#security operations
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
youtube
#youtube#military collaboration#maritime security#Central America#sailing#law enforcement#drug trafficking#drug interdiction#teamwork#coast guard#counter-narcotics#naval operations#Guatemalan Sailors TEAM UP with US Navy for DRUG BUST Exercise!#military cooperation#Guatemala#security operations#international relations#special forces#joint exercises
0 notes
Text
ISPR: 16 terrorists killed in decisive operation at Bannu Cantt
On 4 March 2025, Pakistan’s security forces once again demonstrated exceptional valor and tactical excellence by decisively foiling a determined terrorist attack on Bannu Cantonment. A group of Khwarij elements attempted to breach the cantonment’s security using two explosive-laden vehicles, but their sinister plans were swiftly thwarted by our vigilant and professional troops. The…
#Afghan Nationals#Bannu Cantonment#Border Security#Counter-Terrorism#Khwarij#Martyrdom#National Defense#Pakistan Security Forces#Security Operations#Terrorist Attack
0 notes
Text
The Spy in the Shadows: François Ruffin's Documentary on LVMH's Bernard Arnault
The Curious Case of François Ruffin and the LVMH Spy François Ruffin had recently embarked on an audacious project—a satirical documentary aimed at scrutinizing Bernard Arnault, the wealthiest individual in France and the head of the luxury powerhouse, LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton. However, as filming progressed, Ruffin grew increasingly suspicious of a volunteer who had joined his…
#Bernard Arnault#corporate espionage#corporate spy#documentary#François Ruffin#job loss#legal trial#LVMH#media attention#security operations
0 notes
Text
Microsoft Ignite 2024
You can hear the great announcements from the Microsoft Ignite 2024. You can try the Microsoft Ignite 2024 session scheduler is now live for adding sessions to your own personal calendar, whether you’ve grabbed a ticket to attend in person, you’ll watch online, or you’re building a vault to watch at your leisure. Being a Security person, i loved the following Security related sessions (Labs,…
#cloud security posture#copilot#custom plugins#Developer#endpoint#GenAI#intune#Security#security copilot#security operations#SoC#zero trust
0 notes
Text
A’Ibom: Police Raid, Arrest Six Suspected Drug Dealers
Touchaheart.com.ng reports that in a significant operation aimed at curbing crime and drug trafficking in Akwa Ibom State, Nigeria, the police conducted a successful raid on a notorious hideout linked to illicit activities. This raid resulted in the apprehension of six individuals suspected of being involved in drug dealing and cultist activities. The operation, which unfolded with precision and…
#Akwa Ibom#Arrests#Crime Prevention#Cult Activities#Cultists#Drug Dealers#Drug Trafficking#Law enforcement#Police Raid#Security Operations#Touchaheart.com.ng
0 notes
Text
Character judgement at it's phase value.
Are you a good judge of character? Home page Every author is undeniably the best judge of the character he creates in a storyline. When I started writing KALAGA, I took to judging myself in every scene that emerged from the soliquy I would simulate within myself. While configuring the character Captain MJ which is virtually myself living in the series, I had traversed through a complex…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Text

#fuck musk#musk coup#twitter#maintain operational security#use end to end encryption (it's a start)#trump regime
2K notes
·
View notes
Text
Secure your organization with the help of Security Operations(SecOps) from Locuz. We offer 24*7 SIEM, Incident Response, IDAM & PAM, and Continuous Compliance services.
0 notes
Text
youtube
#youtube#Marine Rotational Force#Maritime Security Operations#Exercise Balikatan 25#International Cooperation#Puerto Princesa#Royal Australian Regiment#Palawan#Australian Army#Security Operations#Military Rehearsal#Philippine Marine Corps#Defense Forces#Philippine Marines#Joint Training#defense cooperation#Pacific security#Exercise Balikatan#1st Marine Regiment#armed forces collaboration#maritime operations#security operations#military rehearsal#joint exercises
0 notes
Text
Enhance Your Security Posture with ServiceNow SecOps and GRC
ServiceNow SecOps combines and integrates previously independent security and operations solutions - Threat Intelligence Framework, Endpoint Detection and Response, Information Security and Event Management, and Vulnerability Management System. Using ServiceNow SecOps, customers can combine data from various sources and utilize current ServiceNow data and procedures to repair weaknesses or manage security-related problems.
ServiceNow SecOps blends incident data from your security solutions into an organized response mechanism that emphasizes and addresses threats based on their effect on your organization, utilizing intelligent processes, automation, and a solid connection with Technology. ServiceNow Security Operations streamlines the "bare necessary" to ensure security professionals can concentrate on higher-level objectives.
