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Tyler

@TylerGetsay

sincere but definitely not serious

Cincinnati, OH Katılım Mayıs 2008
3.3K Takip Edilen681 Takipçiler
Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
I love lawyers. but they do brag about winning $35k when their actual client gets essentially nothing but a refund + has to front their cost/the risk. Contingency is totally fair but should be disclosed IMO.
Bradford Clements@clementsbrad4d

Why did @StubHub @TeamStubHub refuse for 10 months to refund my client $.01 of the $5,600 refund he was entitled to and then admit at the end of arbitration that he was owed all $5,600? How did it feel when the arbitrator awarded my client $35,000 and further ordered you to pay $30,000 in arbitration fees?

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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
A really good test of engineers is how they deal with blockages. weirdly this shows in good frontend devs the most. give a few of them the same 6 endpoints and you'll see the difference in "speed" it comes down to knowledge of state management, then http stuff
Alex Bouaziz@Bouazizalex

A 10-minute delay becomes a 24-hour delay by the end of the chain. Say I reply 10 minutes late to an engineer in London. He comes back an hour later, builds for two hours, and sends it to the product lead in New York at 6pm. NY has a note, sends it back at 4pm EST - but London is asleep. He wakes up, fixes it, and passes it to the team in SF. It's midnight on the West Coast, so they open it the next morning. One 10-minute delay. A full lost day. Now flip it. I reply in 30 seconds and that same chain finishes in a few hours. That expectation compounds - it spreads to your direct reports, then to theirs. Fast response culture doesn't just save time. It transforms how quickly the entire company moves. This isn't about being glued to Slack 24/7. It's about treating unblocking as your highest priority. When someone is waiting on you to keep moving, that's the thing you do first. Not after lunch or after your next meeting - now. Because you're not just making one person wait. You're making everyone downstream wait. Moving fast is about clearing hurdles - identifying what's blocking progress and getting it out of the way before it stalls the chain. @elonmusk is the best at this. He built a culture of hurdle-clearing at his companies. And what's key is that he doesn't wait for problems to surface. He goes straight to the frontline, identifies bottlenecks, and removes them in order of priority. That's the mindset. Don't wait for the perfect path. Clear what's in front of you and keep moving!

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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
the solution to the AI security disclosure apocalypse is as old as time, POC or GTFO
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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@thdxr if it's truly zero external impact then no.. but usually it's unlocking something or tbh just making the damn page load faster
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dax
dax@thdxr·
are there people out there who just want to refactor every day? just wake up and find the worst code and just chip away at it and clean it up wake up the next day do it again, infinitely improving things with zero external impact?
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Rob Freund
Rob Freund@RobertFreundLaw·
This morning, the FTC initiated a case against an individual for making deceptive earnings claims while promoting two MLMs: Total Life Changes and Farmasi US. FTC alleges that Stormy Wellington told recruits that she will help people make "5-7 figures in the next 90 days to 12 months!" FYC says "nearly all TLC participants earn little or no money."
Rob Freund tweet mediaRob Freund tweet media
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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
This sounds crazy but this is how a lot of the forum adminsitrators got hacked in the early 2000s
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

