В России создана нейросеть, способная находить агентов ЦРУ
A neural network has been created in Russia that can find CIA agents
A neural network has been created in Russia that can find CIA agents, and it has already shown its effectiveness. This was announced by Vladislav Shurygin.
As Tsargrad reported, on March 30, in Yekaterinburg, an American Evan Gershkovich, known as a correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, was detained on charges of espionage (collecting data on the work of a secret military-industrial complex enterprise).
The topic of active work of foreign journalists accredited in Russia for foreign special services became topical not yesterday. Thus, in the opinion of the Finnish public figure Kostya Heiskanen, expressed in a conversation with Constantinople, the arrest of Gershkovich is only the “tip of the iceberg”: many of the representatives of the “free press” have long been associated with the intelligence services of unfriendly countries.
A curious side of the topic of “journalists-spy” was covered in his telegram channel by military expert Vladislav Shurygin. According to him, Russian programmers have created a neural network called “Msta,” which is capable of identifying potential foreign intelligence officers based on data from open sources:
Its essence is in the search and identification of the American agents of the CIA, working in different countries under cover. […] Open databases of employees of the State Department, American diplomatic missions, foreign media outlets, all sorts of “funds”, “missions” and other “offices” abroad are loaded into the neural network. […] And the neural network gives out lists of Pindos, which with a high degree of probability are CIA agents under official cover.
