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https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Releases/Release/Article/2470485/department-of-defense-announces-establishment-of-the-trusted-capital-digital-ma/source/GovDelivery/ The Department of Defense is proud to announce the establishment of the Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace (TCDM). The program establishes trusted sources of funding for small and medium-sized providers of innovative defense-critical capabilities, offering long-term strategic benefit and combatting predatory investment practices.

On Jan. 13, 2021, Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment Ellen M. Lord announced the launch of the Trusted Capital program’s digital marketplace. The TCDM is the gateway to an investment ecosystem designed to promote innovation and ensure access to trusted sources of capital for emerging technologies and critical capabilities required for national security.

Small and medium-sized businesses are vital to the defense industrial base (DIB) and the U.S. economy. Funding is paramount to the success of these firms and newly established businesses are susceptible to predatory investment. According to the current National Counterintelligence Strategy, our Nation’s “adversaries use front companies, joint ventures, mergers and acquisitions, foreign direct investment, and talent recruitment programs to gain access to and exploit U.S. technology and intellectual property.” The TCDM was developed to combat these predatory tactics and promote DIB capabilities.

“Trusted Capital works by providing opportunities for trusted financial institutions and qualifying companies to explore mutually beneficial partnerships in support of national security goals,” said Lord. “Aligned with the National Defense Strategy, the Trusted Capital program provides a more lethal force by creating new partnerships in order to reform the way the government will provide opportunity for innovation.”

Led by the Chief Information Security Officer for Acquisition and Sustainment (CISO(A&S)) Katie Arrington and Trusted Capital Director Colin Supko, the program connects vetted investors with qualifying domestic companies critical to the DIB. “I congratulate Ms. Arrington and the entire team involved in making this project a reality,” said Lord. “Through tools like the Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace, the Department of Defense and industry work together to make the Defense Industrial Base more secure.”

Trusted Capital’s military service stakeholders engage in the Marketplace by employing rapid acquisitions contracting vehicles to identify innovative capability providers deemed critical to their supply chains. Such “down-selected” providers of defense-critical and dual-use solutions are candidates for the Trusted Capital Marketplace. Interested capability providers with existing U.S. Government contracts should contact their contracting officer to request an invitation to apply; capability providers with no existing contracts can request a military service down-selection via the Trusted Capital public landing page (https://dodtrustedcapital.force.com).

About Trusted Capital Trusted Capital (TC) is an Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisitions and Sustainment (USD (A&S)) program to strengthen the defense industrial base and limit threats to national security posed by adversarial capital. Trusted Capital provides qualifying small to medium-sized technology capability providers with a range of capital solutions via “trusted” capital providers. To qualify, capability providers and capital providers undergo a national security due diligence process to limit foreign access to critical technology through foreign investments. The TC strategy lays out three lines of effort: Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace, Financial Incentives to invest in national security solutions, and Military Innovation Tours with Venture Capital/Private Equity Industry. To learn more about the Trusted Capital program, visit the website at OUSD A&S - Trusted Capital (osd.mil).

