That family is that of Larry Ellison who developed Oracle into the global superpower of relational databases.
Guess who is behind Ellison and his mega fortune? Yep. The CIA.
In the following the company Software Development Laboratories (SDL) was founded by Ellison.
You must admit that this is absolutely incredible!!
Ellison owes his multi-billion dollar fortune to the CIA.
Ellison's daughter then covers up 9/11!!
ABSOLUTEY INCREDIBLE!!
Now imagine how many back doors the CIA have had into everyone's databases? Even from the late 1970s?
In 1970 an IBM researcher named Edgar H. Codd published a paper on relational databases. His paper was highly theoretical and not widely understood, but it conceived of a new way of organizing large amounts of data so that information could be accessed easily. The potential in Codd's theory was enormous, because it meant that companies could manage and retrieve data in ways that had never been previously possible. However, with the current state of technology, the relational database, as Codd's model was known, would be very slow. It was widely accepted that the idea had no immediate commercial viability. In the mid-1970s IBM Research built a prototype relational database and developed a special programming language called SQL, which allowed easier interaction with the database.
For a variety of reasons, IBM was slow to move on the progress it had made with the database. It was up to a young upstart company with nothing to lose in the way of reputation or market share to take the technology and turn it into a viable product. Ellison was one of many who had read the papers that were published on IBM's work with the relational database. However, he was one of few willing to risk everything in making the effort to produce the world's first commercially viable relational database. Over the next two years Software Development Laboratories changed its name to Relational Software Inc. and developed the technology. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had been interested in the concept of relational databases for several years and provided the company with money to help get the software ready for commercial release. When Oracle Version 2 was launched for the market in 1979, the CIA was one of the first customers, along with several other government intelligence agencies. The small company had snatched the technology out from under the noses of IBM and put the first relational database, albeit one that did not work very reliably, on the market.
[source : Larry Ellison 1944– , Reference for Business, https://www.referenceforbusiness.com/biography/A-E/Ellison-Larry-1944.html, Accessed : 3rd September 2019]
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