Of course they will get stuff like that, but with 3 extra steps that cost money and put costs into the war-spreadsheet.
Adorable-Database187 on
>The Ministry of Foreign Affairs told RTL Nieuws that it is “highly undesirable” that components from Dutch companies are still being found in Russian drones and missiles. The government is “in close contact with the Ukrainian authorities” about this and is “strongly committed to preventing the evasion of sanctions on these goods,” the Ministry said. The government already promised an additional €36.5 million to further strengthen compliance with the sanctions.
Ugh and of course its my country of fat fucking coin tossers again.
How about some lengthy prison sentences for the vultures that are undoing the support to Ukrain we’re all paying for.
I really dont understand the leniency for companies that support the agressor.
6gv5 on
Any chances that they can id the chips to track the source that smuggles them to Russia? The printed date code alone doesn’t say much. Military grade digital chips, CPUs, memories, controllers etc. should have undocumented instructions that return their serial number which would help to pinpoint the source; others might employ other methods (passive RFID in the microwave?) to id them uniquely.
4 commenti
Of course they will get stuff like that, but with 3 extra steps that cost money and put costs into the war-spreadsheet.
>The Ministry of Foreign Affairs told RTL Nieuws that it is “highly undesirable” that components from Dutch companies are still being found in Russian drones and missiles. The government is “in close contact with the Ukrainian authorities” about this and is “strongly committed to preventing the evasion of sanctions on these goods,” the Ministry said. The government already promised an additional €36.5 million to further strengthen compliance with the sanctions.
Ugh and of course its my country of fat fucking coin tossers again.
How about some lengthy prison sentences for the vultures that are undoing the support to Ukrain we’re all paying for.
I really dont understand the leniency for companies that support the agressor.
Any chances that they can id the chips to track the source that smuggles them to Russia? The printed date code alone doesn’t say much. Military grade digital chips, CPUs, memories, controllers etc. should have undocumented instructions that return their serial number which would help to pinpoint the source; others might employ other methods (passive RFID in the microwave?) to id them uniquely.
Any chance that dutch company is Chinese owned?