Dylan Skidmore

4.9K posts

Dylan Skidmore

Dylan Skidmore

@DylanRSkidmore

Born Hillbilly, Retired Military, Aspiring Evil Genius 🍊 VFL

Katılım Kasım 2022
338 Takip Edilen350 Takipçiler
Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
@mike_seigel @JesterJum Happened on a 378. We took on water in Puerto Vallarta and Doc got nervous. Somehow, “double check” turned into “double the dose”. 8 days across the Pacific, hardest I ever saw DCs work. 🤢
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Mike S.🏴
Mike S.🏴@mike_seigel·
@DylanRSkidmore @JesterJum Hahahaha yeah. The 110 had small tanks and we got sick from it whenever we got a new FN or MK and they didn’t know the right mix
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Jum
Jum@JesterJum·
If you ever drank from one of these, I promise, you have nothing to worry about from the Hantavirus
Jum tweet media
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LM
LM@loyalmoses·
So... I want to run trenched fiber between the ranch buildings... where does one start for 200' of terminated fiber?!
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Mike S.🏴
Mike S.🏴@mike_seigel·
@JesterJum As a sailor, does it taste like paint and jet fuel???
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
If you have all of those obstacles, direct burying fiber isn’t going to solve the problem. You are either going around the obstacles with fiber (wildly expensive) or you are removing the obstacles. Unifi allows for relay hops, which means you can effectively and simply chain around obstacles. Bridging also allows you to operate within 3 dimensions much more easily than fiber. The last install we did, we used a grounded pole to elevate the bridge over a bunch of obstacles. You can’t put fiber on the roof. Heck, I installed a bridge on a tree for a buddy of mine to have WiFi in his deer blind.
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Richard Manly
Richard Manly@RichardPManly·
@DylanRSkidmore @loyalmoses Yes, but when you live with large obstacles like trees, homeless encampments, dinosaurs or the like, burying it in conduit is a decent option… but if you haven’t gots Dinos then the UI bridge is 100% the option.
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
This is the correct answer. This isn’t about security, it’s about engagement. Accounts like to crate doom-threads of copy/paste CVEs in long lists to scare folks that don’t know what they are reading. Without context and understanding, a list like this looks like an apocalypse to a normie, which drives engagement.
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Zack Korman
Zack Korman@ZackKorman·
Choose your fighter, cybersecurity. I’m on @ThePrimeagen’s side here. I’m worried about other stuff. Not this.
Zack Korman tweet media
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Doc Strangelove
Doc Strangelove@DocStrangelove2·
The M60 propaganda will continue till morale improves
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
@thoughtlesslabs @ThePrimeagen Why don’t you explain to everyone exactly why you have “a low percentage of worry” about “medical records being edited, power plants being hacked, etc.” based on the list of identified vulnerabilities? What is the attack vector? What do you envision as the exploit chain?
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
If you really believe this, you don’t understand what you are reading. Most of those items are completely different classes of vulnerabilities with different threat models, prerequisites, and impact. local privilege escalation BitLocker bypass Next.js advisory supply-chain compromise and a targeted nation-state exploit are not interchangeable forms of “everything can now hack power plants.” Even “70 CVEs fixed in macOS” mostly means Apple patched a large batch of issues, not that Macs suddenly became catastrophically insecure overnight. The problem with doom thread lists like this is that they flatten all nuance, so people start mentally connecting: “lots of security headlines” to “medical records being edited”or “critical infrastructure collapsing” when the listed bugs don’t imply that scenario at all.
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thoughtlesslabs
thoughtlesslabs@thoughtlesslabs·
@ThePrimeagen I guess inwould say I am not worried about it personally, but am slightly concerned for how it could affect things upstream of me like medical records being edited, power plants being hacked, etc.
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Nikola
Nikola@N1kolaR·
@ThePrimeagen You're over it. This is likely all state actors, who don't do random attacks to extort you for 500$. And these are state actors which do not have already built in access, so you there is already someone inherently able to snoop if they need/want.
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
You have to be kidding. Your post says the story is “velocity, not volume,” then uses “70 CVEs” as evidence, which is literally a volume metric. Your leap to “AI is finding them faster than humans ever could” skips over the fact that disclosure practices, codebase size, automated tooling, and coordinated reporting pipelines all changed too. Big CVE counts alone don’t prove an AI-driven security revolution. Do better.
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bazonut ginaz
bazonut ginaz@gao035·
The bigger story isn't the volume of CVEs it's the velocity. Five years ago, 70 CVEs in one macOS patch would be a panic. Now it's a Tuesday because AI-assisted vulnerability research is finding them faster than humans ever could. The question to ask is are we getting more secure because we're finding more, or less secure because we're now in a race between AI offense and AI defense? Curious where you actually land race or progress?
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Khaaaaan
Khaaaaan@Secretpolicia·
@FenixAmmunition @JoelWBerry "we are gonna plop this abomination in the middle of your rural county. It will employ 0 local people after it's finished, will make your light bill more expensive, and gd if we aren't gonna try to drain your well while we're at it.". Great deal fs.
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Joel Berry
Joel Berry@JoelWBerry·
Nobody in America voted for the steam engine. Nobody in America voted for powered flight. Nobody in America voted for the microprocessor. And thankfully, no one voted for American technological innovation to be policed by hysterical Karens on the internet.
Emerald Robinson ✝️@EmeraldRobinson

