And if you're up against an adversary 1 or 2 above can't handle, let us know what your secret number 3 and grand operation was someday before you die, become a legend ;) It is very simple. When facing an immense conspiracy exploit internal contradictions, and increase the degree of Clausewitzian frictions to an untenable point where the giant combine's gears are being fed sand. Take every action possible that will not worsen your situation, and do not follow your enemy's script, or failing that, follow your enemy's script but take actions in scrambled order. Sometimes it is best to engage with extreme caution, to collect evidence to build a case of the existence of a conspiracy. Keep your ear out for every possibility. These are elementary rational steps, and is the core concept of any warfighting strategy in all eras. Worsen your enemy's position while not worsening your own. Everything flows from that. Besides, it is funny how the Tor project isn't DDOSed. Costs only $100,000 per month to take it out. It's not complex math. The fact that it exists, implies that there are hidden interests. An enemy that does that act in favor of his obvious interests means he has hidden interests. To defeat your opponent, act in favor of your own interests and deny your enemy's ability to achieve his to pressure a quicker resolution. Yeah, I read things and I actually understood them. As opposed to the million walking Chinese rooms. Also, by the way, a lot of the things the NSA does isn't actually classified. Robert Graham talks about them all the time. (which makes you lot hilariously incompetent) [1]http://blog.erratasec.com/2014/05/no-you-cant-remotely-turn-on-phone s.html Apparently the baseband processor is totally insecure. Has any made any research into this? To whose interests is this inaction benefiting? Who is working for whom? Do not fight to fight. Fight to win. Otherwise you are just wasting your time. References 1. http://blog.erratasec.com/2014/05/no-you-cant-remotely-turn-on-phones.html