reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
There are weapons being developed to target specific individuals by using their DNA and medical profiles. This raises concerns about privacy, especially in terms of commercial data protection. Over the past 20 years, expectations of privacy have diminished, particularly among younger generations. People willingly provide their DNA to companies like 23andMe, which then own and can potentially sell this data without sufficient intellectual property or privacy safeguards. The lack of legal and regulatory frameworks to address these issues is a problem. It is crucial to have an open and public political discussion about how to protect healthcare information, DNA data, and personal data, as adversaries may exploit this information for developing such weapon systems.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I believe the privacy of people in this country is being violated. Elon Musk and Trump are taking all of our private information, and we have no idea what information they possess.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
I believe the privacy of the people in this country is being violated. Elon Musk and Donald Trump are taking all of our private information, and we have no idea what information they possess. We don't know the extent of their knowledge about our personal lives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
23andMe is mentioned, prompting a warning against using their services due to data selling practices. It is claimed that 23andMe sells user data to other entities, including Russia. Nathaniel Johnson, a policy advisor for the U.S. Department of the Treasury, is introduced. The claim is made that 23andMe's contract contains a clause allowing them to share information with shareholders, some of whom are pharmaceutical companies based in other countries. These foreign pharmaceutical companies are allegedly owned by entities such as the Ministry of Defense in Russia or are based in China.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion connects multiple individuals and organizations to alleged covert intelligence activity and influence over major events. It begins by referencing Robert F. Kennedy’s campaign and Teddy Kennedy’s chief counsel, then claims that attorney Jeffrey Blattner (executive chairman of HIAS) told Ted Kennedy not to run against incumbent Linda B. Johnson, after which Robert Kennedy ran anyway. The transcript then links Jules Kroll to Robert Kennedy’s campaign team and asserts that Jules Kroll is IDF unit 82,300 while Jeffrey Blattner is Mossad. It claims that in 1972 Jules Kroll and his wife Lynn Korda Kroll began a private intelligence operation called J. Kroll and Associates, which later became Kroll Incorporated and grew into a major private intelligence and investigative firm. The speaker says Kroll and K2 Intelligence are related “distinction without a difference,” and that Kroll worked for clients including the Vatican and Bernie Madoff, as well as being used in cases such as Harvey Weinstein investigations. The transcript also claims that the firm’s Tel Aviv spinoff later had a chief technology officer who was an IDF sergeant in unit 82,300, described as an Israeli signals intelligence equivalent to the NSA. The “plot” relevance is tied to the speaker’s claim that Kroll’s wife had a role in UJA Federation (United Jewish Appeal), and it expands into UJA Federation’s alleged connections to broader power networks. It identifies Larry Silverstein as former chairman of UJA Federation (1994–1997), describes him as connected to “old money” Jewish families and Mossad-related figures, and brings in Brian Michael Jenkins (described as deputy chairman of Kroll) and L. Paul Bremer. The transcript claims French intelligence suspected Jenkins and Bremer of promoting threat prevention strategies and then causing attacks when organizations didn’t adopt them. It further states that the New York Port Authority hired Kroll in 1993 to conduct a terrorism vulnerability threat analysis for the World Trade Center Plaza and that the report included a line item suggesting (it said) it was unlikely but possible that the towers could be vulnerable to being hit by jet airliners. The transcript then asserts the Port Authority hired Kroll to run security for the World Trade Center Plaza immediately after Jenkins’ report, and links that year to Larry Silverstein becoming president of UJA Federation. A Mossad whistleblower is introduced: Victor Ostrovsky. The transcript says Ostrovsky, after serving in the Israeli Defense Force beginning at age 14 and becoming a Mossad agent for fourteen months, became a “burn notice”/whistleblower and wrote two books: *By Way of Deception* and *The Other Side of Deception*. It claims the books’ content was managed to avoid “mass scale antisemitism,” and lists ADL (Jonathan Greenblatt), APAC, and UJA as entities said to be arms of Mossad, citing social media training claims and appointment/training activities mentioned in the transcript. The transcript then moves to post–September 11 financial and structural changes, asserting that Solomon Smith Barney (described as the largest tenant of World Trade Center Building 7) was “crashed” and consolidated, and it claims $2.3 trillion referenced by Donald Rumsfeld was consolidated among Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, BlackRock, Blackstone, Apollo, and a little to Goldman Sachs. It states there were 3,800 Jews who worked in both towers and claims only four Jewish deaths were reported on 09/11, including Daniel Lewin (cofounder of