Father&Friend. Infosec Leader. Whiskey, dogs, and cake. Rock&Ice climbing. He/Him

Joined February 2010
786 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
2 Aug 2021
Sparkle Unicorn 2.0 batch 1 complete! #badgelife #DC29 @defcon @dcstickerswap @1dark0ne
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Make sure to mark the Flock cameras in your neighborhoods so nobody chops them down for parts

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2 years ago today, we heard Not Like Us for the first time… unforgettable 🔥
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FISA 702 just passed the House. This bill lets the government search Americans’ private communications without a warrant—in direct violation of the Fourth Amendment. But don’t blame the GOP alone. Forty-two Democrats betrayed the American people to help Mike Johnson pass it.
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Apr 21
Amazon just got caught running a secret price manipulation operation with Levi's, Home Depot, Walmart, and many more. Every time you "comparison shopped" online, you were looking at prices that were already rigged. Here's what happened: Amazon would monitor prices on Walmart, Target, Best Buy, Home Depot, and Chewy in real time. The second a competitor listed a product cheaper than Amazon, they'd contact the brand directly and tell them to "fix it." And the exact emails are now PUBLIC. Amazon sent Levi's links to two Walmart listings with the subject line "styles of concern." They basically said the prices on Walmart are too low and we have a problem. The next day, Levi's responded: "I talked to Walmart and they have partnered with us to take Easy Khaki Classic fit back up to ladder SPP price, $29.99 immediately." Levi's literally called Walmart and told them to raise the price. Because Amazon told Levi's to make the call. Walmart complied. Then Amazon matched the HIGHER price. Both retailers ended up charging more. The customer paid extra. Nobody competed. Same playbook with Hanes: Amazon sent them links showing Target and Walmart prices were lower. Hanes confirmed they "reached out to Target and Walmart to have the prices increased." Target increased the prices. Walmart increased the prices. Amazon kept their margins. But it gets even worse... Amazon told Allergan (the company that makes eye drops) that their product was "suppressed" on Amazon because it was cheaper on another site. Allergan responded: "Walmart got their price back up to $16.99." Amazon then unsuppressed the listing. They did this with pet treats on Chewy. Furniture on Home Depot. Products across dozens of categories spanning YEARS. The mechanism is simple but terrifying: If you're a brand and you sell cheaper on Walmart than on Amazon, Amazon suppresses your product, removes you from the Buy Box, buries you in search results, and effectively makes you invisible to 300 million customers. Brands can't afford that. So they call Walmart and Target and say "raise your prices or we'll lose our Amazon listings." Walmart and Target comply because they need the brand's products. Amazon captures 40 cents of every dollar spent online in America. That gives them the leverage to set prices across THE ENTIRE internet. Not just their own platform. So turns out, you were never comparison shopping. You were looking at a coordinated price floor set by Amazon through backroom phone calls between brands and their competitors. "Amazon is working to make your life more unaffordable." 3 separate antitrust trials are now scheduled for 2027. The FTC has its own case. 18 states plus the DOJ are piling on. This is literally happening during the WORST affordability crisis in a generation. Groceries up 25% since 2020. Housing unaffordable. Wages flat. And the largest ecommerce company on Earth has been secretly coordinating with brands to make sure you can't find a cheaper price ANYWHERE. "Competition" in retail is just a fantasy.
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We are spending at least $500 million a day to bomb Iran. Imagine how many teachers we could hire, how many public housing units we could build, how many bridges and roads we could fix, if we spent that kind of money on improving life for working people?
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The Intercept is at JFK International Airport today reminding you to #TurnOffYourPhone before going through security to keep federal authorities from getting into your devices. More tips from our digital security expert: interc.pt/4lVZJwE
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Be compassionate when your users get phished. If it can happen to the Director of the FBI, it can happen to anyone.
