGE and were unknown destination. The whistleblower goes on to claim that DOGE representatives appear to turn off or escape monitoring tools to “cover their songs” that keep the tabs it performs in computer systems. (NLRB spokesman denied NPR that DOGE had access to agency systems.)