Akamai) described as reportedly the first 9/11 casualty and said to be IDF. Additional claims focus on corporate ownership: the transcript asks who is the largest shareholder of BlackRock and asserts Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley ownership (with Merrill Lynch said to own 45%), and it links BlackRock’s founding to Steven Schwarzman of Blackstone, and Rob Capito as UJA Federation. It further asserts connections among Blackstone, BlackRock, Apollo Global Management, Larry Silverstein, and James Tisch, alongside Mark Rich (born Marcel Reich), and describes Mark Rich as having brokered deals involving Iran, Israel, and the Ayatollah through Mossad agents that allegedly reduced oil costs despite US sanctions. It then identifies Michael Chertoff as “second generation Mossad” and claims he coauthored the Patriot Act with provisions to protect Israel from future investigation, later appointing him as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and later chairman of BAE Systems. The transcript claims Rumsfeld later chaired a pharmaceutical company (Eli Lilly) and sat on boards connected to Investor AB. The discussion culminates in claims about COVID-19: it introduces Alvin Krongard, alleging he controls conservative media, helped plan and cover up COVID, and made trades before September 11 and before related outcomes. It asserts that BlackRock’s Aladdin (and similar tools “In-Q-Tel” and “Lab 72/Lab 41”) was used to model pandemic impacts, and claims Avril Haines (described as working directly for Tony Blinken) was sent to “Event 201” to seize control of the global financial system. Finally, it asserts COVID was “calibrated” to affect certain populations through ACE2 receptor polymorphisms, and it connects Sergei Brin and 23andMe to access to patient DNA data used for calibration. The transcript ends mid-sentence as it continues discussing these claims.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A senator questions a 23andMe representative about their data privacy policies, specifically regarding the sale of consumer data. The senator claims the company's privacy statement says they cannot share information without consent, yet they are selling it. The representative states customers can delete their data anytime, even after the sale. The senator points out that the deletion page went down after the sale announcement. The representative claims the issue was fixed and customers can now delete their data. However, the senator reads from 23andMe's privacy policy, which states the company retains genetic information, date of birth, and sex even after account deletion. The representative initially denies retaining genetic information, but then admits to retaining name, email address, and other data. The senator accuses the company of not allowing consumers to permanently delete their data and lying to them. The senator concludes that 23andMe controls consumer data and is violating its promises.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
DNA companies are issuing warnings that your personal information can be sold and weaponized against you. It is claimed that someone's DNA and medical profile can be used to target a biological weapon that will kill that person. People are sending their DNA to companies like 23 and Me to get data about their background, but their DNA is now owned by a private company and can be sold off. There needs to be a public discussion about protecting healthcare and DNA information because this data will be collected by adversaries to develop these systems.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A committee hearing is addressing privacy and national security concerns surrounding 23andMe's bankruptcy. 23andMe, a direct-to-consumer genetic testing company, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, raising concerns about who will gain access to sensitive customer data. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals initially entered an agreement to acquire 23andMe, but the auction was reopened. Concerns exist regarding the storage, usage, and potential access by foreign adversaries to this private information, especially given 23andMe's past funding from investors linked to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Regeneron's partnership with a Chinese company also raises questions. The CCP's history of mass surveillance, bioweapon activities, and misuse of genetic data, including the hacking of 23andMe in 2023, are highlighted. In 2019, the Department of Defense warned military members against using consumer DNA kits due to security risks. Potential harm includes misuse by foreign actors, higher insurance premiums, credit restrictions, and targeted advertising. The committee seeks to understand how 23andMe will ensure the safety of Americans' genetic data and is hearing from 23andMe representatives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A committee hearing is addressing privacy and national security concerns regarding 23andMe's bankruptcy. 23andMe, a direct-to-consumer genetic testing company, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, raising questions about who will access customers' sensitive genetic data. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals initially entered an agreement to acquire 23andMe, but the auction was reopened to allow bids from Regeneron and TTAM Research. Concerns exist regarding the storage, usage, and potential access by foreign adversaries to this private information, especially given 23andMe's past funding from investors, including WuXi Healthcare Ventures, linked to the CCP. Regeneron's partnership with a Chinese company, Xi Lab Ltd, is also noted. 