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CBS Drama ‘The Good Fight’ Tweet with ’Assassinate Trump’ Sparks Calls for Secret Service Investigation
CBS crime drama The Good Fight tweeted an image on Friday from a recent episode, entitled, “The One Where Diane Joins the Resistance.” The imaged showed a character pointing to a list of “target words” that included the phrases “Assassinate President Trump” and “Eliminate Mar-a-Lago.” The tweet, which has since been deleted, sparked backlash among Twitter users, many of who reported CBS to the Secret Service.
The official CBS Twitter account for The Good Fight asked viewers if they had noticed any “Easter eggs” within the “target words” from the Mach episode.
“Hmmm… some of those target words look a little familiar. Did you catch any easter eggs in this scene from The One Where Diane Joins The Resistance? #TheGoodFight” tweeted the account on Friday.
originally posted by: rickymouse
I'm pretty sure that there will be an investigation into that by the secret service. They can track the origination of any tweet or post if they want to within minutes these days, even if you bounce it off a few servers. Every device has a code, they can track down where it was used anywhere. It might take a few weeks, but they will narrow it down to a few individuals quickly. Yes, technology has gotten that good these days, every single post a person makes can be tracked back to the IP address. They may make an example of this person.
originally posted by: rickymouse
I'm pretty sure that there will be an investigation into that by the secret service. They can track the origination of any tweet or post if they want to within minutes these days, even if you bounce it off a few servers. Every device has a code, they can track down where it was used anywhere. It might take a few weeks, but they will narrow it down to a few individuals quickly. Yes, technology has gotten that good these days, every single post a person makes can be tracked back to the IP address. They may make an example of this person.
originally posted by: Violater1
originally posted by: rickymouse
I'm pretty sure that there will be an investigation into that by the secret service. They can track the origination of any tweet or post if they want to within minutes these days, even if you bounce it off a few servers. Every device has a code, they can track down where it was used anywhere. It might take a few weeks, but they will narrow it down to a few individuals quickly. Yes, technology has gotten that good these days, every single post a person makes can be tracked back to the IP address. They may make an example of this person.
But if thy are using WiFi at McDonalds, or Starbucks?
originally posted by: roadgravel
a reply to: rickymouse
Sound as though your are combining wifi and cellular service in the same action.