Andy Ledger loved puzzles but this one was truly a test. He
used every trick of the trade and countless generations of sophisticated
computer codes but he had found what he really wanted after eight months of
endless hours and money. Andy Ledger worked for the CIA and spent all his time and their money spying on the NSA which was spying on Putin in Russia. It was a small world.
Any person with some mathematical skills could learn modern
computer language skills and write simple programs or come up with their own
web site designs and functions.
Andy wasn't looking for the secrets of e-commerce he was looking
for the keys to the kingdom. His D.O.D. contract with the CIA grant money also came with
security keys into certain areas that gave him some limited direct access for
research and development. He was watching the NSA watching Putin and reporting his findings to the highest bidder, business was good.
Many complex programmers left so many back door entrances into
their complex programs it was just a matter of time that the most multifaceted
programs could be hacked and all the knotty codes could be made simple again. Andy saw the Russian military moving by watching the data by the trillions of bits moving around the globe, the NSA knew something was up but the White House didn't have time to watch the Soviet Union being born on earth.
In just a few minutes Andy Ledger would be looking inside the most
complicated and highly developed computer software on planet earth using his
own software programs and applications. He had been making some good
money protecting mom's and dad's from credit card theft but his company was
about to graduate. Andy was smarter than most and with his new government contract he had the money to expand.
The citizens of the United States were caught in some terrible
cultural storm that the President had promised as transformational. Andy
knew about change and opportunity but the President had something else in mind
and it wasn't a simple make over.
In the computer programming business the answers were always at
the back of the book. If a person could find the back door to the
software you could look inside all you wanted without being detected in most
cases. His D.O.D. security keys were the digital keys to unlock countless
programs and their operating systems. He saw the TARGET STORES getting hacked but he couldn't say anything. He was watching via computer programs and powerful computers and he also saw Syrian military orders, they even joked about Obama's red line.
Andy Ledger started his own company seven years ago as a software
security provider for major corporations around the world and business had
never been any better. His company that consisted of fifteen total
employees could write programs and security codes to protect email accounts,
general ledger information, supply chain secrets and even porn site access.
With the explosion of the internet and the thunder of e-commerce
Andy was surely in the right business at the right time and his company was on
the rise and expansion was planned next year.
His most popular software security package was called
"CORKER" which you could find on the shelves on Wal-Mart, Staples and
Amazon that sold for $179.95. "Corker" would protect the
customers computer from external threats and virus attacks and internal abuse.
He had spent several years borrowing money, selling software
direct to customers, saving money to buy new packaging, talking up his product
in online chat rooms but "Corker" put all that behind him.
He had made enough money to buy his home in Virginia or should say
qualify for a mortgage. Outside of Richmond Virginia Andy bought five
acres of land and built a good sized home but not too big. On the far
side of his property he built a larger building for his business which was the
general office for his tiny software empire.
Andy's neighbors could see Andy and his dog walk to work every
morning from his homes back porch and unlock the single side door every morning
about seven fifteen or so. Andy and a few guys would work some and stop
for coffee often but as "Corker" sales went up so did the
pressure. Andy hired some more guys and gals out of school and started
spending some money on research and development. He didn't want to be a one
product company so Andy was in a hurry for something else to sell.
Last year Andy sent a presentation to the D.O.D. Department of
Defense requesting a open grant to develop a new security package for military
use and some civilian applications.
The D.O.D. would often times hand out cash for software companies
to work on certain specific projects or brainstorm new ideas. The success
of "Corker" opened a lot of doors because people had heard of the
product and loved the little green frog logo. Andy Ledger got some money.
Andy had never had one million three hundred and fifty thousand
dollars in cash at one time without some big bills to pay. He sat in his
office and looked at the documents and the Treasury check and wondered what his
dog was smelling at the door.
..
Mr. Tom Harris was the D.O.D. Department of Defense grant
representative that delivered the contract and check directly to Andy Ledger
just two hours ago. Andy signed all the paperwork and accepted delivery
of the check payment from the United States government for computer software
research and development.
He stared at the check a long time and started making the first
list of the things he wanted to look at in the software business. He
could draw a circle of ideas on his legal pad and every starting point ended up
being the ending point. The software business was like that when you drew
a picture of the business model. Everybody started at one point and raced
to the end point which would start another circle and another chase. He
worked several days just writing down ideas and then scratching them out with
his mechanical pencil. You could drown in ideas and go broke or baffle them
with something new.
He drew a square on his legal pad representing all the government
computers and then drew three little circles inside the square representing the
software programs running inside.
Every computer had software and every piece of software required
at times very complex programming and security codes. He drew another
square with little circles inside and then another. The internet would connect
all the squares together allowing all the government computers to talk to each
other. Between the squares he drew tiny squares with even more software
to act like gatekeepers between computers. A computer at N.S.A. could not
simply talk to D.O.D. computers without the security codes to pass through the
tiny squares that guard the larger boxes on his legal pad.
The internet connected one big government square to another big
government square but the data had to pass through a security portal
first. The security portal computers housed the most sophisticated
high-level dedicated software ever created on earth which allowed top secret
information to be passed around to and from people with the proper level access.
Big banks used the same software packages to move billions of
dollars in less than a second from bank to bank or country to country.
Government officials used the protected computer networks to send
encrypted messages, secrets, money and family pictures.
The keys to the world was just a bunch of 0 and 1's floating
around cyberspace and Andy Ledger could read them all sitting inside his
backyard office.
It took Andy months of work and late nights. He had built
eight rooms inside his large building in the backyard that now housed by
various arrangements departmental codes for government programs.
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