23andMe was hacked in 2023, exposing nearly 7,000,000 profiles, mostly targeting Jewish and Chinese customers. The Department of Defense previously warned military members against using consumer DNA kits due to security risks. Potential harms include misuse by foreign actors, higher insurance premiums, credit restrictions, and targeted advertising. The committee seeks to understand how to ensure the safety of Americans' genetic data from Ann Wojciechie and Joseph Selzavage.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 outlines a controversy over data mining and privatized spying. He says the data mine is owned by a company called ChoicePoint, created by Republicans. He asserts they built the database that “knocked off the black voters,” and claims they did so to help elect the president of the United States, with “no bid contracts” totaling over $1,000,000,000 to maintain databases on people. He alleges that after talking with insiders at the ChoicePoint Corporation, executives, they are “matching your phone numbers, your billing medical records, your voting registration records, your driver's licenses, and their latest thing, your DNA.” He notes that spying on Americans is illegal under the Constitution, and emphasizes that the trick is privatizing the spy function. He argues they set up a private company—describing it as a private FBI, but calling it a private KGB—and that this private company has a large database, “16,000,000,000 records,” believed to be at least double that since then, which would be illegal for the United States government to keep. According to the speaker, ChoicePoint supposedly keeps the records and then sells that information to the U.S. government secretly. He asserts that when they were supposedly hunting illegal voters in Florida, their list was “97% wrong.” He repeats, “Let me repeat that. 97% wrong.” Yet he claims the list “was perfect for Jeb Bush because what it did get right is it identified black voters, which they could knock off.” The speaker also alleges problems with DNA evidence: “25% of the DNA evidence in rape cases in Illinois until the police caught them faking the evidence in rape cases,” after which they were fired. He emphasizes that this is not about Mouthis getting their man, but about the Mouthis getting the political targets for their men. Speaker 1 adds a closing line, saying, “I took over George Orwell's old power. He'd appreciate all this, you know. He'd love it.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses how the CIA uses Google to gather personal and biometric information, including DNA data from organizations like 23andme and ancestry.com. They warn against providing DNA information as it can be accessed by the CIA and Department of Defense. They mention the ARPA H program, an offshoot of the DOD's total information awareness program, which aims to collect medical information for both the CIA and DOD. The speaker emphasizes that we are now in the surveillance age and nothing we do is private.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
TikTok poses a significant threat as it can access private data on your phone, including keystrokes. This means sensitive information like usernames and passwords for banking can be obtained. Unlike other social media platforms, TikTok goes beyond collecting data for advertising purposes. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has ulterior motives, aiming to harm the American people. In the event of a conflict, the data collected from American consumers will be used against them and their communities.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
DNA companies are under scrutiny for potentially selling and weaponizing personal DNA information. It is claimed that a person's DNA and medical profile could be used to target them with a biological weapon. Concerns are raised about individuals willingly submitting their DNA to companies like 23 and Me, resulting in private companies owning and potentially selling that data. It is argued that open discussions are needed regarding the protection of healthcare and DNA information. The speaker asserts that adversaries could procure and collect this data to develop harmful systems.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 states their interactions with the NSA are very limited, adding the NSA is not an agency that works with you directly. Speaker 0 mentions reading in newspapers about their phone being penetrated with Pegasus, but has no idea if it's true, stating this is the only source of information they have about themselves personally. Speaker 0 assumes by default that the devices they use are compromised and has very limited faith in platforms developed in the US from a security standpoint and privacy standpoint.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker raises concerns about people being overly enthusiastic about giving their data to organizations like Cambridge Analytica, which has links to Palantir and Faculty. They emphasize the risk of putting everyone's data in the country at stake by giving it to such organizations. The speaker urges the secretary of state to become aware of this issue and offers to provide information on data and democracy.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Retired FBI Agent discusses the privacy concerns surrounding home DNA test kits. He highlights a case where a detective obtained a court order to search over a million records in a DNA database. He questions whether health insurance companies would use this information to make coverage decisions. Even if privacy measures are in place, the risk of hacking or acquisition by a company with different values remains. While acknowledging the desire to find birth parents, the speaker personally opts out of using these kits.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
