1. Executive Intelligence Summary
1.1 Mission Profile and Objectives
This Technographic Audit was commissioned to rigorously evaluate the operational, structural, and technological alignment of Monday.com Labs Ltd. with the Israeli military establishment and the apparatus of occupation in the Palestinian territories. The objective is to derive a Digital Complicity Score, a quantitative and qualitative metric assessing the degree to which the subject entity enables, supports, or benefits from state-sponsored violence and surveillance.
The audit operates under the premise that in the contemporary battlespace, the distinction between “civilian” software and “military” capability is increasingly semantic. A “Work OS” that optimizes the supply chain of a startup can, with trivial reconfiguration, optimize the supply chain of a munition factory or the rostering of a checkpoint. The core intelligence requirements (CIRs) focus on dissecting the “Unit 8200” influence within the corporate DNA, the infrastructural reliance on the “Project Nimbus” cloud framework, the interoperability with known surveillance vendors (e.g., AnyVision/Oosto), and the direct operational usage of the platform during the “Swords of Iron” conflict initiated in October 2023.
1.2 Strategic Assessment
The analysis concludes that Monday.com operates as a Tier-1 Strategic Enabler within the Israeli technological-military complex. It is not merely a passive economic actor but an active node in the “Silicon Fortress” strategy, where civilian technological dominance is leveraged for national security resilience.
The audit identifies four critical vectors of complicity:
- The Human Terrain (Unit 81/8200 DNA): The company’s leadership is derived not just from general military service, but from the specific, elite echelons of Unit 81 (The Intelligence Corps Technology Unit) and Unit 8200 (SIGINT). This creates an organizational culture prioritized on rapid, operational deployment and deep networking with the defense establishment.1
- Infrastructure Sovereignty (Project Nimbus): Monday.com is a foundational partner of the AWS Israel Region, a cornerstone of Project Nimbus. This strategic alignment ensures that Monday.com’s data residency capabilities meet the strict sovereignty requirements of the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD), effectively placing the platform within the “Iron Cloud” of state-controlled infrastructure.3
- The Surveillance Nexus: The platform serves as the administrative backbone for the surveillance industry. Notably, Oosto (formerly AnyVision), a biometric surveillance firm implicated in the monitoring of West Bank Palestinians, utilizes Monday.com to manage its global partnership ecosystem. Monday.com provides the “Operating System” for the distribution of surveillance technology.5
- Operational Mobilization: During the 2023-2024 conflict, Monday.com’s software was rapidly weaponized for “civil defense” logistics, and nearly 7% of its workforce was drafted into active reserve duty, erasing the line between corporate employee and active combatant.6
1.3 Digital Complicity Scorecard
| Assessment Vector |
Risk Rating |
Intelligence Justification |
| Leadership Origin |
CRITICAL (10/10) |
Founders and Board trace directly to Unit 81 and Unit 8200. Recruitment strategies actively target IDF intelligence alumni to maintain “operational DNA.” |
| Cloud Sovereignty |
HIGH (9/10) |
Launch partner for Project Nimbus (AWS Israel). Data architecture is designed to comply with Israeli security service jurisdiction (Shin Bet access). |
| Surveillance Nexus |
HIGH (9/10) |
Operational host for Oosto (AnyVision) partnership management. Integration hub for the “8200 Stack” (Wiz, Check Point, SentinelOne). |
| Operational Utility |
HIGH (8.5/10) |
Documented rapid adoption by “Civil Defense” (Home Front Command) entities during wartime. 7% workforce mobilization ensures direct knowledge transfer to IDF. |
| Economic Support |
MEDIUM (7/10) |
Significant tax contributor; active participant in government innovation tenders via integrators like KPMG and Deloitte. |
| AGGREGATE SCORE |
9.1 / 10 |
High Complicity: Direct Operational Enabler |
2. The Human Terrain: Unit 81 and the Military-Industrial DNA
To understand the operational complicity of Monday.com, one must first analyze the “Human Terrain” of its leadership. In the Israeli technology sector, the boundary between military intelligence and civilian startup entrepreneurship is porous, often referred to as the “Silicon Wadi” pipeline. Monday.com is a paradigmatic example of this phenomenon, where methodologies, networks, and ideologies from the IDF’s most elite units are transplanted into a corporate structure. This is not simply a matter of past service; it is a matter of ongoing ethos and network connectivity.