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Katharine Hepburn, in her own words: "Once, when I was a teenager, my father and I were standing in line to buy tickets for the circus. Finally, there was only one family between us and the ticket counter. That family made a lasting impression on me. There were eight children, all under the age of 12. From the way they were dressed, you could tell they didn’t have much money, but their clothes were clean, very clean. The children were well-behaved, standing in pairs behind their parents, holding hands. They were so excited about the clowns, the animals, and all the acts they would see that night. From their excitement, you could tell they had never been to a circus before. It was going to be a highlight of their lives. The father and mother stood proudly at the front of their little group. The mother was holding her husband’s hand, looking at him as if to say, 'You’re my knight in shining armor.' He was smiling, enjoying seeing his family happy. The ticket lady asked how many tickets he wanted, and he proudly responded, 'I want eight children’s tickets and two adult tickets.' Then she announced the price. The wife let go of her husband’s hand, her head dropped, and the man’s lip began to quiver. He leaned in closer and asked, 'How much did you say?' The ticket lady repeated the price. He didn’t have enough money. How was he supposed to turn around and tell his eight kids that he couldn’t afford to take them to the circus? Seeing what was happening, my dad reached into his pocket, pulled out a $20 bill, and dropped it on the ground. We weren’t rich by any means. My father bent down, picked up the $20 bill, tapped the man on the shoulder, and said, 'Excuse me, sir, this fell out of your pocket.' The man understood what was happening. He wasn’t being handed charity, but he gratefully accepted the help in his desperate, heartbreaking, and embarrassing situation. He looked straight into my father’s eyes, took my dad’s hand in both of his, squeezed the bill tightly, and with trembling lips and a tear streaming down his cheek, he replied, 'Thank you, sir. This really means so much to me and my family.' My father and I went back to our car and drove home. The $20 my dad gave away was what we had planned to use for our own tickets. Although we didn’t see the circus that night, we felt a joy inside us that was far greater than seeing the circus. That day, I learned the true value of giving. The Giver is greater than the Receiver. If you want to be great, greater than life itself, learn to give. Love has nothing to do with what you expect to get, only with what you expect to give—everything. The importance of giving and blessing others cannot be overstated because there is always joy in giving. Learn to make someone happy through acts of giving." ~Katharine Hepburn
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Feb 22
RT @hacknotcrime: What is our society coming to?!? What kind of sociopath would sabotage a @flock mass surveillance camera by disconnectin…
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Story of the Fat Orange Monster, King Puddin, and the magic spell book.
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Fun Fact: If Maduro was in the Epstein files he'd be safe at home in his bed right now
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Replying to @JohnCleese
This is similar to the algorithm described by @doctorow where a medical staff agency assessed how desperate a nurse was for a shift using their credit reports & paid them less if they looked like they really needed the money
Replying to @doctorow
That's why, when staffing agencies offer a nurse a shift, they are able to secure that nurse's credit report, discover how much credit-card debt the nurse is carrying, and offer a lower wage to nurses who are economically desperate: pluralistic.net/2024/12/18/l… 20/
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They arrested Maduro’s wife before they arrested a single Epstein pedophile…
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The same day the United States Department of Justice partially released details on the Jeffrey Epstein case, the Department of Justice released a few other interesting press releases. Three of the press releases fall into our domain of cybersecurity, the remainder are related to narcotics or illegal immigration. There is some speculation however that the large volume of press releases unveiled at the same time were intended to be a distraction from the Epstein file disclosure. However, this is just speculative. What is not speculative however is the modifications made to the United States Department of Justice Epstein file releases. Since the release of the files, several files have been removed from the release. People reviewing the files noted that the files redacted contained images of the current United States President. Some individuals online asserted these statements are false and the United States Department of Justice has made no changes to the Epstein file release. However, what people seem to forget is that the internet does not forget. After the release of the Epstein files the Department of Justice website implemented a queueing feature to prevent accidental DoS. During this time I archived the Epstein file releases so people interested did not have to wait in line. Guess who has the original releases which contains data which is now removed? It's on vx-underground under /tmp/, it's listed as DataSet1, DataSet2, DataSet3, and DataSet4. Feel free to compare these raw datasets to the new ones.
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6 Mar 2024
I have a cybersecurity job opening for an early career person. Requires IT experience. Cyber experience is a plus. 50% of time will be SOC analyst/incident response. Seattle based. Would really like to see femme candidates apply. @marcusjcarey linkedin.com/jobs/view/38446…
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