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#1
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08-26-2025, 10:56 PM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,671 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4596 Post(s)
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Video Request for Foreign Country Viewers
It has recently been reported that the Ukrainians hacked into a TV channel in Russia, locked out Russian controls, and broadcast a video feed of Russian losses in Ukraine, during 3 hours of Russian prime-time viewing hours, before they shut it down, and returned control to the Russian network. Would ANY of our overseas readers have seen this video segment, or possibly have recorded it, so we could see it here on DR? I doubt anyone in the U.S. would be able to even view the actual TV show on Russian TV. I don't think our U.S. DVR's will even work with Russian TV signals. I understand it would be in either Ukrainian, or more likely in Russian, but that is unimportant. I just want to see what material they broadcast, and how effective it was. Any help from our foreign DR members? I would see that you got LOTS of CORNS!!!! Thanks to any who can help out!! |
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#6
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08-27-2025, 01:42 AM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2946 Join Date: Sep 2021 Posts: 135 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 76 Post(s)
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Re: Video Request for Foreign Country Viewers
Of course we have to tiptoe around “explicit” topics using innuendo and cryptic speak because this is documentingreality and not Kaotic
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#7
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08-27-2025, 05:04 AM
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Re: Video Request for Foreign Country Viewers
On the evening of August 24, Ukraine’s Independence Day, Russian television channels in multiple regions unexpectedly aired a video showing the real consequences of Russia’s war against Ukraine, including footage of destroyed oil facilities and military burials. According to Hromadske sources in Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence (HUR), local cyber partisans breached the systems of a major Russian provider, referred to as “№3,” and managed to broadcast the video simultaneously on 116 television channels. On Ukraine’s Independence Day, hackers hijacked Russian TV in prime time — broadcasting footage of war losses, oil depot explosions, and military funerals on 116 channels for over 3 hours. The hackers also blocked administrator access to the provider’s servers, complicating efforts to halt the transmission. At least 50,000 subscribers in Moscow and other regions reportedly watched the broadcast for more than three hours during prime time. For users without digital television, the content was also available through mobile applications in Apple Store and Google Play, Smart TV services, and additional cable networks. Sources emphasized that such operations are aimed at breaking through state-controlled propaganda and delivering information about the war directly to Russian audiences. Earlier, on July 28, pro-Ukraine hacker group Silent Crow and Belarusian Cyber Partisans claimed responsibility for a large-scale cyberattack on Russian airline Aeroflot. According to their statement, the operation destroyed around 7,000 servers, compromised corporate systems, and extracted more than 20 terabytes of data, including emails, surveillance records, and passenger information. The hackers said they had maintained access to Aeroflot’s network for over a year before making their presence public. |
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#8
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08-27-2025, 10:18 AM
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| ♚ Legacy Gold Member ♚ Poster Rank:99 Male Join Date: Nov 2009 Posts: 16,671 Mentioned: 7 Post(s) Quoted: 4596 Post(s)
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Re: Video Request for Foreign Country Viewers
The country that is losing, is the one that can't HONESTLY tell it's citizens what it is doing. Ummmmmmmmmm...........which one of those would RUSSIA be? |
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#9
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08-27-2025, 11:05 AM
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Re: Video Request for Foreign Country Viewers
Ukraine is a metaphorical ant holding up Russia's big toe. Putin could wipe his ass with that country in a heartbeat if he wanted too. But noooo. They wanna scream "muh NATO, muh Geneva convention". They never stood a chance. |