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https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Releases/Release/Article/2470485/department-of-defense-announces-establishment-of-the-trusted-capital-digital-ma/source/GovDelivery/ The Department of Defense is proud to announce the establishment of the Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace (TCDM). The program establishes trusted sources of funding for small and medium-sized providers of innovative defense-critical capabilities, offering long-term strategic benefit and combatting predatory investment practices. On Jan. 13, 2021, Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment Ellen M. Lord announced the launch of the Trusted Capital program’s digital marketplace. The TCDM is the gateway to an investment ecosystem designed to promote innovation and ensure access to trusted sources of capital for emerging technologies and critical capabilities required for national security. Small and medium-sized businesses are vital to the defense industrial base (DIB) and the U.S. economy. Funding is paramount to the success of these firms and newly established businesses are susceptible to predatory investment. According to the current National Counterintelligence Strategy, our Nation’s “adversaries use front companies, joint ventures, mergers and acquisitions, foreign direct investment, and talent recruitment programs to gain access to and exploit U.S. technology and intellectual property.” The TCDM was developed to combat these predatory tactics and promote DIB capabilities. “Trusted Capital works by providing opportunities for trusted financial institutions and qualifying companies to explore mutually beneficial partnerships in support of national security goals,” said Lord. “Aligned with the National Defense Strategy, the Trusted Capital program provides a more lethal force by creating new partnerships in order to reform the way the government will provide opportunity for innovation.” Led by the Chief Information Security Officer for Acquisition and Sustainment (CISO(A&S)) Katie Arrington and Trusted Capital Director Colin Supko, the program connects vetted investors with qualifying domestic companies critical to the DIB. “I congratulate Ms. Arrington and the entire team involved in making this project a reality,” said Lord. “Through tools like the Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace, the Department of Defense and industry work together to make the Defense Industrial Base more secure.” Trusted Capital’s military service stakeholders engage in the Marketplace by employing rapid acquisitions contracting vehicles to identify innovative capability providers deemed critical to their supply chains. Such “down-selected” providers of defense-critical and dual-use solutions are candidates for the Trusted Capital Marketplace. Interested capability providers with existing U.S. Government contracts should contact their contracting officer to request an invitation to apply; capability providers with no existing contracts can request a military service down-selection via the Trusted Capital public landing page (https://dodtrustedcapital.force.com). About Trusted Capital Trusted Capital (TC) is an Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisitions and Sustainment (USD (A&S)) program to strengthen the defense industrial base and limit threats to national security posed by adversarial capital. Trusted Capital provides qualifying small to medium-sized technology capability providers with a range of capital solutions via “trusted” capital providers. To qualify, capability providers and capital providers undergo a national security due diligence process to limit foreign access to critical technology through foreign investments. The TC strategy lays out three lines of effort: Trusted Capital Digital Marketplace, Financial Incentives to invest in national security solutions, and Military Innovation Tours with Venture Capital/Private Equity Industry. To learn more about the Trusted Capital program, visit the website at OUSD A&S - Trusted Capital (osd.mil). Subscribe to Defense.gov Products Choose which Defense.gov products you want delivered to your inbox. SUBSCRIBE

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Link to actual site: https://dodtrustedcapital.force.com/s/

This thing needs looked at in more depth - And they ABSOLUTELY need to provide the names of these "investors" to the public - without disclosure of who these people are (and even then it could be hidden in shell companies.)

Adding to that, Arrington

Arrington, who made her pro-Trump views the centerpiece of her campaign, appeared to have been critical of Trump in 2016.[10] In a March 2016 Facebook post, she praised Mitt Romney on the night that he delivered a rebuke of then-candidate Trump, whom Romney called "a phony, a fraud" and someone who was "playing the American public for suckers".[11] Arrington also supported Marco Rubio in the 2016 Republican primary for the presidential nomination. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katie_Arrington

Supko also throws up some red flags to me. In 2014 he establsihed "Patriot List," a Craigslist Type marketplace for the military. https://www.patriotlist.us/aboutus

Inc.in Nevada. Based Graduated from Stanford - a school birthing a TON of people in high Globalist positions.

So far I haven't found much information about the company's ownership and seed funding. It also appears connected to a company called Zikl - which I also can't find (yet) info about it's ownership. https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/zikl-com

LInk to Zikl/PatriotList blog: http://www.patriotlist.us/blogs/

On the flip side, Supko is a veteran and if his site is taking business away from ebay and Craiglist - whose owners, Omidyar and Newmark, are funding our destruction, then that's great by me.

As far as Lords herself, I consider her a Globalist and dislike her association with Globalist-packed Center for a New American Security https://www.cnas.org/people?group=board-of-directors

As I've said in previous posts, I'm sorry if I appear harsh and untrusting - but I am - and I have zero-tolerance for Globalists.

Since i have trouble dealing with numbers and know little to nothing about computer shit. I greatly appreciate your take on this..

To me it sent up both a red flag and a black flag ( race is called - red flag... Report back to your pits- black flag ) The Globalist reset is my take on it.

I share your concerns - like most gov initiatives, it has the potential for abuse - I want to know who will determine who gets access to this program - the wrong people, and we're literally putting out national security in their hands.

As a whole, I disagree with outside companies sponsoring/investing in government programs -

[–] 0 pt

So is this a move away from corrupt Super PAC contractors to smaller businesses that have not been infiltrated?

IDK - that would be my hope but I'm not satisfied with the answers I'm seeing so far. Needs more research.