Michael Waltz reportedly used Gmail for government messages
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The report follows last week’s news that several cabinet-level officials, including Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, discussed highly sensitive war plans in a Signal group chat that also inadverten...
From TechCrunch
Members of Trump's administration, including Waltz and Hegseth, in the past have leveled harsh criticism at former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton for her use of a private email ser...
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Thunderbird’s developers are planning to compete with Gmail and other email providers by offering paid “pro” tier services, including @thundermail.com email addresses and new services such as an appointment scheduler,
According to three officials who spoke to the Washington Post, members of President Trump's National Security Council, including Waltz, have conducted government business over personal Gmail accounts.
The Washington Post is reporting that National Security Advisor Mike Waltz and his staff used their personal Gmail accounts for government communications. Washington Post national security reporter John Hudson joins Ana Cabrera to explain more.
Emails sent with Gmail’s end-to-end encryption are extremely secure because only the sender has control over the encryption key, which is stored outside of Google’s infrastructure. Users can click the padlock by the Bcc button and press Turn On under the Additional Encryption’ option to apply it.
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Democratic leaders of key House committees are reigniting calling for National Security Advisor Mike Waltz to step down.
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U.S. security officials have reportedly been using their personal Gmail accounts to conduct government business — including sharing sensitive information about military positions. And yes, national security advisor and Signalgate protagonist Michael Waltz was involved.
The Washington Post reports that members of the White House's National Security Council have used personal Gmail accounts to conduct government business. National security advisor Michael Waltz and a senior aide of his both used their own accounts to discuss sensitive information with colleagues,