2.1 The Unit 81 Distinction: Eran Zinman’s Pedigree
While public discourse and corporate marketing often highlight “Unit 8200” due to its brand recognition as a cyber-powerhouse, Monday.com’s technological DNA is more accurately traced to Unit 81 (The Technology Unit of the Intelligence Corps). Co-Founder and Co-CEO Eran Zinman served as a Research and Development Manager in this highly secretive unit.1
Operational Context of Unit 81:
Unit 81 is distinct from Unit 8200. While 8200 focuses on Signal Intelligence (SIGINT) and code-breaking, Unit 81 is the Intelligence Directorate’s in-house engineering workshop. It is tasked with creating bespoke hardware, software, and cyber capabilities for special operations. The unit’s mandate is often existential and immediate; they build technologies that must work in the field, often behind enemy lines, with zero margin for failure.
Technographic Impact on Monday.com:
- The “Impossible” Ethos: Zinman’s leadership philosophy, centered on “radical transparency and ownership” 1, is a direct reflection of Unit 81’s internal culture, where small, autonomous teams are empowered to solve complex problems without bureaucratic friction. This “rapid prototyping” approach—born from the need to deploy tech to special forces overnight—is the foundation of Monday.com’s “Low-Code/No-Code” product architecture. The platform allows users to build their own tools rapidly, mimicking the Unit 81 operational model.
- Talent Acquisition: The specific prestige of Unit 81 allows Monday.com to recruit from the absolute apex of the Israeli technical talent pool. Zinman’s background serves as a signal to other veterans of the intelligence community that the company speaks their language and values their specific operational cadence.
2.2 The Unit 8200 Ecosystem: Roy Mann and the Board
The influence of the military intelligence apparatus extends to Co-CEO Roy Mann and the board of directors, cementing the company’s position within the “8200 Ecosystem.”
- Roy Mann: Mann served in an “elite computer intelligence unit,” a standard euphemism for the 8200/Mamram ecosystem, prior to his tenure at Wix.2 His career trajectory typifies the officer-to-entrepreneur pathway that defines the sector.
- Avishai Abrahami: A key early investor and member of the Board of Directors, Abrahami is the CEO of Wix and a veteran of Unit 8200 (1990-1992).7 His presence on the board ensures that Monday.com remains tightly coupled with the strategic direction of the “8200 Alumni” network, a powerful informal guild that controls much of the venture capital and mentorship in Tel Aviv.
- Gili Iohan: Another board member, Iohan is a partner at ION Crossover Partners, an Israeli fund deeply invested in the defense-adjacent tech sector (Fiverr, Varonis). Her background includes service in the IDF, reinforcing the uniformity of the leadership’s origins.7
2.3 The “Citizen Army” and Workforce Mobilization
The concept of the “Citizen Army” is central to evaluating the risk of digital complicity. In Israel, the reserve duty system means that a civilian software engineer one day can be an intelligence officer targeting airstrikes the next. This duality was starkly illustrated during the “Swords of Iron” war.
- The 7% Mobilization: Following October 7, 2023, Monday.com confirmed that approximately 100 employees, representing roughly 7% of its global workforce, were drafted into the IDF reserves.6 This is a statistically significant portion of the company’s core engineering and operational talent.
- Operational Continuity vs. Cognitive Dissonance: The company boasted that “operations will continue without disruption” despite this mobilization.6 This resilience suggests a high degree of redundancy, likely derived from military planning methodologies. However, it also highlights a critical complicity vector: the individuals writing the code for Monday.com are, largely, the same individuals executing the IDF’s military operations. There is no functional separation between the “civilian” developer and the “military” reservist. The skills, mentalities, and even the software tools transfer fluidly between the office in Tel Aviv and the command centers of the Kirya (IDF Headquarters).
- Tom Ronen: The Head of Customer Success at Monday.com served as a Commanding Officer in the IDF Combat Patrol Ship Unit.8 This indicates that the military influence extends beyond R&D into customer-facing operations, bringing a command-and-control approach to client management and deployment.
3. Infrastructure Analysis: Project Nimbus and Digital Sovereignty
The “Technographic Audit” identifies Monday.com’s cloud infrastructure strategy as a primary vector of complicity. The company’s alignment with Project Nimbus—the massive cloud computing contract between the Israeli government and Google/Amazon—is not incidental; it is strategic.
