Joined April 2017
3,373 Photos and videos
Calling all cybersecurity enthusiasts! Hear from past attendees why you should attend this year's InfoSec World conference on October 11-15, in Orlando, FL. Don't miss out on this must-attend event. Secure your spot today! #InfoSecWorld #CRAevents sprou.tt/1Blm9QCxtel
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For many founders, a $10 million exit once meant financial freedom. Why does that milestone feel so different today? Strong discussion from @SecWeekly. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20622โ€ฆ

A $10 million business used to be a life-changing exit. For many founders, that milestone once meant selling the company, retiring comfortably, and moving on. But changing valuations and market conditions may be shifting that equation. Are founders being pushed to build bigger companies simply because the old exit path no longer works? #Startups #Entrepreneurship #BusinessGrowth
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Security doesnโ€™t start when the operating system boots. Strong @SecWeekly conversation on firmware, option ROMs, and trusted code running before most people realize it. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20604โ€ฆ

Your PC may trust hardware code before your operating system even starts. This clip breaks down what โ€œoption ROMsโ€ are inside UEFI firmware and why hardware devices can load their own low-level initialization code into a system during boot. How much trusted code runs before your security tools ever activate? #CyberSecurity #UEFI #FirmwareSecurity
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What happens when security AI stops executing instructions and starts deciding how to achieve outcomes? Great conversation from @SecWeekly on goal-driven security systems. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20608โ€ฆ

Security AI is moving beyond rigid workflows. Instead of following fixed playbooks step-by-step, newer systems are being designed around goals: investigate the breach, determine the scope, and dynamically figure out how to get there. Should AI systems be trusted to adapt investigations on their own? Now booking interviews at Black Hat 2026. Early access pricing is open. Message us for details! #Cybersecurity #AI #SOC
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Every major tech trend eventually faces the same question: Did it actually deliver results? Great @SecWeekly conversation on AIโ€™s next chapter. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20597โ€ฆ

No cybersecurity buzzword lasts forever. This clip looks at decades of RSA Conference session data and makes a bold prediction: AI may be entering its โ€œprove itโ€ phase, where companies stop funding endless experiments and start demanding real results. What replaces AI as the industry obsession if the hype fades? #AI #Cybersecurity #RSAConference
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Sometimes the healthiest thing for an open source project is broader ownership. Great @SecWeekly conversation on why MITRE is moving Caldera to the Apache Foundation. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20601โ€ฆ

MITRE is moving the Caldera cybersecurity platform to the Apache Foundation. The discussion breaks down why mature open source security projects often outgrow the resources of their original creators โ€” and why broader collaboration may matter more than centralized ownership. Does open source security improve when more organizations share responsibility? #CyberSecurity #OpenSource #MITRE
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Cyber insurance reports are revealing the real cost of vulnerable edge devices. Strong @SecWeekly conversation on Akira ransomware and legacy firewall risk. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20589โ€ฆ

Some old firewalls are becoming more valuable to ransomware crews than to the companies running them. This clip breaks down how Akira ransomware repeatedly targeted SonicWall devices โ€” and why cyber insurance reports are exposing the real financial impact of vulnerable infrastructure. At what point does legacy security technology become a security risk itself? #CyberSecurity #Ransomware #InfoSec
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AI agents donโ€™t quit โ€” and they donโ€™t ask for their access to be removed. Great conversation from @SecWeekly on managing AI identities and privilege sprawl. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20593โ€ฆ

AI agents donโ€™t quit their jobs. They also donโ€™t ask for their access to be revoked. This clip explains why companies are starting to treat AI agents like employees with full identity lifecycles โ€” including onboarding, governance, and termination. What happens when thousands of unused AI agents keep their permissions indefinitely? #CyberSecurity #AI #IdentityManagement
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AI-assisted cybercrime could become a volume problem, not just a sophistication problem. Interesting discussion from @SecWeekly on speed, scale, and lower barriers to entry. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20594โ€ฆ

AI-assisted cybercrime may not look the way people expect. This clip argues the real danger isnโ€™t elite hackers becoming unstoppable โ€” itโ€™s inexperienced operators shipping attacks faster, with less oversight, more bugs, and more volume. What happens when speed matters more than quality in cyber operations? #Cybersecurity #AI #Hacking
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Encryption stops working the moment you intentionally weaken it. Interesting @SecWeekly discussion on telecoms, โ€œvalue-added services,โ€ and the temptation to decrypt customer data. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20596โ€ฆ

Encryption only works if you leave it alone. In this clip, a cybersecurity analyst describes a telecom executive idea that sounded simple: decrypt customer data to build โ€œvalue-added services.โ€ The response was immediate โ€” that defeats the entire point of encryption. How often do business goals quietly undermine security controls? #Cybersecurity #Encryption #Privacy
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Attackers donโ€™t always target users first โ€” sometimes they target the developers building the software. Really interesting @SecWeekly clip on Quasar RAT and stolen Git, NPM, and PyPI credentials. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20529โ€ฆ

Hack the developer, hack the software. This clip breaks down how a Linux RAT called Quasar steals developer credentials like Git, NPM, and PyPI tokens to compromise software repositories upstream. Instead of attacking users directly, attackers go after the people building the software. How do companies realistically defend against this kind of supply chain attack? #cybersecurity #supplychain #developers
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The scary part isnโ€™t that AI deleted production code. Itโ€™s that someone trusted AI with direct production access in the first place. Great clip from @SecWeekly. ๐Ÿ‘‡ x.com/SecWeekly/status/20579โ€ฆ

An AI coding assistant allegedly wiped 30,000 lines of production code from a live app. The scary part isnโ€™t just the deletion. Itโ€™s that someone let AI modify a live production environment in the first place. How much autonomy should AI tools really have in software development? #AI #Programming #CyberSecurity
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