@nanghninhninwai8383: နေကြာရိုင်း🌼🌻🌻#နဲနဲတော့ချစ်ပေး💖 #sweet #လူအိပ်ချိန်မှထထတင်သောမိမိ🌚✌️

𝓓𝓪𝓲𝓼𝔂 𝓗𝓷𝓲𝓷 “ᴳᴵᴿᴸ🌸
𝓓𝓪𝓲𝓼𝔂 𝓗𝓷𝓲𝓷 “ᴳᴵᴿᴸ🌸
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Monday 27 November 2023 05:52:29 GMT
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kham3101
Kham🐼ဘော်နင်းကုန်းသူလေး🖤🥰 :
ကြည့်ရင်အိမ်အပြန်လမ်သတိရတာ😳🥰
2023-11-27 13:38:38
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hkk3522
WANAလေးရဲ့မေမေ💜🩵🩷🏡👨‍👩‍👧 :
😁😁😁
2024-12-15 15:01:48
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hkk3522
WANAလေးရဲ့မေမေ💜🩵🩷🏡👨‍👩‍👧 :
🥰🥰🥰
2024-12-15 15:01:45
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yaunglay8
Yaung Lay :
ဘယ်မှာလဲမ💞💞💞💞
2023-11-28 13:26:43
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Soon after the revelation that the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic had inadvertently been added to a Signal chat with top Trump administration officials about Yemen attack plans, some of those officials began changing or deleting their Venmo accounts. At least one account remained public for a day after the Atlantic report. Venmo, an Internet-based mobile payment service owned by PayPal that allows users to send and receive money quickly, also allows the public to view users' contacts if they do not change their privacy settings. National security experts contend the public information could be exploited by foreign intelligence services or other nefarious actors. According to screenshots obtained by CBS News, White House national security adviser Michael Waltz's friends list on Venmo was open to the public to view as late as Tuesday — a day after the Atlantic report about the Signal chat was published. On Wednesday, his account settings were changed to make his contacts private. Waltz's contacts on Venmo included journalists, government officials, active and retired service members and members of congress. There was evidence Waltz had sent or received payments on the platform. Susie Wiles, President Trump's chief of staff, was listed on Waltz's Venmo friends list, but her account is now no longer searchable. On Wednesday, Wired magazine reported on Waltz' and Wiles' Venmo accounts and said their respective accounts were made private after the publication contacted the White House.
Soon after the revelation that the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic had inadvertently been added to a Signal chat with top Trump administration officials about Yemen attack plans, some of those officials began changing or deleting their Venmo accounts. At least one account remained public for a day after the Atlantic report. Venmo, an Internet-based mobile payment service owned by PayPal that allows users to send and receive money quickly, also allows the public to view users' contacts if they do not change their privacy settings. National security experts contend the public information could be exploited by foreign intelligence services or other nefarious actors. According to screenshots obtained by CBS News, White House national security adviser Michael Waltz's friends list on Venmo was open to the public to view as late as Tuesday — a day after the Atlantic report about the Signal chat was published. On Wednesday, his account settings were changed to make his contacts private. Waltz's contacts on Venmo included journalists, government officials, active and retired service members and members of congress. There was evidence Waltz had sent or received payments on the platform. Susie Wiles, President Trump's chief of staff, was listed on Waltz's Venmo friends list, but her account is now no longer searchable. On Wednesday, Wired magazine reported on Waltz' and Wiles' Venmo accounts and said their respective accounts were made private after the publication contacted the White House. "Venmo is a commonly used app, and Mike Waltz has made necessary updates for his personal privacy protection," said NSC spokesman James Hewitt, after being contacted by CBS News Wednesday. #venmo #cash #signal #dc #news #tech

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