The United States of America and the Rest of the World Are Following a Sodomite All the Way to the Gates of Hell…
Dialog, co-founded in 2006 by millionaire internet entrepreneur Peter Thiel, has kept its membership a secret for the past two decades.
This attitude became more difficult to maintain last week when Swiss hacktivist Maia Arson Crimew, who published the US government’s No Fly List, discovered an open directory in dialog.org’s source code that was visible to visitors. WIRED corroborated the information and obtained Dialog’s 2026 retreat registration list for August 12-16, near Dublin, Ireland.
“A trove of internal records from a secret society for powerful figures in US politics, finance, and tech was left exposed online, WIRED has confirmed, naming participants in its events and revealing sensitive personal details they were assured would stay private,” reported Wired.Dialog, which was cofounded by billionaire internet entrepreneur Peter Thiel in 2006, is only accessible by invitation. It holds annual off-the-record retreats for US, international, and Silicon Valley CEOs.”
222 persons registered for 2026, with 87 being first-timers. Some have over a decade of history, while others date back to the beginning. Their presence was excluded from public record regulations since none of them used government email addresses.
The roster does not include nearby powers. Power directly regulates itself. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Dialog Chairman Auren Hoffman, who founded SafeGraph and LiveRamp, are shown. The directory also includes Senator Ted Cruz, who chairs the FTC and data-privacy committees. Palantir cofounder Joe Lonsdale, whose software processes ICE cases and Pentagon data, is shown beside Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and House Intelligence Committee ranking member Jim Himes, who oversees Palantir’s contract agencies.
Forbes has welcomed investor Marc Andreessen and former Facebook board member Jim Breyer.
Since 2021, General Alexus Grynkewich, NATO’s top allied commander in Europe and leader of the US European Command, has attended Dialog meetings.
The 2026 retreat will have seminars on “Navigating WWIII,” “Battlefield Technologies,” “Bring Back Nuclear,” and “Build-a-Cult,” all conducted by Pray.com’s founder. “How’s Your Sex Life?” probably has a separate moderator.
The website directory includes current Trump administration officials, two US senators, six Paypal Mafia members, a former Middle East intelligence chief, a sitting ambassador to the US, and the founders and directors of many of the country’s largest surveillance, data-broker, and advertising-data companies.”Wired” continues.
The leaked registration list includes Randy Kroszner, a former Federal Reserve governor who now serves on the Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee; Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League; Ryan Stowers, executive director of the Charles Koch Foundation; Nobel laureate economist Roger Myerson; and a group of Google and Google DeepMind executives, including Tom Lue, global affairs director for the frontier AI division.
The data leak is disgraceful because it could have been prevented. Viewers of the page’s source code obtained the directory. A separate Dialog page at app.dialog.org includes a sign-in screen with no terms of service, restrictions, or invitations. Airtable, a commercial database, used each participant’s membership status, retreat attendance, biography, home city, and secret access token as login credentials.
The dialogue corresponds to the people. Registering as “looking for love” permits singles to take part in “future matchmaking.”” Dating.dialog.org provides a “meaningful connections for outstanding people” application. The form records political leanings that Dialog claims to keep confidential. However, the attack revealed this information and matchmaking responses. concludes Wired.
Dialog data reveals personal flaws, relationship status, political beliefs, and access to influential networks, which criminals and spy agencies may find helpful. This information can be useful in targeted phishing, social engineering, honeytraps, blackmail, and influence efforts. Participants’ global elite position makes them tempting intelligence targets, heightening the risk. Even highly adept individuals may expose critical personal information in trusting contexts, allowing for manipulation and abuse.
An internal guide for event moderators, also in the exposed directory, advises them to remind participants that everything is off the record, keep comments concise and “nonobvious,” and model brief introductions to “avoid status signaling” in a room full of senators, dignitaries, and tycoons. Members were not disciplined for their website security.

