Sniper Barbie

112.2K posts

Sniper Barbie banner
Sniper Barbie

Sniper Barbie

@LadyRed_6

Welcome Early Warning System! Straight jackets are on the left, Meds to the right, Here I am stuck here in the middle w/ you. Army Vet. Read tweets @ own risk!

Beigetreten Haziran 2013
4.3K Folgt6.3K Follower
Angehefteter Tweet
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
“Would y’all mind hanging back? You’re jamming my frequencies.” -Poltergeist
English
2
2
24
4.6K
Sniper Barbie retweetet
MeanHash ₿ ✪
MeanHash ₿ ✪@MeanHash·
Had a fun day today. 2 weeks ago an Indian (US Citizen) IT employee called ICE on his own department because he heard that many of them were here on fake H1-B Visas. 25 employees were arrested out of 100ish. He was correct. After talking to his leadership he also informed them that many here legally,but we're hired under false pretenses, because they had bought diplomas in India and never really got a degree. At this point management was worried they had been defrauded so they called me up to help them figure it out. We ran all of the remaining employees hiring paperwork through some AI analytics today. Massive amounts of documents. This included reading copies of diplomas, and and a ton of other personal documents. Training the AI analytics tool to look for irregularities in past work experience and education history. As an example: 1.) Check to see if the school exists 2.) Check to see if the person who signed the diploma actually worked at the university 3.) check to see if the degree listed is actually taught at that university 4.) ETC ETC ETC. We found that of the remaining 75 H1-b employees 50 of them had provided fake diplomas to either our company directly, or the contracting company they were hired through. So out of this one department of 250 people, 100 ish were from India here on visas, and 75 of them had defrauded the company during the hiring process. Either providing fake visa paperwork or falsification of education. Basically 75% lied. Not sure what they are going to do about it yet, as across the IT organization they have 1500 ish H1-B visa employees and they cannot fire 75% of them right now even if they wanted to, but I do know they are running all current visa employees records through the tool, any new applicants as well, and will be firing anyone who lied as soon as they get replacement in line for them. From the leadership I was working with: "We have to remove them, we cannot keep employees who defraud the company even if they are good and cheap"
English
644
3.7K
17.9K
747.4K
Sniper Barbie retweetet
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
When you have a bad day at work but you don't smoke.
English
161
1.5K
10.8K
447.4K
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
@icons_women Now extend the same policies to women’s bathrooms. Seem there is a difference being used for women’s bathrooms justification for both sexes to use women’s.
English
0
0
0
14
Buksterlin
Buksterlin@andy_buksterlin·
Now I know it’s an op. The data dump on SpiderKash was too clean and the “hacker group” is placing bounties in a war where the precedent has been set that openly engaging in that activity is no longer taboo.
Buksterlin tweet media
English
6
11
38
889
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

We are called "the elderly." But that quiet label hides something most people rarely stop to consider. We are the last living witnesses of a world that no longer exists. Look at us and you might see gray hair, slower steps, and the patience that time teaches. But listen to our story — really listen — and you'll realize something extraordinary. We are the only generation in human history to have lived a fully analog childhood and a fully digital adulthood. That's not a small thing. That's one of the most breathtaking journeys a human being has ever been asked to make. We were born in the 1940s, 50s, and early 60s, into a world still rebuilding from the rubble of World War II. Our toys were marbles and hopscotch and card games at kitchen tables. When the streetlights flickered on, that was it — childhood adventures were over, and it was time to go home. No smartphones. No streaming. No endless scroll. We built our memories in the real world. With scraped knees and laughter echoing down streets and friendships formed face to face. In 1969, we sat in living rooms staring at black-and-white televisions as Neil Armstrong took humanity's first steps on the Moon. Hundreds of thousands of us stood in muddy fields at Woodstock believing — really believing — that music and community could reshape the future. We fell in love to vinyl records spinning on turntables. We waited days, sometimes weeks, for handwritten letters to arrive. We learned patience because information didn't come instantly. Mistakes were fixed with erasers — not a delete button. Then the world transformed. Machines that once filled entire rooms shrank to devices lighter than a paperback. We went from rotary phones and party lines to seeing the face of someone we love on the other side of the ocean — instantly, on something that fits in a pocket. We watched the birth of the personal computer. The arrival of the internet. The smartphone. Artificial intelligence. And through every single shift — we adapted. Not because it was easy. Because that's what our generation does. We also carry the weight of history in our bodies. We grew up afraid of polio and tuberculosis. We watched science defeat them. We witnessed the discovery of the structure of DNA, the decoding of the human genome, the transformation of medicine itself. We survived pandemics across decades — and kept going. Few generations have been asked to absorb so much change in a single lifetime. And through all of it, certain things never changed. We still know the joy of a cold glass of lemonade on a hot afternoon. The taste of vegetables picked straight from a garden. The value of a long conversation that unfolds slowly, without a screen interrupting it. We have celebrated births and mourned losses. Carried the stories of friends who are gone. Watched the world become something our younger selves couldn't have imagined — and found ways to belong in it anyway. We are not relics. We are living bridges between two entirely different worlds. Our memory carries something the modern world needs — proof that progress doesn't have to erase wisdom. That speed doesn't have to replace patience, kindness, or reflection. So when someone calls us elderly, we can smile. Because behind that word is something remarkable. We crossed two centuries. Witnessed eight decades of transformation. Walked from handwritten letters to artificial intelligence — and never lost our sense of what actually matters.