In conjunction with SecOps, our ServiceNow practice includes strong foundations in Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC), which enhances the workflow, cooperation, and orchestration features of the primary ServiceNow Risk Management solution. Consequently, this delivers a comprehensive, end-to-end solution that integrates your security and governance programs to decrease risk and liability throughout your organization. likewise, you liberate essential assets by automating administrative processes to enhance and expand your security posture.
ServiceNow GRC (governance, risk, and compliance) solutions increase enterprise-wide detection and response time by automating and simplifying risk and security procedures to guarantee a quick reaction. With continuous data validation and evidentiary collecting, ServiceNow GRC identifies and monitors incompatible controls, KRIs, and KPIs in real time. The GRC services will assess hazards as they emerge and assist you in prioritizing and handling them to enhance your risk management program.
By Utilizing ServiceNow SecOps and GRC, Organizations can:
ServiceNow SecOps ensures security policy and regulatory compliance by continually tracking and evaluating information technology resources.
Firms can improve awareness and proactively recognize possible security risks with real-time threat information.
Using optimized DLP incident response protocols, you can detect and address data loss situations more efficiently.
Leveraging workflows and automation, use orchestration tools to save precious time on fundamental activities, and dynamically prioritize and react to problems.
Proactively control your business's hazard exposure by prioritizing significant impact attacks immediately and at scale.
Dashboards could identify business-critical problems, shorten reaction times, and much more.
Configuration Compliance supports diagnosing and remedying more vulnerable assets, substantially improving your organization's security. Recognize, prioritize, and repair malfunctioning software.
ServiceNow GRC portfolio management features enable you to integrate your suppliers into a single catalog.
ServiceNow GRC audit outcomes can then be utilized to assign priority to procedures to implement adjustments that have a substantial and beneficial influence on the remainder of the organization.
Conclusion
ServiceNow SecOps prioritizes and resolves risks to your organization by leveraging intelligent processes, automation, and a strong relationship with your computer network. Still, with ServiceNow SecOps, threat detection, and mitigation are expedited. ServiceNow GRC provides important stakeholders with quick accessibility to the data they require to react to security events, and repair vulnerabilities while making more efficient and effective choices, managing risk, preserving and maximizing revenue, and minimizing the effect of any damage.
For More Details And Blogs : Aelum Consulting Blogs
For ServiceNow Implementations and ServiceNow Consulting Visit our website: https://aelumconsulting.com/servicenow/
1 note
·
View note
Text
insert just got married sign here
#ts4#the sims 4#ts4 legacy#mg;bluemorpho#my new simz jietang and ulan yay#Ulan's parents runs a money laundering operation and to protect her they ship her off to some foreign country#where she meets Jietang who owns an inn called Blue Morpho inn#was inspired by chris isaak's song called blue hotel lol#and yea his license is about to expire#and the marriage could help him secure a grant for “family-owned” businesses and it could legalize Ulan's residency
158 notes
·
View notes
Text









Sorry for being absent on International Working Women's Day, I was busy pleasing a working woman.
(Pt.1)
#united front#meme#anticapitalism#communism#socialism#imperialism#free palestine#capitalism#memes#anti imperialism#antifascism#donald trump#elon musk#tesla protest#tsa#social security#aaron bushnell#mental health#cia#operation mockingbird
132 notes
·
View notes
Text
ZZZ Anniversary Artwork
#zzz#zenless zone zero#character artworks#belle#wise#eous#koleda belobog#zhu yuan#vivian banshee#hugo vlad#caesar king#burnice white#tsukishiro yanagi#nicole demara#hoshimi miyabi#von lycaon#alexandrina sebastiane#random play#cunning hares#sons of calydon#mockingbird#belobog heavy industries#hollow special operations 6#victoria housekeeping#new eridu public security
109 notes
·
View notes
Text

#biden crime family#the msm are democrat operatives with press passes#biden bribery#biden corruption#hunter biden is a threat to national security#joe biden mental decline
187 notes
·
View notes
Text
Matt Shuham at HuffPost:
EL PASO, Texas — The armored military vehicles President Donald Trump has sent to the U.S.-Mexico border weigh 50,000 pounds apiece and have thermal and infrared cameras said to be able to spot “a little mouse up to a mile out.” That feature might appeal to Trump, who has referred to people who cross the border without authorization as “rats” who “infest” the nation.
Last week, when a soldier emerged from one of the hulking eight-wheelers, armed with a pair of binoculars and a grimace, he briefly turned his attention away from the U.S.-Mexico border. He turned over his left shoulder, looking inward at the United States — and at me. He was one of the approximately 10,000 members of the U.S. military who are now stationed at the border, many of whom now patrol areas where, according to the president, they have the authority to detain civilians. Over the last few weeks, Trump has directed the military to take control of thousands of acres of land along the border in Texas and New Mexico, treating nearly 250 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border as de facto military installations known as “National Defense Areas.” As a result, people who cross the border in these areas are now not only susceptible to charges of illegal entry but also of trespassing on a military installation. This escalation also purportedly gives soldiers the legal authority to detain civilians for trespassing. In short: Trump has issued a hugely significant order for troops to detain people for civilian criminal violations on American soil. At the U.S.-Mexico border last week, I saw what a national military police force might look like.
