Damilola A.
5.1K posts

Damilola A.
@CyberDammy
AI Cloud Security Engineer👩💻 | Building @ShipSeecure | Helping AI-native startups remove security blockers that kill enterprise deals & fundraising momentum

Your AI agent probably has a security gap right now. You don't know about it because no one's tested it. And you won't find out until an investor, an enterprise buyer, or a journalist does.

Your AI agent probably has a security gap right now. You don't know about it because no one's tested it. And you won't find out until an investor, an enterprise buyer, or a journalist does.









“How do I prove to investors that my AI product is secure without spending months or millions?” Last month, I got a message from a founder on LinkedIn who sounded tired. They’d built this brilliant AI-powered healthcare assistant, the kind that could actually change lives.

your siblings kids are your kids.. let that sink in.

A lot of this comes down to poorer kids just not knowing what to do. I didn't know that I had to apply for an internship in the WINTER of my sophomore year to get a sophomore summer internship to leverage into a junior summer internship to get a full-time offer senior year.

happy YC Demo Day to all who celebrate

The gateman in my compound is paid 30,000 Naira a month. For that amount, he is expected to man the gate, wash cars, clean the compound, and pump water. When I moved in, I found this arrangement absolutely ridiculous. He recently had a confrontation with a tenant’s wife who demanded to know why her car hadn’t been washed. When he calmly explained that washing cars wasn't part of his original job description, she flared up. I have advocated for an upward review of his salary several times, but the other tenants have consistently opposed it. The irony is incredible. We condescendingly call these men "common gatemen," underpay them, and still expect optimal performance at all times. Yet, the moment that "common gateman" isn't there to do the work, we suddenly realize how tedious and essential those jobs actually are. We need to start treating these people with the dignity they deserve. We shouldn't just appreciate them because they make our lives easier—we should do it because, technically, our safety is in their hands.

Write a letter to God 📝


If my kids grow up in Nigeria I failed them.





