This email is reminiscent of one of the things that the mask sent early in its Twitter days, calling for employees to description of a page of what they did last month and how they are different from their goals.
Instead, TTS employees were surprised to meet people who had never seen or worked with them instead of syncing at these meetings.
“It was a very confusing call because I was expecting to meet you, and instead I was reluctant to identify by two people,” said one TTS employee. One wrote: “They haven’t seen the information I have sent in my own way, so I tried to explain things without the image/link I posted.”
Another employee added: “He also had the same exact experience.” “The person I met with had no idea about the Google form I sent, and when I mentioned it, I met me to avoid.”
In a Slack message to the TTS employees on Thursday morning, he apologized for the vague invitations of the meeting and apologized to anonymous people at Gmail meetings.
“They are each in the process of acquiring the GSA and PIV card. I take full responsibility for the actions of each of them in calls. I asked them to start calls with your name And confirm that they are my advisor.
Shide told the staff that people in the calls “were reviewed by me and were invited to call.” He said they were physically present at the GSA headquarters, and he “had shown them all into the building.” This means that those who join the calls now have the official state ID for agency employees.
At least two of them appear to be “college students with A-Suite customs clearance.” .
One person says they were reviewed by Edward Coristine, a recent high school graduate who spent several months in Neuralink, the Costuist Brain Brain Interface Company, which was previously known as a person working in the staff management office. (OPM) and a direct report to his new boss, former employee XAI Amanda Scales. He has not responded to Wired comments, and OPM has refused to comment.
“We currently have no additional staff notice.” A GSA spokesman told Wired on Thursday.
This is for ordinary TTS workers to cooperate with other agencies across the government simultaneously, and many of their projects contain foreign data in GSA and are subject to sensitivity agreements. However, in order to share specific technical gains, he deceived some employees who were afraid to violate these agreements.
“The team is correct in the sense of neural sharing about other agencies in these calls and should continue looking for ordinary tips that are not sensitive,” Shade wrote on Thursday. “The point of these calls is to talk through interesting and interesting problems and how to get this victory,” he said.