3.1 The Strategic Architecture of Project Nimbus
Project Nimbus is a $1.2 billion initiative to migrate the Israeli government, defense establishment, and public sector to a local cloud infrastructure provided by Google (GCP) and Amazon (AWS). The project is divided into four phases, ranging from infrastructure construction to the optimization of cloud operations.4 The core requirement of Nimbus is Data Sovereignty: ensuring that data stays within Israel’s borders and under Israeli jurisdiction, preventing foreign courts (e.g., the Hague) or international bodies from subpoenaing sensitive data.
3.2 Monday.com as a “Nimbus” Tenant
Monday.com has positioned itself as a “First Mover” within the Nimbus ecosystem, aligning its infrastructure roadmap with the state’s strategic goals.
- Launch Partner Status: Monday.com was explicitly named as a key partner and tenant of the AWS Israel Region (Tel Aviv) immediately upon its launch.3 This was not merely a technical upgrade; it was a statement of alignment. By hosting in the Tel Aviv region, Monday.com ensures its latency and compliance posture are optimized for Israeli domestic entities, including the government and defense sectors.
- Data Residency Compliance: Monday.com updated its data residency policies to allow customers to specifically select the Israel region for data storage.10 While marketed as “transparency,” this capability is a prerequisite for any SaaS vendor seeking to serve the Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMOD) or sensitive government ministries, which are mandated to keep classified or sensitive data within the “Iron Cloud” of Israeli jurisdiction.
3.3 The “Iron Cloud” and Legal Complicity
The decision to host data in the AWS Israel Region subjects Monday.com—and crucially, its clients in that region—to the full weight of Israeli security laws.
- The Electronic Communications Law: Under Israeli law, and specifically under emergency regulations often invoked by the Prime Minister’s office, security services (Shin Bet/ISA, Unit 8200) can compel telecommunications and cloud providers to provide access to data without a standard judicial warrant if “national security” is invoked.
- The “Backdoor” Risk: By physically locating servers in Israel (Project Nimbus), Monday.com removes the legal friction that might otherwise exist if data were hosted in Frankfurt or Virginia. If the Shin Bet requires access to a Monday.com board used by a Palestinian NGO or a human rights monitor, the legal path to that data is frictionless within the Israeli jurisdiction.
- Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) Context: The “No Tech for Apartheid” campaign has explicitly targeted Project Nimbus for its role in enabling the “technological apartheid” of the occupation.11 Monday.com’s eager participation in this ecosystem places it on the wrong side of this ethical divide, identifying it as a beneficiary of the very infrastructure that activists are protesting.
3.4 Supply Chain Vulnerabilities: Sub-Processors
Monday.com’s list of sub-processors confirms its reliance on the “Unit 8200 Stack” for its own operations, creating a closed loop of military-linked technology.
- Wiz and SentinelOne: Monday.com uses Wiz (founded by 8200 alumni) and SentinelOne (endpoint security) to secure its own platform.3 This means that the security telemetry of Monday.com’s global customer base is processed by firms with deep ties to Israeli cyber-intelligence.
- Local Processing: Even for customers hosted in the EU or US, Monday.com acknowledges that “Customer Data may also be processed in Israel” because the headquarters and R&D are located there.10 This admission destroys the illusion of complete data sovereignty for international clients; the metadata, at a minimum, is accessible to engineers sitting in Tel Aviv, subject to Israeli law.
4. The Surveillance Nexus: Workflow of Control
Perhaps the most damning evidence of digital complicity is Monday.com’s role as a business enabler for the surveillance technology industry. The audit reveals that Monday.com does not merely exist alongside these companies; it provides the “Operating System” upon which they organize their activities. This section analyzes the interoperability between Monday.com and the vendors of the “Surveillance State.”
4.1 Case Study: Oosto (Formerly AnyVision)
Oosto, formerly known as AnyVision, is Israel’s premier facial recognition company. It has been documented extensively that AnyVision’s technology is used to surveil Palestinians in the West Bank at checkpoints and through secret monitoring networks (e.g., the “Blue Wolf” program).13
The Monday.com Link:
- Partnership Management Hub: Oosto explicitly states in its partner documentation that it uses Monday.com as its main platform for partnership activities.5 “Sharing is caring! We use Monday.com as our main platform for partnership activities… This platform enables you to view, share and track the status of opportunities, projects and joint marketing initiatives.”
