A photograph of Trump administration official Mike Waltz’s phone shows him using an unofficial version of Signal designed to archive messages during a cabinet meeting.

Mike Waltz, who was until Thursday U.S. National Security Advisor, has inadvertently revealed he is using an obscure and unofficial version of Signal that is designed to archive messages, raising questions about what classification of information officials are discussing on the app and how that data is being secured, 404 Media has found.

On Thursday Reuters published a photograph of Waltz checking his mobile phone during a cabinet meeting held by Donald Trump.

The screen appears to show messages from various top level government officials, including JD Vance, Tulsi Gabbard, and Marco Rubio.

  • ORbituary
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    42 months ago

    I have a polarizing filter on my phone, but that can be circumvent Ed with the right camera lens.

      • ORbituary
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        52 months ago

        I’m leaving Ed be. He’s cool, but his views are polarizing.

    • @DahGangalang@infosec.pub
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      22 months ago

      Next question: how does the rest of the photo come out when using that camera lens?

      Polarized light still feels like black magic to me, so I wouldn’t be surprised if it would have a negligible to no effect on anything else in the frame, but my instinct says it would mess up a bunch of random things, thus making it useful for very specific spy craft type applications, but not for general use.