But hey the FBI were wrong when they cleared Clinton, right?
Anyway, the FBI's excuse was that the Trump server was receiving "spam emails" from the Russian bank. But that sounds
really unlikely. People looked into this long enough that if it was mass-marketing material, packets aimed at other places would have appeared. If it was spam, it would have to be specifically spam directed at mr trump.
The original story also mentions that they kept complete logs of the DNS activity of Trump's servers. The communication was 2-way:
That wasn’t the only oddity. When the researchers pinged the server, they received error messages. They concluded that the server was set to accept only incoming communication from a very small handful of IP addresses.
Eighty-seven percent of the <Trump server> DNS lookups involved the two Alfa Bank servers. “It’s pretty clear that it’s not an open mail server,” Camp told me. “These organizations are communicating in a way designed to block other people out.”
Earlier this month, the group of computer scientists passed the logs to Paul Vixie. In the world of DNS experts, there’s no higher authority. Vixie wrote central strands of the DNS code that makes the internet work. After studying the logs, he concluded, “The parties were communicating in a secretive fashion. The operative word is secretive. This is more akin to what criminal syndicates do if they are putting together a project.” Put differently, the logs suggested that Trump and Alfa had configured something like a digital hotline connecting the two entities, shutting out the rest of the world, and designed to obscure its own existence. Over the summer, the scientists observed the communications trail from a distance.
Basically, the FBI argument sounds pretty retarded as an explanation.