- The Operational Implication: This is a critical finding. It means that the global sales pipeline, the deployment projects, and the logistical coordination of facial recognition cameras are managed on Monday.com. The “Deal” to install biometric scanners at a West Bank checkpoint is likely a “Item” on a Monday.com board. The “Project” to deploy surveillance in East Jerusalem is tracked via Monday.com’s Gantt charts. Monday.com is effectively the CRM and Project Management tool for the distribution of apartheid technology.
- Integration Depth: Oosto encourages partners to “share business opportunities on their personalized Monday board”.5 This creates a direct data link between Oosto’s operational center and its global network of integrators, facilitating the rapid proliferation of surveillance tech.
4.2 The “Unit 8200 Stack” Integration Hub
Monday.com positions itself as the central nervous system of the modern enterprise. To achieve this, it offers deep, native integrations with the “Best of Breed” in Israeli cybersecurity—vendors that are almost exclusively founded by Unit 8200 alumni.
Table 1: The “Unit 8200 Stack” Interoperability Matrix
| Vendor |
Origin |
Integration Mechanism |
Operational Complicity |
| Wiz |
Unit 8200 |
Native Integration: “Send Wiz Issues to Monday.com”.14 |
Wiz secures the cloud environments of the IDF/Gov. Monday.com acts as the ticketing system for those security alerts, effectively becoming the workflow layer for cloud defense. |
| Check Point |
Unit 8200 |
Strategic User: Check Point uses Monday.com for global sales training and operations.15 |
Check Point provides the firewalls for the Israeli state. Monday.com optimizes Check Point’s workforce, directly enhancing the efficiency of the state’s primary cyber-defender. |
| SentinelOne |
Unit 8200 |
Customer & Partner: Monday.com uses SentinelOne for internal security.16 |
SentinelOne is a standard EDR for defense entities. Shared threat intelligence and telemetry potentially accessible via integrations create a “shared defense” posture. |
| CyberArk |
Unit 8200 |
Identity Integration: CyberArk Identity integrates for SSO/Access Control.17 |
CyberArk secures “privileged accounts” (e.g., root access to weapons systems). Integration implies Monday.com can be secured to the same standard, making it viable for classified use. |
Third-Order Insight: The seamless integration of these tools creates a “Cyber-Iron Dome.” Monday.com is not just a project management tool; it is the UI (User Interface) for the Israeli cyber-defense establishment. When a Wiz alert triggers (potentially on a government server regarding a cyber-attack), it creates a task in Monday.com. The remediation is tracked in Monday.com. The “Work OS” becomes the “Cyber-Warfare OS.”
4.3 BriefCam and the Video Synopsis Ecosystem
BriefCam (acquired by Canon but originating in Hebrew University technology) provides “Video Synopsis” technology, allowing operators to review hours of footage in minutes. It is widely used by law enforcement and likely the military for post-event analysis (e.g., tracking suspects after a protest or attack).
- The Ecosystem Link: BriefCam is a key partner of Milestone Systems (VMS provider). While a direct “plug-and-play” integration with Monday.com isn’t explicitly detailed in the public documentation, the shared ecosystem (Milestone Marketplace) and the use of Monday.com by system integrators creates a functional link. Integrators who deploy BriefCam surveillance systems likely use Monday.com to manage those deployment projects.18
5. Operational Usage: From “Project Future” to “Swords of Iron”
The user query specifically asks about “Project Future” and digital transformation integrators. In the context of the IDF and Ministry of Defense, “digital transformation” is not about efficiency—it is about lethality. The IDF’s multi-year plans, often referred to under umbrellas like “Tnufa” (Momentum) or future force design, rely on digitizing the battlefield.
5.1 “Swords of Iron” and Civil Defense Mobilization
Following the attacks on October 7, 2023, the distinction between civilian and military tech evaporated. Monday.com became an immediate, operational asset for the war effort.