Nobody in America voted for data centers. Nobody in America voted for AI. Nobody in America voted for surveillance capitalism. The entire fabric of our society is being changed without the will of the people. Without a vote.

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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
@kenhll555 @grok @GeneBryant2 Not only is NEA is a partisan source but the metric they are using, cost per student, is not a valid metric to measure educational outcome.
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BigKen555
BigKen555@kenhll555·
@grok @GeneBryant2 @grok Remove Shelby and Davidson County from the Education Stats Also how many of the uninsured have access to Obamacare or Tenncare?
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Gene Bryant
Gene Bryant@GeneBryant2·
TN has had 0% job growth the last two fiscal years.... TN is last in education funding in the country.... Around 650,000 Tennesseans remain uninsured with no healthcare access.... Yet, after 15 years of Republican control, they think we want more.... yahoo.com/news/articles/…
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The Tennessee Holler
The Tennessee Holler@TheTNHoller·
“You can’t tell me it’s not racism if you’re gonna smirk at the pain of Black Tennesseans while you do it.” @Kanew & @brotherjones_ on the complete and total lack of empathy from Tennessee Republicans as they stripped majority-Black Memphis of representation.
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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
So your argument is he suddenly decided to play with another companies irons, when he literally owns an iron company and has full access to their line and custom alterations. Why would he work against the marketing of his own company, especially on video? That isn’t even taking into account all of the legal terms that you brought up, preventing him from working against the company. Likely this is due to the venue or event restrictions. There is another explanation (this is the one I lean towards): he was playing with the 2027 Takomo irons and they are embargoed from public release.
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Cam Young Fan
Cam Young Fan@a_rai_truther·
@DylanRSkidmore @b9bozzi I think that makes it much more likely it is the answer no? He signed some lengthy legal docs to get that ownership…
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Tony “Back Nine” Bozzi
I feel like there’s only two answers to this Grant mystery: 1. He got it at Augusta and they aren’t letting him talk about it 2. He got it playing with Tiger but Tiger doesn’t want people knowing they’re friends I really can’t come up with any other logical scenarios. Such a weird secret.
golf guy@paint_onwood

@Murda_OTB How can one be concerned about whether or not Matt Leinart breaks 90 at the mink when we still don’t have any info on where Grant horvat made his hole in one that he absolutely can’t talk about?

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Dylan Skidmore
Dylan Skidmore@DylanRSkidmore·
@TGill55441 @Mrgunsngear Except: The subsonic 5.7 is still a jacketed bullet, retains much more muzzle energy, better BC, and enjoys the reliability of a center fired cartridge. While there is overlapped with the standard .22lr in terms of velocity, that is where the similarities end.
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Guilty
Guilty@TGill55441·
@Mrgunsngear Legitimate question, no sarcasm: if velocity is the main selling point of the 5.7, what is the purpose of a subsonic round? Doesn’t that turn it into a .22lr?
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