Arriving At The Border
On top of increased air surveillance and logistical support, there are now at least three massive, armored Stryker vehicles each in Texas and southeastern New Mexico. The Strykers themselves aren’t armed, but the soldiers within them carry rifles, as do others along the border. (About 50 such vehicles arrived at the border in April; it’s unclear how many are in use.)
Four other journalists and I participated in a U.S. Army tour last week, being shepherded around the borderlands in a sprinter van. Beginning at Fort Bliss, we first drove through downtown El Paso, Texas, to the bollard fence that marks many urban borders with Mexico. We passed through the gate, going south, and our van lurched between sandy potholes until we stopped underneath the Bridge of the Americas. For the first time in American history, soldiers have purportedly been given the authority to detain people in the New Mexico and west Texas borderlands on the grounds that they are trespassing on a military base. Though the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act restricts the use of the military for domestic law enforcement, a loophole known as the military purpose doctrine allows exceptions where soldiers are working to further a primarily military function, like guarding a military base. Trump’s recent orders take advantage of this loophole. You might be able to spot the circular logic. The hundreds of miles of new “military installations” along the border have provided the grounds for hundreds of trespassing charges, and potentially thousands more in the future. The purpose of those charges is to protect the military bases. Those bases, according to the military, are part of an overall effort to “seal the southern border and repel illegal activity,” as well as “denying illegal activity along the southern border.” But the trespassing charges now central to that effort would not be legal if the bases didn’t exist. According to the military, these new National Defense Areas range from 60 feet to over 3 miles deep, though the Army has not released maps to make their exact dimensions clear. Analyzing land transfer data earlier this month, a spokesperson for Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) told SourceNM the border militarization scheme has serious implications for anyone driving along New Mexico State Road 9 “who might pull over to stretch their legs and unwittingly trespass on a military base.” [...]
At least so far, the arrests have been carried out by Border Patrol agents, not soldiers. But that could change, especially if the number of unauthorized border crossings ticks up as temperatures cool in the fall. Also, so far, it appears no U.S. citizens have been charged with trespassing on the border installations — but there’s nothing in the legal authorities cited by the Trump administration that would preclude that. These developments are just the latest in decades of border militarization. The United States, under presidents of both parties, has built hundreds of miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border in recent decades. The Border Patrol recently celebrated its 100th birthday, and especially since Sept. 11, 2001, border enforcement has grown more and more aggressive, featuring high-tech surveillance equipment and thousands of armed agents, the presence of whom — especially as recent presidents have attacked asylum rights along the border — tends to push people into isolated, barren parts of the desert. In recent years, members of the military have served in a support capacity along the border, helping with logistical tasks and surveillance. Still, Trump has accelerated this trend in his second term. Now, there are 10,000 soldiers along the border as part of the federal mission, up from 2,500 in January. And the threat of trespassing charges is palpable. Veteran border journalist Todd Miller wrote this month that on a recent trip to attempt to take photos of the new Defense Department signage, he noticed a camera system on an unmarked truck that appeared to be tracking his movements. [...] Similar boasts about the military’s ability to one-up Border Patrol officers are common in Operation Lone Star, the governor of Texas’ parallel (but unrelated) mission to militarize that state’s border using Texas National Guard soldiers, state troopers and state trespassing charges. That mission has also been marred by alleged human rights abuses and gratuitous political theater. Still, even before the declaration of National Defense Areas, crossings were already at historic lows, as they began dropping during the Biden administration due to much larger forces. Mexico, under pressure from the U.S., has for years moved aggressively to use its military and law enforcement to keep migrants away from the U.S. border. And both Trump and former President Joe Biden dramatically cracked down on asylum rights on the border, in Biden’s case with a numerical cap, and in Trump’s by simply declaring border crossings to be an emergency, and eliminating asylum rights almost altogether. As of last Thursday, the Army claimed it had made 190 “detections” since the New Mexico National Defense Area was first established in April — a minuscule number compared with Border Patrol’s day-to-day work.
HuffPost’s Matt Shuham went on tour to the US/Mexico Border to preview what a potential national military police force would look like under the Trump Regime.
Read the full story at HuffPost.
#Immigration#Border Security#US/Mexico Border#Trump Administration II#Posse Comitatus Act#National Defense Areas#Operation Lone Star#Border Patrol#ICE
46 notes
·
View notes