23andMe is mentioned, prompting a warning against using their services due to data selling practices. It is claimed that 23andMe sells user data to other entities, including Russia. Nathaniel Johnson, a policy advisor for the U.S. Department of the Treasury, is introduced. The claim is made that 23andMe's contract includes a clause allowing them to share information with shareholders, some of whom are pharmaceutical companies based in other countries. These foreign pharmaceutical companies are allegedly owned by entities like the Ministry of Defense in Russia or are based in China.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Some people are concerned about data mining and privacy issues, particularly with ChoicePoint, a company created by Republicans. ChoicePoint has access to vast amounts of personal data, including phone numbers, medical records, DNA, and more. They have been involved in controversial activities, such as providing inaccurate voter lists in Florida and falsifying DNA evidence in rape cases. This privatized spy function raises constitutional concerns and blurs the line between government and private surveillance. George Orwell would find this situation concerning.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 asks Speaker 1 if they know who Palantir is and if they agree with the comparison to Stanford Analytica. Speaker 1 says they haven't heard that. Speaker 0 then asks if Palantir taught Cambridge Analytica how to use certain tactics, to which Speaker 1 replies that they don't know. Lastly, Speaker 0 asks if Palantir has ever scraped data from Facebook, and Speaker 1 says they are not aware of that.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Chinese and us are both developing ethnic bioweapons, with labs in Ukraine collecting Russian and Chinese DNA to target people by race.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
23andMe filed for bankruptcy, and CEO Ann Wajiki is resigning. Shares dropped over 50% after the bankruptcy filing. 23andMe's database of human genetic information may be sold in bankruptcy proceedings. According to 23andMe's privacy statement, in the event of bankruptcy, merger, acquisition, reorganization, or sale of assets, personal information may be accessed, sold, or transferred. This means your DNA could be used in unforeseen ways, such as cloning or being sold to malicious actors who could use it to implicate you in crimes. Bioweapons are a possibility, as is insurance companies using DNA data to deny coverage. Instructions are provided on how to delete your data from 23andMe.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: ChemChina is producing pesticides in China that are not allowed to be used in China and shipping them over here for us to use and to harm ourselves with. So we're dealing with foreign companies that are happy to offload their toxic products onto us and then demand liability protection.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
China has obtained the genomic sequence of every person in the US who has undergone gene typing. They are using this information to develop bioweapons that specifically target Caucasians. Chinese companies, such as BGI, dominate the genomic sequencing industry in the US. There is evidence suggesting that the COVID-19 virus originated from a lab in Wuhan, China, and was created through gene splicing and gain of function research. China has publicly discussed their interest in using advanced pathogenetic capabilities for warfare. The export of American genetic information to China is a significant concern, as it could be used to develop genetic weapons that target specific populations based on their genetic variations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Weapons are being developed to target specific individuals using their DNA and medical profiles. This raises privacy concerns, especially with the degradation of privacy expectations over the last twenty years. People willingly submit their DNA to companies like 23 and Me, resulting in private companies owning and potentially selling their DNA with minimal privacy protection. Current legal and regulatory systems are inadequate to address this. An open, public, and political discussion is necessary to determine how to protect healthcare information, DNA, and personal data, as adversaries will collect this data to develop these targeted weapon systems.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A member of the House Intelligence Committee, Congressman Jason Crow, has warned against using DNA testing services, stating that private companies could potentially use the collected material to develop bioweapons targeting individuals. While this may sound like something out of a James Bond movie, it is a concern due to the CRISPR gene editing technology, which makes it easier to create targeted bioweapons. One such company, 23andMe, is an American-owned California company that trades on the Nasdaq but has a Chinese investor. There are concerns about the transparency of data sharing with China. US officials worry about the lack of regulation and transparency surrounding the movement of medical data, as well as China's strategy of gathering biological data for various purposes.
View Full Interactive Feed