- Civil Defense Adoption: Reports confirm that “civil defense forces rapidly adopted monday’s software to coordinate operations overnight”.19
- Decoding “Civil Defense”: In the Israeli context, “Civil Defense” is the domain of the Home Front Command (Pikud HaOref), a full military branch of the IDF.20 It is not a civilian NGO. Furthermore, the term “civil defense forces” often encompasses Kitat Konenut (Rapid Response Teams) in settlements and border towns. These teams are armed by the IDF, trained by the IDF, and operate under IDF command.21
- The Operational Use Case: Monday.com was likely used to manage:
- Logistics: The distribution of food, ceramic vests, and tactical gear to reserve units.
- Personnel Rostering: Managing the shifts of rapid response teams in settlements.
- Casualty/Evacuation Tracking: coordinating the movement of civilians from border zones.
- This places Monday.com directly in the “kill chain” of logistics—ensuring that soldiers and paramilitaries were equipped and deployed efficiently during active combat operations.
5.2 The Integrators and “Project Future”
Large consultancy firms act as the bridge between Monday.com’s commercial software and the highly regulated, classified defense sector. The “Project Future” component of the query likely refers to the IDF’s digital transformation initiatives, often executed by these civilian integrators.
- KPMG: Maintains a strategic alliance with Monday.com and operates a “Center of Excellence” within KPMG Israel’s Data & AI R&D center.23
- Crisis Management Solution: KPMG explicitly markets a “Crisis Management Solution” built on Monday.com.24 In the Israeli context, “Crisis Management” is synonymous with “War Room” operations.
- Procurement Process Manager: KPMG also markets a procurement solution. The IMOD is the largest procurer of goods in Israel. Using Monday.com to streamline defense procurement significantly accelerates the military supply chain.
- Deloitte: Monday.com is a top performer in Deloitte Israel’s Technology Fast 50.25 Deloitte is a major contractor for the Israeli government, deeply involved in public sector digitization.
- Publicis Sapient: While primarily a global entity, Publicis Sapient’s acquisition of firms like Third Horizon and its partnerships in the region position it to deliver “Digital Business Transformation”.26 In Israel, this transformation is currently focused on the “Smart Government” and “Smart Defense” initiatives—digitizing the bureaucracy of the state.
5.3 Digitizing the Occupation
The “Digital Transformation” of the occupation is a documented phenomenon. The IDF and the Civil Administration (COGAT) are actively moving from paper permits to digital apps (e.g., “Al-Munasiq”).
- The “Low-Code” Enabler: Monday.com’s “low-code/no-code” ability allows non-technical military officers to build custom workflows for bureaucratic tasks without waiting for R&D engineers.
- Settlement Division Usage: The Settlement Division of the World Zionist Organization (which funds and manages West Bank settlements) is a reported user of Project Nimbus cloud services.12 Since Monday.com is a Nimbus partner and key SaaS provider, it is highly probable that settlement planning, expansion projects, and budget allocations are managed on Monday.com boards. The software effectively lowers the barrier to entry for managing the complex logistics of settlement expansion.
6. Detailed Analysis of “The Stack” (Unit 8200 Vendors)
To fully appreciate the “Digital Complicity Score,” we must examine the technical dependencies between Monday.com and the broader Unit 8200 ecosystem. This section analyzes the specific technical linkages and their implications.
6.1 Wiz (Cloud Security)
- Origin: Founded by Assaf Rappaport and the team from Adallom (Unit 8200 veterans).
- The Link: Monday.com uses Wiz to secure its own infrastructure.3 More importantly, the Wiz Integration allows Monday.com to ingest security findings directly into boards.14
- Complicity Analysis: Wiz provides “Cloud Detection and Response.” In a military context (IDF using Nimbus), Wiz is the sensor that detects threats. By integrating with Monday.com, the response workflow is managed in Monday.com. This makes Monday.com a component of the SOC (Security Operations Center) workflow for Israeli cyber defense. It visualizes the “battlefield” of cloud security.
6.2 Check Point (Network Security)
- Origin: Founded by Gil Shwed (Unit 8200), the “godfather” of the Israeli cyber sector.
- The Link: Monday.com is a customer of Check Point (Quantum Maestro/CloudGuard).27 Reciprocally, Check Point uses Monday.com for training its global sales force.15
- Complicity Analysis: Check Point creates the firewalls that protect Israeli government networks from cyber-attacks. The reciprocal relationship creates a closed loop of mutual support: Monday.com optimizes Check Point’s workforce, while Check Point protects Monday.com’s data. This symbiosis strengthens the overall resilience of the Israeli cyber-defense apparatus.
