As Sam reported on Sunday, lefties were in a panic after DataRepublican revealed that a website called GTFO ICE, started by Miles "Anonymous" Taylor, was anything but anonymous. Taylor, former Google Head of National Security Policy, launched a site that collects your full name, email, phone number, and ZIP code to join an anti-ICE "rapid response network," and then shares that information via a public API. Lefty actor Mark Ruffalo was one of more than 17,000 people whose data was made public.
"The man who ran the third-largest federal department (250,000 employees, $60 billion budget) who oversaw election security architecture and led counterterrorism operations, then served as Google's Head of National Security Policy, can't secure a sign-up form," she wrote.
Now, DataRepublican is back with a look at another of Taylor's leaky sites, this one unveiled as a prank on April 1.
🚨🧵 BREAKING: Former DHS Chief Miles Taylor's prank site collected death threats against the President and 4,000+ people's personal data. Then exposed them through all an open API. 🚨
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
Two days ago, I showed you how Miles Taylor's GTFO ICE site exposed 17,000+ people's data on… pic.twitter.com/nepChiVKNU
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… an open API. That site halted sign-ups and is still "under construction."
But Taylor's organization DEFIANCE[.]org didn't just build one leaky site. They built two. On the same server.
UndoTrump[.]org — launched April 1, 2026 as an "April Fools' joke" — collects names, emails, and political messages from people signing up for fictional "Removal Parties" at government buildings. The White House Ballroom. The Kennedy Center. The DOJ. Battleships.
4,000+ signup records. 3,300+ unique people. Same vulnerability. Same API. Same zero authentication.
And this one has death threats against a sitting President in the database.
The man who was deputy chief of staff for the department that houses the Secret Service couldn't secure a sign-up form. Again.
As always, patience as I pull together the thread.
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Here's a video of Miles himself soliciting PII in sign-ups. He implies he's not saving the user data... but he did. pic.twitter.com/LWCkk12WvE
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
Same server. Same IP address. 34.111.179.208. Google Cloud Platform. Same React 19 frontend. Same Express.js backend. Same https://t.co/dXnaHuA2Ft registrar. Domains registered 13 days apart.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
This wasn't two mistakes. This was one codebase deployed twice. pic.twitter.com/2V1EoElGXF
Here's the joke. UndoTrump[.]org launched on April Fools' Day 2026. Taylor's own Substack admitted: "These Removal Parties aren't real... YET."
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
The data collection was real though. 4,000+ signups over 25 days. Names. Emails. Political messages. No security. pic.twitter.com/4Y1T0kIJGO
Many of the messages did not indicate knowledge that the site was a prank. Many suggested they were government employees - which is one reason we took so long to report on this, we were giving the data through all the channels we knew of. pic.twitter.com/iGnjzLyAuq
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
Taylor signed up for his own site as user #5. "Miles from DC." March 30 — two days before public launch. User #3 is Xander Schultz, his https://t.co/APCLu52iVu co-founder. The other pre-launch sign ups are test users.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
They knew exactly what this site collected. They built it. pic.twitter.com/YVFxIofEcs
The messages people submitted weren't just political commentary. Multiple entries contain explicit death threats against the President of the United States — a federal crime.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
It got reported. All of it. pic.twitter.com/nV8C3OGCdl
"This is important to me because he's not a real president he's an imposter who rather rape, kill and eat babies and children. He needs to be executed publicly and on live television."
Miles Taylor was DHS Deputy Chief of Staff. That department houses the United States Secret Service — the agency that investigates threats against the President.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
He built a site that collected those threats. And apparently never reported them. @EagleEdMartin @HarmeetKDhillon
Foreign nationals from 13+ countries signed up — Canada, Germany, UK, France, Brazil, India, Australia, Bhutan, and more. Including a Bhutan .gov email.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
For a campaign targeting US federal buildings. On an unregistered "nonprofit's" open API. pic.twitter.com/VG8ut2PW0r
This is the same Miles Taylor who put up billboards in solidarity with the Seditious Six. Credit to @iamlisalogan and @SKDoubleDub33 for finding this. They also found a lot more about Defiance[.]org's connections to the larger color revolution network - needless to say, they're… pic.twitter.com/NLhcNIJff5
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
"… deeply involved."
CONCLUSION:
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
Miles Taylor put out a video walking through the site, shows you exactly how to enter your name and email, and calls it a "viral April Fools' joke to draw in support for an anti-Trump nonprofit."
4,000+ people took the bait. Their data landed in an unsecured…
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… database with death threats against the President.
Two sites. One server. Zero security. Federal criminal exposure.
The man who ran homeland security couldn't secure a sign-up form. Twice.
If you appreciated this content, follow @bitchuneedsoap and @astrarce , who have done a spectacular job of breaking data breaches in activist websites.
— DataRepublican (small r) (@DataRepublican) May 4, 2026
Ironically, the guy who was allowed to publish a New York Times op-ed and a book anonymously is free to collect others' information and make it public.
Damn, @MilesTaylorUSA
— 2Slick (@2Slick) May 4, 2026
You’re in it now lol. Enjoy the ride, son. I suspect things won’t end well for you.
Sooner than later. 🫡🇺🇸
It seems these would have been the appropriate instances for Miles Taylor to use the name “Anonymous,” as he did when he wrote his anti-Trump op-eds in the NYT several years ago.
— Jonathan Crump (@RealCrumpster) May 4, 2026
What a klutz.
— Steve Bodie (@smbodie3) May 4, 2026
— 𝕄𝕠𝕝𝕝𝕪 ℙ. (@molly_perco) May 4, 2026
The responded a little faster this time. pic.twitter.com/BHAtshEI1G
— Jared Maxwell (@ThatRetiredDude) May 4, 2026
And Taylor keeps getting invited as a guest on cable news shows for his great insight.
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