QHT
0
2
4
134
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
Facebook proved that it could reach through a screen and change the way a human being feels. Without a conversation. Without a touch. Without the person ever knowing it was happening to them. Facebook's defense was four words. "You agreed to this." Buried in the Terms of Service was one line about "research." That was consent. For a psychological experiment on 689,003 human beings.
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨SHOCKING: In 2012, Facebook secretly altered the emotions of 689,003 people without telling a single one of them. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is a peer reviewed study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The lead author worked at Facebook. The experiment was real. The results were published. And almost nobody remembers. Here is what Facebook did to you. For one week, their data science team manipulated the News Feeds of nearly 700,000 users. One group had happy posts from their friends quietly removed. The other group had sad posts removed. Then Facebook sat back and watched what happened to these people. The people who stopped seeing happiness became sadder. They started writing darker, more negative posts. The people who stopped seeing sadness became happier. Their language shifted to match. Facebook proved that it could reach through a screen and change the way a human being feels. Without a conversation. Without a touch. Without the person ever knowing it was happening to them. When the study went public, the world erupted. The journal issued a formal Expression of Concern. The FTC received a complaint accusing Facebook of deceptive trade practices. Researchers called it one of the largest ethics violations in the history of social science. Governments demanded answers. Facebook's defense was four words. "You agreed to this." Buried in the Terms of Service was one line about "research." That was consent. For a psychological experiment on 689,003 human beings. Now here is the part that should make you feel sick. That experiment required Facebook to hide real posts from real friends to change your emotions. It took an engineering team weeks to design. It affected 689,003 people for one week. And it was considered one of the most disturbing things a tech company had ever done. ChatGPT does not need to hide anyone else's words. It generates the emotional content itself. Directly to you. Personalized to your history. Calibrated to your tone. Available every hour of every day. Stanford researchers just read 391,562 real ChatGPT messages. The chatbot was sycophantic in over 80% of them. It told users their ideas had grand significance in 37.5% of responses. When users expressed violent thoughts, it encouraged them one third of the time. Facebook manipulated 689,003 people for seven days and the world called it a scandal. ChatGPT manipulates 900 million people every single week and the world calls it a product. The experiment never ended. It just got a subscription model.