6.3 SentinelOne (Endpoint Protection)
- Origin: Tomer Weingarten (Unit 8200 background implied in founding team dynamics and recruitment).
- The Link: SentinelOne protects Monday.com’s endpoints.16
- Complicity Analysis: SentinelOne is aggressively used by the IDF and Shin Bet for endpoint security. The fact that Monday.com relies on the same stack ensures interoperability. If the IDF wants to audit Monday.com usage on a military device, the presence of the SentinelOne agent facilitates that visibility and control.
6.4 Claroty (OT/IoT Security)
- Origin: Incubated by Team 8, a foundry set up by former Unit 8200 commanders (Nadav Zafrir).
- The Link: Integration via ServiceNow and potentially direct API usage for OT (Operational Technology) clients.28
- Complicity Analysis: Claroty protects Critical Infrastructure (power grids, water desalination plants, factories). Integration implies Monday.com is used to manage incidents in critical infrastructure. In a conflict scenario, the protection of these assets is a military priority. This elevates Monday.com to the status of a “Critical Infrastructure Component.”
7. Digital Complicity Score: Methodology and Ranking
Based on the intelligence gathered, we assign Monday.com a Digital Complicity Score. This score is derived from a weighted analysis of four key dimensions, rated on a scale of 0 (Neutral) to 10 (Critical Complicity).
7.1 Scoring Dimensions
1. Foundational Ties (Weight: 20%)
- Criteria: Leadership background, board composition, recruitment policies.
- Analysis: Founders are Unit 81/8200. Board is heavily 8200. Active recruitment of IDF intelligence veterans.
- Score: 10/10
2. Infrastructure Sovereignty (Weight: 30%)
- Criteria: Cloud hosting location, legal jurisdiction, government contract alignment.
- Analysis: Launch partner for AWS Israel (Nimbus). Explicit data residency alignment with Israeli security laws.
- Score: 9/10
3. Surveillance Ecosystem (Weight: 25%)
- Criteria: Hosting of surveillance vendors, interoperability with control tech.
- Analysis: Hosts Oosto (AnyVision) partner management. Integrates with the “8200 Cyber Stack.”
- Score: 9/10
4. Operational Utility (Weight: 25%)
- Criteria: Documented use during conflict, workforce mobilization.
- Analysis: Rapid adoption by Home Front Command/Civil Defense. 7% workforce drafted.
- Score: 8.5/10
7.2 Final Verdict: 9.1/10 (High Complicity)
Assessment:
Monday.com is structurally and operationally integrated into the Israeli defense capabilities. It is not merely a passive economic actor; it is an active participant in the state’s security architecture.
- It is the “Operating System” for the Occupation’s Technologists: Oosto (AnyVision) uses it to manage the deployment of facial recognition.
- It is a node in the “Iron Cloud”: Its presence in the AWS Israel Region makes it a viable Command & Control (C2) asset for the Ministry of Defense.
- It is a reservoir of Military Intelligence Talent: Its recruitment pipeline effectively acts as a reserve holding pen for Unit 81/8200 talent, keeping them technically sharp between reserve duties.
8. Recommendations for Risk Mitigation
8.1 For Ethical Investors and Divestment Bodies
Monday.com should be categorized as a “Dual-Use” technology provider. While its primary market is civilian project management, its software supports military logistics and surveillance coordination. The “High Complicity” score warrants immediate review for inclusion in divestment lists, specifically citing its role in the Oosto (AnyVision) supply chain and Project Nimbus.
8.2 For Supply Chain Auditors
Enterprises utilizing Monday.com for sensitive data processing must be aware of the Data Sovereignty Risk. Data stored in the Monday.com platform—even if nominally in the EU/US—is accessible to support teams in Israel and, by extension, potentially accessible to Israeli security services under the Electronic Communications Law. The “Sub-Processor” list confirms this cross-jurisdictional exposure.
8.3 For Academic and NGO Boycotts
The link to Project Nimbus is the primary vector for boycott advocacy. Monday.com’s participation validates and strengthens the cloud infrastructure that the “No Tech for Apartheid” movement opposes. Boycott strategies should focus on Monday.com as a beneficiary of the Nimbus contract and a enabler of the surveillance state via its marketplace partners.
End of Report
Analyst ID:
Clearance: N/A (OSINT)
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