North Korean intelligence agents built an entire fake company to compromise one JavaScript developer. And it worked. UNC1069 didn't hack Axios. They befriended its maintainer. They cloned a real company founder's identity, built a branded Slack workspace with fake employee profiles and LinkedIn post channels, then scheduled a Microsoft Teams call with what appeared to be a full team. During the call, a fake error message said his system needed an update. He installed it. That update was the RAT. From one developer's laptop, they had everything: npm credentials, publishing access, the keys to a package installed in 80% of cloud environments. Axios gets 100 million downloads per week. The attackers published two poisoned versions at 12:21 AM UTC on a Sunday night, tagging both the latest and legacy branches within 39 minutes. The malicious dependency had been pre-staged 18 hours earlier with a clean decoy version to build registry history. Three separate RAT payloads were pre-built for macOS, Windows, and Linux. The malware self-deleted after execution to erase forensic evidence. The poisoned versions were live for about three hours before npm pulled them. Huntress observed 135 endpoints across all operating systems calling the attacker's command-and-control server during that window. Wiz found the malicious versions in roughly 3% of environments scanned. Every affected machine needs full credential rotation: npm tokens, AWS keys, SSH keys, CI/CD secrets, everything in .env files. The part that keeps getting worse: this isn't isolated. The same threat cluster compromised Trivy (a security scanner), KICS, LiteLLM, and multiple GitHub Actions in the two weeks before Axios. Google estimates hundreds of thousands of stolen secrets are now circulating from these combined attacks. The maintainer had 2FA enabled. He said himself: "I have 2FA/MFA on practically everything." The exact method of token compromise is still undetermined. One person. One fake Teams call. 100 million weekly downloads weaponized in under three hours. The npm ecosystem runs on mass trust in individual maintainers who volunteer their time, and North Korean intelligence now has a repeatable playbook for turning that trust into a delivery mechanism.

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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@tenobrus This makes sense but if you are right -- where are the fixes?
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Tenobrus
Tenobrus@tenobrus·
if you're about to release a model that you know has the ability to reveal zerodays in every commonly used open source project you could delay release for a few years or spend another ten billion on alignment RL. or you could just secretly fix all the zerodays yourself first.
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Tenobrus@tenobrus·
people keep talking about this like it's not blatantly obvious. anthropic clearly has a system that's auditing open source repos for vulnerabilities using their unreleased higher power models and sending fixes for them without revealing their current level of capabilities.
ℏεsam@Hesamation

this is another thing about Anthropic's Claude Code source that i cannot stop thinking about and it raises some serious questions: why would the internal team need an UNDERCOVER MODE to contribute to public repos and hide the fact that they're using Claude Code?

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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@Snapcrackle Wait till you hear about whats going on in Haiti
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James | Snapcrackle
James | Snapcrackle@Snapcrackle·
A stablecoin company is buying phone credit kiosks in Africa. A former White House official is running its US subsidiary. It replaced the board of a South American agricultural conglomerate. It made $10 billion last year with 300 employees. Tomorrow I'm publishing a deep dive on @tether. It's not what you think it is.
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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
Todays weather summary basically sums up Ohio
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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@eddylazzarin I really want to know what this guy would do if he got cancer?
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Mitchell Hashimoto
Mitchell Hashimoto@mitchellh·
I know this is pretty well established at this point, but Codex 5.3 is a much more effective model than Opus 4.6. I went back and forth on both for a bit, but haven’t touched Opus at all now for a full week. First model to get me off of Opus… ever. Good job Codex team.
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Tyler@TylerGetsay·
Punch-kun
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Tyler@TylerGetsay·
Im obsessed with that little japanese monkey that has the stuffed animal
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Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@soigomaa holy shit this is amazing
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goma
goma@soigomaa·
Two teenagers from Pennsylvania just solved a problem most engineers ignored. Rohan Kapoor and Jack Reichert created the "Go Green Filter" — a 3D-printed device that attaches to your car's exhaust pipe. It doesn't just reduce emissions. It converts CO2 into oxygen. Using microalgae. The same process plants use — photosynthesis. They built a bio-reactor with water, LED lights, and living algae inside. The algae eat the carbon dioxide from your exhaust... and release clean oxygen back into the air. In testing? It cut emissions by 74%. They didn't wait for funding. Didn't wait for permission. They 3D-printed the prototype themselves. Now it's being deployed in Indonesia. The cost? Low enough to scale globally. If this works at mass scale, it could reduce billions of tons of carbon annually. Two high school kids just did what billion-dollar companies haven't.
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Tyler
Tyler@TylerGetsay·
Sometimes I see a take so bad that I unfollow anyone who follows the account that made it
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Tyler@TylerGetsay·
@Spotify can you add the lyrics to eminem's songs
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