Marck Rojas

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Marck Rojas

Marck Rojas

@Marck_R

Software Engineer, Chef and InfoSec newbie. Building my way a bug at time.

Encarnacion, Paraguay Katılım Eylül 2009
521 Takip Edilen94 Takipçiler
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kanav
kanav@kanavtwt·
there's been an update
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Perly 🦈
Perly 🦈@_Shark_byte·
Recently made a list on places to learn cybersecurity Posting here in case it helps anyone out > @Google CTF good for hands on, and will look cool on a resume :) > @hackinghub_io pretty cool labs, good to apply skills in practice > @owasp Juice Shop vulnerable web app to test tings you learn legally! > @JustHackingHQ by the 🐐 @_JohnHammond , need I say more? > @Cisco networking academy pretty cool imo, and good foundation > @SubvertedSec Just tried this one, pretty cool > @blackperl_dfir pretty cool, but haven't gone in depth (YET) > @edXOnline not security specific, but they have good foundational courses > @rootme_org Also pretty cool, but haven't gone in depth > @PentesterLab ditto lol ( my goals for 2026 are to try out more of these 😅 ) > @PortSwigger web academy honestly my fave (and its free) > @Codecademy more general coding and fundamentals > @Hacker0x01 Hacker101 good for practice, and its a bit CTF style > @picoctf love working on the old challenges > @yeswehack dojo haven't used this in depth yet, but pretty cool form what ive seen so far > @tryhackme love this platform sm > @hackthebox_eu also really awesome, tbh struggled a bit with this one at the very start of learning cybersecurity, so I recommend if you already know some stuff > pwn college haven't used in depth either, but hear very good things > APIsec University more specific to APIs but honestly another one of my favs > @MetaCTF love the challenges and flash CTFs > National Cyber League never competed (ikr???) but have done gymnasium challenged as its great for beginners > @codepath cybersecurity course For students, super comprehensive > @CryptoHack__ love crypto omggg another one of my favorites esp for cryptography (my specialty lol - any CTF teams looking for a crypto expert 👀 ) > @TCMSecurity never tried it out yet, but again I hear good things! > YT channels like John Hammond, nahamsec, cyb3rmaddy (Maddy -.), Tib3rius, computerphile Lemme know if I missed one
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I Am Devloper
I Am Devloper@iamdevloper·
Monolith: "all my bugs are in one place." Microservices: "My bugs are distributed for scalability."
DHH@dhh

Microservices is the software industry’s most successful confidence scam. It convinces small teams that they are “thinking big” while systematically destroying their ability to move at all. It flatters ambition by weaponizing insecurity: if you’re not running a constellation of services, are you even a real company? Never mind that this architecture was invented to cope with organizational dysfunction at planetary scale. Now it’s being prescribed to teams that still share a Slack channel and a lunch table. Small teams run on shared context. That is their superpower. Everyone can reason end-to-end. Everyone can change anything. Microservices vaporize that advantage on contact. They replace shared understanding with distributed ignorance. No one owns the whole anymore. Everyone owns a shard. The system becomes something that merely happens to the team, rather than something the team actively understands. This isn’t sophistication. It’s abdication. Then comes the operational farce. Each service demands its own pipeline, secrets, alerts, metrics, dashboards, permissions, backups, and rituals of appeasement. You don’t “deploy” anymore—you synchronize a fleet. One bug now requires a multi-service autopsy. A feature release becomes a coordination exercise across artificial borders you invented for no reason. You didn’t simplify your system. You shattered it and called the debris “architecture.” Microservices also lock incompetence in amber. You are forced to define APIs before you understand your own business. Guesses become contracts. Bad ideas become permanent dependencies. Every early mistake metastasizes through the network. In a monolith, wrong thinking is corrected with a refactor. In microservices, wrong thinking becomes infrastructure. You don’t just regret it—you host it, version it, and monitor it. The claim that monoliths don’t scale is one of the dumbest lies in modern engineering folklore. What doesn’t scale is chaos. What doesn’t scale is process cosplay. What doesn’t scale is pretending you’re Netflix while shipping a glorified CRUD app. Monoliths scale just fine when teams have discipline, tests, and restraint. But restraint isn’t fashionable, and boring doesn’t make conference talks. Microservices for small teams is not a technical mistake—it is a philosophical failure. It announces, loudly, that the team does not trust itself to understand its own system. It replaces accountability with protocol and momentum with middleware. You don’t get “future proofing.” You get permanent drag. And by the time you finally earn the scale that might justify this circus, your speed, your clarity, and your product instincts will already be gone.

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kuzushi
kuzushi@kuzushi·
New vibe
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Nicolás Schürmann
Nicolás Schürmann@_nasch_·
Con tanto IA bro y vibe coders los desarrolladores no podremos jubilarnos, como siempre toca arreglar las kagadas... 🫡
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
we are so back
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SwiftOnSecurity
SwiftOnSecurity@SwiftOnSecurity·
You can do the same chart for length of email signature.
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Security Trybe
Security Trybe@SecurityTrybe·
Computer Ports Identification
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LaurieWired
LaurieWired@lauriewired·
A lone Boston coder rewrote BIOS in 1984. IBM wanted to sue. The programmer's clever loophole became the model for legally defensible reverse engineering. You’ve probably been booting his descendants ever since. This is how Phoenix Technologies got away with it:
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dinosaur
dinosaur@dinosaurs1969·
i keep losing my money to this asshole
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Kris Kashtanova
Kris Kashtanova@icreatelife·
The most valuable math you can learn is how to calculate the future cost of your current decisions.
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Fergo🌎
Fergo🌎@jfergo86·
Estamos totalmente desprotegidos, hace unas semanas hubo un hackeo de millones de datos, ahora leo a muchos que están recibiendo mensajes para configurar el WhatsApp.
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Tristan T
Tristan T@trirpi·
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Kevin Naughton Jr.
Kevin Naughton Jr.@KevinNaughtonJr·
backend validation is pointless since you should have already validated the data on your frontend
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Naval
Naval@naval·
The most expensive trait is pride.
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Marck Rojas
Marck Rojas@Marck_R·
Habemus Sr. Y Sra 👩🏼‍🤝‍👨🏾
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Marck Rojas
Marck Rojas@Marck_R·
Mr. & Mrs minus one 👩🏼‍🤝‍👨🏾
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