CISONAUT

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CISONAUT

CISONAUT

@cisonaut

Tech Exec * Infosec Explorer * Veteran

Katılım Şubat 2025
161 Takip Edilen51 Takipçiler
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
Timing the proportionate deployment of passion and competence is a superpower
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Dave Kennedy
Dave Kennedy@HackingDave·
What I’m realizing is 99.9999999999999999999999999% of AI posts are from people that are trying to get more followers and clicks and has no real world experience on actually deploying. “Improve your workflow 80% by this one Claude skill” “Omg they just released this and it changes the industry completely” It’s all bogus. Create your own workflow that is tailored to you. Don’t buy into this garbage.
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
Got a little irritated and told Claude “don’t be stupid” tonight … When I ended work and wrote to memory it committed it as a “feedback” memory… and now I’m not sure how I feel about that…
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Richard Seroter
Richard Seroter@rseroter·
"For the first time since we began publishing the CTHR in 2021, we observed a tactical pivot by threat actors. They’re now targeting third-party software vulnerabilities more than weak or missing credentials as the primary initial access vector." cloud.google.com/blog/products/…
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Dave Kennedy
Dave Kennedy@HackingDave·
Today marks a huge day for #BinaryDefense and truthfully for the industry. This is what I've been working on the past 9 months of my life, putting in 80 hours a week - because I had to. This isn't an AI marketing campaign that promises the world - it's built from the ground up on our own trained models (not using third parties) and drastically changes our ability to respond to threats super fast, reduce MTTR, and provide insanely quick response times for customers. Trains off of our analyst behavior and gets smarter with every ticket, escalation, response. Proactively looks at all trends across customers and bubbles up threat hunts or areas it hasn't seen before. AI-Assisted threat hunting based on data ingest, ability to go through realtime analysis immediately. Sandbox detonation, full learning off of any type of data structure (universal log parsing), evaluator models to check consistency, confidence, and more - agentic capabilities to pull back data for higher confidence boosting, ensemble scoring for multi-model support. Automatic playbook creation specific and dynamic to the event at hand to contain. Directly integrates into our SOAR with enriched data for our analysts to triage immediately. This completely changes the game out there, it's actually something that works and is really really good at what it does, and gets smarter every second. It's a force multiplier for our team, we remain human-driven, human led - and because of that - we have one of the best products out there today in the industry. I'm so proud of the team at Binary Defense, some of the most brilliant minds in the industry - 9 months worth of my life here comes to a reality today. (re-posted to fix link) x.com/binary_defense… #BinaryDefense
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
He got me… 😆
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Triggered Millennial.™
Triggered Millennial.™@SlapLordActual·
PRO TIP(yearly reminder) Use 9mm shot for your first round in your home defense handgun. This gives you the opportunity to pop the intruder with something non lethal to scare em off or stun them. Followed by a carry round of your choice.
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Triggered Millennial.™
Triggered Millennial.™@SlapLordActual·
DISCLAIMER: For those of you who are too dense. This is a joke and highly illegal. You will go to prison don't do this
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
ProTip for Intruders: If you enter the place where my wife or my children sleep under my watch— lethality IS my mission, and every weapons platform and load reflects that. Your odds are better this guys house tho ⬇️
Triggered Millennial.™@SlapLordActual

PRO TIP(yearly reminder) Use 9mm shot for your first round in your home defense handgun. This gives you the opportunity to pop the intruder with something non lethal to scare em off or stun them. Followed by a carry round of your choice.

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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
I’d like to report a m*rder
Apple Lamps@lamps_apple

Everything you said about the current state of the Navy's mine countermeasures capability is wrong. Not a little wrong. Completely, embarrassingly, dangerously wrong.... "The four ships we had dedicated to doing this we just decommissioned." The Avengers in Bahrain... Devastator, Dextrous, Gladiator, Sentry. Wooden-hulled ships from the 1980s. Ships that were pushing 40 years old. You know what replaced them? Three Independence-class Littoral Combat Ships... Canberra, Santa Barbara, and Tulsa… all three already deployed to U.S. 5th Fleet, all three operating in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Gulf right now, today, as you wrote this little rant. Not in San Diego. Not in drydock. In theater. Carrying the most advanced mine countermeasures mission package the Navy has ever fielded. USS Canberra arrived in Bahrain in May 2025 as the first LCS with a full MCM mission package. USS Santa Barbara is in the Arabian Gulf conducting mine countermeasures operations with unmanned surface vehicles… and, by the way, just made naval history by executing the first-ever at-sea launch of a LUCAS one-way attack drone from a littoral combat ship under Task Force 59. USS Tulsa is right there alongside them. Three ships. In the Gulf. Doing the mission. While you say the Navy "is absolutely not ready for this." These are fundamentally different platforms. Autonomous mine-hunting sonar… the AN/AQS-20C… towed by unmanned surface vehicles so sailors stay outside the minefield. Airborne laser mine detection systems on MH-60 helicopters. Unmanned influence sweep systems for acoustic and magnetic minesweeping. The old Avengers sent sailors INTO the minefield on wooden boats. The new systems keep them OUT of the minefield using robots... something you call a "downgrade" And while Santa Barbara hunts mines, she's operating under armed overwatch from A-10C Warthogs out of Jordan… loaded with JDAMs, laser-guided APKWS rockets, and enough firepower to shred any fast boat or drone swarm the Islamic Regime throws at them. The Avengers never had anything like that. "We lost all of our corporate knowledge." Really? The Navy spent a decade building, testing, qualifying, and deploying an entirely new mine warfare architecture specifically to preserve and advance that knowledge. They trained new crews. They ran operational tests on Cincinnati. They deployed the first operational package on Canberra. The Navy's mine countermeasures technical division ran this transition for years with deliberate overlap between old and new platforms. You lose corporate knowledge when you do nothing. The Navy did the opposite of nothing. "Now we're running an experiment and it's gonna cost people their lives." Three combat ships, forward deployed in the most contested waters on earth, running mine countermeasures with unmanned systems, protected by close air support, integrated with Task Force 59's autonomous warfare network. That's the most capable mine warfare force the United States has put in the Persian Gulf since 1991. Yelling "amateur hour" at people while getting the basic facts of the Navy's current force posture completely, demonstrably wrong… while three ships are literally in the water doing the job he says nobody can do… that IS amateur hour.

