Gray Shuko

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Gray Shuko

Gray Shuko

@Gray_Shuko

2D artist - FR / EN concept art / illustrations / comics Portfolio: https://t.co/hhtka55sLa Contact: grayshuko-at-gmail-dot-com

Taiwan Katılım Temmuz 2015
192 Takip Edilen830 Takipçiler
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Gray Shuko
Gray Shuko@Gray_Shuko·
Just created an account on bsky.app (Bluesky) Here's my link: gray-shuko.bsky.social If you have an account there, feel free to share it so I can follow you ;)
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Gray Shuko retweetledi
Pixelnest Studio - Releasing CTHULOOT💎🐙
It's the end of the year… already! And we're cooking up something great: Pixelnest will go back in space in 2026! 🚀 Happy Holidays & take care! 💌
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Maus
Maus@AndDwightS·
@UKikaski @LetsArmUKR Why do you call it a fact? "The fact that Europe made that choice tells us something profound."
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OSINT Intuit™
OSINT Intuit™@UKikaski·
CRITICAL DEVELOPMENT! Someone Is Inside the Kremlin's Walls Follow-Up Analysis: The Real Revelation Hidden in the European SIGINT Leak The reporting on the intercepted calls involving U.S. presidential evoy Steve Witkoff, Vladimir Putin’s foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov, and sanctioned Russian financier and head of Russia's Sovereign Fund Kirill Dmitriev has now entered a new phase. The first round of our analysis only focused on the content of the Witkoff - Usakov call and the fact that Europe revealed any intercept at all. The real story, however, only comes into focus when the Dmitriev–Ushakov leak is examined on its own merits. The Witkoff call could have been intercepted because Witkoff used an unsecured phone. That would compromise only one side of the communication. It would be embarrassing and politically explosive, but it would not reveal anything about European visibility inside the Russian state. The Ushakov–Dmitriev call is an entirely different category of signal. It is not something that can be captured by monitoring a single insecure handset. This was a conversation between two hardened Kremlin communications nodes inside Russian territory. Russia treats these channels as strategic assets. They sit behind layered encryption, physical compartmentalization, and continuous counterintelligence monitoring. Their compromise is viewed inside the Russian system as a direct national-security breach. There is no world in which that intercept can be explained as a lucky catch. It is evidence of penetration. It is evidence of access. It is evidence that a European intelligence service is inside a Russian secure pathway that Moscow believed was locked down. And here is the most important point. Europe did not accidentally leak it. Europe burned that access on purpose. This is not the behavior of a single rogue country freelancing. This is the behavior of an alliance making a calculated decision. To release a Kremlin-level SIGINT product is to throw away a crown jewel capability. Services spend years, sometimes decades, cultivating that kind of window. To reveal it intentionally is to choose immediate strategic effect over long-term operational access. The fact that Europe made that choice tells us something profound. They judged the risks posed by U.S.–Russia shadow diplomacy to be so great that they were willing to destroy one of their own most valuable sources to stop it. The timing is not a coincidence wither. The intercept comes at the same moment European governments were blindsided by the 28-point plan drafted in Miami with Russian participation. At the same moment their diplomats were cut out. At the same moment the U.S. administration pushed a Russia-forward proposal without consultation and rapid unvetted approval. At the same moment Moscow attempted to frame the West as obstructionist. Europe looked at that picture and made a strategic decision. They signaled that they were monitoring the Miami channel and that those conducting it should assume they are visible. They also signaled to the Kremlin that European penetration of Russian communications infrastructure is not hypothetical. It is operational. This was not a message written in words. It was written in the choice of what to leak and what to withhold. The benign slice they chose to release, rather than the damaging content they kept, follows a classic intelligence pattern. When a service wants to send a warning without blowing up the geopolitical environment, it releases the smallest possible piece that demonstrates access. That leaves the final question. Why now? From an OSINT perspective, the answer is straightforward. Europe decided that stopping Russian influence operations inside the U.S. national decision chain now outweighs the cost of exposing their capabilities. They also signaled to the White House that any attempt to run off-book diplomacy with Moscow will not be uncontested. The warning was calibrated and unmistakable. Someone in Europe sent a message so clear that anyone who has ever worked behind classified doors can feel the shift. They did not reveal the conversation. They revealed the system behind it. They revealed they are inside it. They revealed they are watching. And for the actors who built the Miami channel, that changes everything. Their private discussions were never private. Their assumption of secrecy was never real. Their belief that they were moving unseen was incorrect. Europe did not just publish a leak. Europe fired a warning shot. It crossed oceans. It landed in two capitals. And it hit its mark. --------------------------------- Follow #OSINT Intuit™ for evidence-based analysis of hostile influence and information warfare. Photo: Getty Images via NBC News
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Jimmy Palmiotti
Jimmy Palmiotti@jpalmiotti·
My opinion and simply put: if Russia rolled into part of the U.S., would anyone seriously say, “Sure, just keep that territory”? No way. You’d fight tooth and nail to protect it. Ukraine deserves the same. Their land, their freedom, their future—it’s non‑negotiable. The world should be standing shoulder to shoulder with them, no excuses. And let’s be real—we all want this war to end. The fastest way there is making sure Ukraine wins and Russia backs off.
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GFX47
GFX47@GFX47·
@Gray_Shuko The first levels are meant to be quite fast. Is it still the case after that?
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GFX47
GFX47@GFX47·
📢 Endless Escalation is an endless incremental strategy game where you build and upgrade your army to face ever-growing enemy forces. If you like incremental/idler/clicker games, please check it out and let me know what you think! 🕹️ gfx47.itch.io/endlessescalat… #IncrementalGames
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DAWINSTONE
DAWINSTONE@dawinstone·
Bad 2 Bad: Tombstone is set in a post–world war era where combat androids (AIs) were deployed on the battlefield. While I cannot reveal the full details of the story, it will primarily follow the protagonists’ struggle for the survival and rebuilding of humanity in such a world.
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Gray Shuko retweetledi
Absolum | OUT NOW!
Absolum | OUT NOW!@AbsolumGame·
Absolum is nearly there! Discover what awaits you in our brand-new Gameplay Trailer!💥 Explore branching pathways, uncover quests, and battle challenging bosses in a world brimming with adventure👇 youtube.com/watch?v=w3zhPX…
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