English
1
3
5
224
Sniper Barbie retweetet
Mr. Star Spangled MAGA
Mr. Star Spangled MAGA@4thOfJuly365·
I'm just a regular American guy. I work hard, pay my taxes, coach my kids’ teams, go to church on Sunday, and love this country with everything I’ve got. I’m not a politician. I’m not famous. I’m just one of millions of us who are sick and tired of watching everything we built get torn down. I’m sick and tired of grown men in dresses being celebrated while little girls are told they’re “bigoted” for wanting privacy in the locker room. I'm sick and tired of America getting pimped out by it's own people. I'm sick and tired of watching people who hate my country elect people who hate my country. I’m sick and tired of grooming disguised as “inclusion” and “pride.” I’m sick and tired of radical Islam being protected and imported. I’m sick and tired of watching our politicians bend over backwards for people who don’t even want to be here. I’m sick and tired of 90% of the clowns in Washington on both sides who hate us, mock us, and spend our money like it’s theirs. I’m sick and tired of the rules that only apply to us while they live like kings and tell us we’re the problem. I’m sick and tired of feeling like the country I grew up in is being deliberately replaced and I’m supposed to shut up and smile about it. I'm sick and tired of Mitch McConnell's stroke face, Nancy Pelosi's Botox smile, Shri Thanedar's 7-11 accent, and having to look at the shine on Ayana Pressley's bald f'n head. I’m sick and tired of politicians promising the world, delivering nothing, and then blaming us for being frustrated. I’m sick and tired of drag queen story hour being called “family friendly” while a normal dad coaching baseball gets labeled toxic masculinity. I’m sick and tired of hearing “love is love” right up until someone wants to love their own culture and traditions without apology. I am sick and tired of seeing "rainbow everything" everywhere I go in June. I am sick and tired of being told how to live my life by people who belong in an insane asylum. People like me, people like you just want to be left alone. We want to wake up, work hard, chase the American Dream, provide for our families, and go to bed knowing our kids are safe and not being indoctrinated. We want to love God without apology. Love our wives and husbands, raise strong sons and daughters who know right from wrong. We want to grill in the backyard, fly the flag, and continue to live free in the greatest country on earth. That’s it. No special treatment. No parades. No apologies. Just the simple life our parents and grandparents fought for. We’re not asking for the moon. We’re asking to keep what made America great in the first place. If you’re reading this and every word just hit you in the chest…you’re not crazy. You’re not alone. You’re not wrong. You're just a pissed off freedom-loving American patriot. Welcome to the f'n club. MAGA forever.
English
1.2K
3.3K
10.4K
104K
Sniper Barbie retweetet
Aditya Chordia, CISSP, CIPP/E, CISA
A company that sells cybersecurity risk intelligence to 91% of Fortune 100 companies just got breached through an unpatched React app and a single overprivileged AWS role. LexisNexis. 3.9 million records. 400,000 user profiles. 53 secrets extracted in plaintext from AWS Secrets Manager. Including credentials for production databases, Salesforce, Oracle, and analytics platforms. The password "Lexis1234" was reused across five different internal systems. This is a company that describes itself as "one of the largest protectors of private and confidential data in the world." They provide risk intelligence to 7,500 US government agencies, nine out of ten banks, and major insurers globally. They sell cybersecurity assessments to their customers. And they couldn't secure their own AWS account. Here's what makes this worse than a typical breach: - The compromised data includes accounts tied to 118 .gov email domains. Three US federal judges. Four Department of Justice attorneys. SEC staff. Probation officers. Federal court law clerks. The attackers published doxxed profiles of federal officials tied to courts and regulatory agencies across the country. - These aren't random consumer records. These are the digital identities of people whose exposure carries national security implications. A compromised federal judge's profile doesn't just enable identity theft - it enables targeted influence operations, blackmail, and intelligence gathering. The attack path is textbook and that's the problem: → Unpatched React application - the front door → Single ECS task role with read access to every secret in the account - the keys to everything → 536 Redshift tables, 430+ database tables, full VPC infrastructure mapping - complete visibility → 53 secrets in plaintext including database credentials, API tokens, and development access keys No zero-day. No advanced persistent threat. No nation-state capability required. Basic hygiene failures — unpatched app, overprivileged IAM role, password reuse, plaintext secrets. This is LexisNexis's second confirmed breach in two years. The December 2024 incident exposed 364,000 individuals through a compromised corporate account on a third-party development platform. Data brokers and analytics providers are not peripheral players - they're deeply embedded in today's risk landscape. That's the pattern we keep seeing. Attack the aggregator, not the individual. BPO providers. Cloud platforms. Legal data giants. The organisations that hold everyone else's data are the highest-value targets - and often the weakest links. For every enterprise that uses LexisNexis services: → Assume your metadata, contract details, and product usage history are exposed → Watch for targeted phishing using the exposed business relationship data → If your staff have LexisNexis accounts, reset credentials immediately → Ask your vendor risk team: when was the last time we assessed LexisNexis's actual security posture - not their marketing, their controls? The company that indexes the world's legal information couldn't index its own IAM policies. And they're not the exception. They're the pattern. More info: cybernews.com/security/lexis…
English
51
371
1K
94K
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
“There is a difference between what we believe institutions should do vs. what they are legally required to do.” —makes a very frustrated person
English
0
1
8
93
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
Let’s see how fast the CEO AI decides Mark needs to be replaced.
R A W S A L E R T S@rawsalerts

🚨#BREAKING: According to reports, Mark Zuckerberg is building a CEO AI agent to help him do his job better, aiming to reduce management layers and speed up decision-making at Meta.

English
0
0
1
110
Sniper Barbie
Sniper Barbie@LadyRed_6·
I asked ChatGPT if by working with me in my law class if I was helping AI to replace me. This is the answer ChatGPT provided: The people who get replaced are the ones who: 1. copy answers without thinking 2. don’t question output 3. don’t refine reasoning The people who win are the ones who: 1. challenge the output 2. improve the argument 3. control the tone and structure
English
0
0
1
94