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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
@philvenables @anton_chuvakin If it’s IP developed on company resources or with company proprietary methods, I think the answer here is probably settled law
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Phil Venables
Phil Venables@philvenables·
@anton_chuvakin The corollary was, if I have an agent helping me in my job, and I move job should I be able to take that agent with me to my next employer?
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Phil Venables
Phil Venables@philvenables·
The most interesting (and scariest?) phrase I’ve heard so far this year……. “Bring your own agents”
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solst/ICE of Astarte
solst/ICE of Astarte@IceSolst·
Your CEO is NOT reaching out to your goofy ass on WhatsApp/text/email, it’s a scam, and they keep doing it because it works
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MJTruthUltra
MJTruthUltra@MJTruthUltra·
Dear conspiracy theorists.. sadly, you were right again… 🚨 Dr. Robert Malone: Declassified Docs Expose U.S. Military Releasing 282,800 Radioactive Ticks, Sparking Lyme Disease Epidemic and 40-Year Cover-Up - The U.S. military released 282,800 radioactive lone star ticks (labeled with Carbon-14) across Virginia sites along bird migration routes from 1966–1969; before the experiments, these ticks were not found north of the Mason-Dixon Line, but they soon established populations on Long Island for the first time. - CIA operatives under Operation Mongoose (1962) dropped infected ticks on Cuban sugarcane workers via nighttime C-123 flights; one operative’s infant son suffered a life-threatening 105°F fever requiring emergency tracheotomy after family contamination. - Plum Island Animal Disease Center (under Army Chemical Corps) conducted open-air tick experiments with containment failures: test animals mingled with wild deer and birds, and deer from nearby Lyme, Connecticut, swam to the island while birds fed on insects—Lyme, CT, is only 13 miles away and became the namesake epicenter in 1975. - Willy Burgdorfer (who identified the Lyme bacterium in 1982) discovered a second pathogen called the “Swiss Agent” (Rickettsia helvetica) in patient samples but deliberately omitted it from his published research; materials found in his garage after his 2014 death proved 40+ years of suppression of co-infection data that could explain chronic Lyme treatment failures. - Under Project 112 (1962–1974), the Pentagon ran 134 bioweapons tests (plus hundreds more classified), investing $3–4 billion and building capacity to produce 100 million infected mosquitoes and 50 million fleas per month; the program was “categorically denied” by the military for nearly 50 years until 2000. - Operation Big Itch (1954) successfully dropped 670,000 tropical rat fleas from cluster bombs to prove the weapons could incapacitate an entire battalion-sized target area for up to a full day. - Multiple tick-borne diseases (Lyme arthritis, babesiosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever) erupted simultaneously around Long Island Sound right after the tick releases (1968–1972), clustering statistically around Plum Island—an anomaly the article attributes to possible lab enhancement or accidental release (45% probability per the analysis). - Burgdorfer, recruited in 1951 for tick weaponization and linked to Nazi scientists brought via Operation Paperclip, left a cryptic note before dying: “I wondered why somebody didn’t do something,” and in 2013 video testimony insinuated an accidental release while admitting he “didn’t tell you everything.” These claims are based on a review of 41 primary declassified sources, testimony, and suppressed research presented in the article. malone.news/p/declassified…
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Send @gork posts to your friends 😂
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
this boost-phase DEW fundamentally changes China's deterrence calculus Reliably killing ballistic missiles in boost from standoff range degrades viability of any MRBM/IRBM anti-ship ballistic missile strategy *if* the US can park high-altitude DEW platforms in a theater...
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
@ns123abc @grok is it true that Anthropic products were used in the Iran strikes?
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NIK@ns123abc·
🚨 BREAKING: IRAN IS BOMBING AMAZON AWS DATA CENTERS Today, Iranian missiles hit Amazon’s main Middle East data center and went offline 12 hours later: >SECOND data center in UAE just lost power >Bahrain also hit >AWS Bahrain now OFFLINE >“localized power issues” >AWS officially told customers to failover to OTHER REGIONS >“don’t rely on Middle East infrastructure right now” Remember: >Anthropic runs on AWS >Claude was used in the Iran strikes >Iran is now retaliating ITS OVER
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
IMHO - One of the biggest disruptions coming is the SaaS world. A non zero portion of the enterprise market (bigger companies first) will figure out how to reduce their investments in SaaS with locally curated & AWS or Google/MS hosted capabilities. SaaS bear in 18-24 months…
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CISONAUT
CISONAUT@cisonaut·
The real story here isn’t about Anthropic at all. It’s that OpenAI and MS and Google all said yes to those demands
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