23-05-2019, 01:07 AM
I'm not sure if all the files I'm referring to are part of that 'Bay' collection, but anyway, I just sent you a PM with a link to the files I'm talking about. They're still online. As I mentioned in the PM, the Layer 3 folder is encrypted. When the files were uploaded a message appeared on the same day giving a key to unencrypt them, using Veracrypt, and it does indeed work. I've provided links to all that in a PM.
There are way too many files in the Layer 3 folder for a single researcher to properly investigate by themselves. I spent a few days just carefully reading and following leads from a WTC security deposition in one of the earlier layers, and noticed some illuminating stuff. The Layer 3 folder has many depositions, many PDF's, many transcripts, many messages. It would take a group a number of months to properly digest everything there. If the hackers went through everything before splitting the files up into the Layers that they did, it would have taken a long time. If they release anything more, they really should offer links or a summary to what they've found rather than relying on the research community, what's left of it, to discover things.
Additional note - the Layer 3 folder, even once unencrypted, is a bit of a mess to comprehend without the accompanying Excel document that appeared during the same week of it's release, which lists the name of every single file in order along with the subject header of the MSG email message. I have that somewhere, and with that Excel file open, and a Messenger account open, and the folder of documents open on the same screen, I was able to start progressing through the list, matching MSG title to MSG file, sending the messages to my newly opened Messenger account, then opening the MSG message by clicking on it, reading the text of the email (which reads in your inbox as if you've literally just received the message that was sent, complete with subject header and CC notes and everything else) and then clicking and opening on the attached PDF's if the message had any. MSG files with a larger file size typically did have a PDF or two, but even the smaller MSG files often surprised me by having a long deposition in TXT format, which often doesn't take up much space but which can run for dozens of pages.
The depositions in TXT format, and there are many, all have the original names and addresses of the participants mentioned at the start of the deposition, ie can you confirm you are Joe Bloggs at 121 Smith St, etc. These have not been redacted at all and for this reason I haven't posted any online. I did grab a couple which were in TXT format and went through the lines with the addresses, and blacked them out so it read 'You live at XXXXXX XXX XXX', to avoid privacy issues, but the whole process just for one deposition in TXT format - which I could easily save as a PDF and upload to Scribd - took a while. Going through all the materials myself in Layer 3 would take about a year. Other researchers really need to jump in.
Just as an aside, when reading through the various materials, such as the WTC security depositions, I'd frequently stop and Google unfamiliar names and add keywords to them - Silvertstein, Iran-Contra, 9/11 etc - just to see what came up. Things occasionally did come up, such as a high up government official involved in the legal dealings that led to Silverstein buying the WTC complex later leaving their position and going to work for Silverstein directly. But of course for this whole saga links like that are pretty much expected.
I'll have a look for that Excel document, as even just reading the summary of message headings is a good heads up to see what is in Layer 3, and it's a necessary tool to really browse the folder, unless you want to go through everything numerically and just see what pops up. The Boeing depositions for example however were halfway down the list of thousands of messages and the Excel file is a help in picking and choosing.
One other thing, if you look at Youtube and see the Jason Bermas channel, some of the commenters under his videos have been through all of the above, and if you get stuck or need a Veracrypt key or what have you, they can often help. Some people have occasionally posted links to the unencrypted files of the first few Layers. I only currently have the links I've sent you in a PM.
To backtrack to the beginning - the hackers have now released three out of the five Layers of documents that they promised, including the biggest of the folders, Layer 3. Layers 4 and 5 are of a smaller size, ostensibly contain the most interesting documents, and have not yet to date been unencrypted so people can read them.
There are way too many files in the Layer 3 folder for a single researcher to properly investigate by themselves. I spent a few days just carefully reading and following leads from a WTC security deposition in one of the earlier layers, and noticed some illuminating stuff. The Layer 3 folder has many depositions, many PDF's, many transcripts, many messages. It would take a group a number of months to properly digest everything there. If the hackers went through everything before splitting the files up into the Layers that they did, it would have taken a long time. If they release anything more, they really should offer links or a summary to what they've found rather than relying on the research community, what's left of it, to discover things.
Additional note - the Layer 3 folder, even once unencrypted, is a bit of a mess to comprehend without the accompanying Excel document that appeared during the same week of it's release, which lists the name of every single file in order along with the subject header of the MSG email message. I have that somewhere, and with that Excel file open, and a Messenger account open, and the folder of documents open on the same screen, I was able to start progressing through the list, matching MSG title to MSG file, sending the messages to my newly opened Messenger account, then opening the MSG message by clicking on it, reading the text of the email (which reads in your inbox as if you've literally just received the message that was sent, complete with subject header and CC notes and everything else) and then clicking and opening on the attached PDF's if the message had any. MSG files with a larger file size typically did have a PDF or two, but even the smaller MSG files often surprised me by having a long deposition in TXT format, which often doesn't take up much space but which can run for dozens of pages.
The depositions in TXT format, and there are many, all have the original names and addresses of the participants mentioned at the start of the deposition, ie can you confirm you are Joe Bloggs at 121 Smith St, etc. These have not been redacted at all and for this reason I haven't posted any online. I did grab a couple which were in TXT format and went through the lines with the addresses, and blacked them out so it read 'You live at XXXXXX XXX XXX', to avoid privacy issues, but the whole process just for one deposition in TXT format - which I could easily save as a PDF and upload to Scribd - took a while. Going through all the materials myself in Layer 3 would take about a year. Other researchers really need to jump in.
Just as an aside, when reading through the various materials, such as the WTC security depositions, I'd frequently stop and Google unfamiliar names and add keywords to them - Silvertstein, Iran-Contra, 9/11 etc - just to see what came up. Things occasionally did come up, such as a high up government official involved in the legal dealings that led to Silverstein buying the WTC complex later leaving their position and going to work for Silverstein directly. But of course for this whole saga links like that are pretty much expected.
I'll have a look for that Excel document, as even just reading the summary of message headings is a good heads up to see what is in Layer 3, and it's a necessary tool to really browse the folder, unless you want to go through everything numerically and just see what pops up. The Boeing depositions for example however were halfway down the list of thousands of messages and the Excel file is a help in picking and choosing.
One other thing, if you look at Youtube and see the Jason Bermas channel, some of the commenters under his videos have been through all of the above, and if you get stuck or need a Veracrypt key or what have you, they can often help. Some people have occasionally posted links to the unencrypted files of the first few Layers. I only currently have the links I've sent you in a PM.
To backtrack to the beginning - the hackers have now released three out of the five Layers of documents that they promised, including the biggest of the folders, Layer 3. Layers 4 and 5 are of a smaller size, ostensibly contain the most interesting documents, and have not yet to date been unencrypted so people can read them.

