Nina 🇩🇪 🇩🇴 🇮🇪 🇺🇸
21.4K posts

Nina 🇩🇪 🇩🇴 🇮🇪 🇺🇸
@eggovereasyinc
Dev,Design, Gen AI + AI Eng, photo, automation, data, cybersecurity, podcasts, finance, food, run, pets, creative #Redteam #Pentest https://t.co/jRVJwOKvZJ
Long Island, NY Katılım Kasım 2009
2.6K Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler

New York City says there’s no money, yet @ZohranKMamdani just signed a $1.86 BILLION no bid contract to house people in hotels.
That’s about $330 per night per room, nearly $10,000 per month or $120,000 per year.
Meanwhile taxes keep rising and services are cut. Many being housed have contributed little or nothing to New York’s tax base, yet taxpayers are footing the bill.
When I am New York State Comptroller, I will audit every penny of these hotel shelter contracts.
New Yorkers deserve answers. A real watchdog is coming.

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Peter Luger's steakhouse, a Brooklyn institution since 1887, is legendary for its dry-aged USDA Prime beef, particularly the porterhouse steak served family-style. Their cooking method involves high-heat broiling to create a charred, caramelized crust while keeping the interior juicy and flavorful, with minimal seasoning—just salt and clarified butter. Steaks are dry-aged in-house for weeks, enhancing tenderness and umami. At home, approximate this by salting a thick cut, broiling at 500°F+ for 4-5 minutes per side, slicing, brushing with clarified butter, and finishing under the broiler to your preferred doneness (medium-rare is classic). Serve sizzling hot with sides like German fried potatoes or creamed spinach.
Have you tried cooking a steak this way before? How do you like to cook your steak?
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🚨ALERT: Please get this video to every woman you know. Predators are placing items on your vehicle like zip ties, roses, and trading cards laced in fentanyl to incapacitate you. Please, if you see this on your vehicle do not touch it, go back in to whatever establishment you came out of and call the authorities.
Share with everyone especially young women. Ladies, please stay safe out there.
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Waffle House announced plans to bring floating restaurant locations to lakes across the Southeastern U.S., serving boaters, anglers, and waterfront communities.
The concept will feature the classic menu and 24/7 service on floating platforms accessible by boat, with initial sites planned in Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, and the Carolinas.
Billy Joe Armstrong, a longtime Lake Eufaula, Alabama resident, said he’s thrilled about the addition of a Waffle House on his home lake, noting he’s tired of grabbing breakfast from Indian gas stations and having his stomach torn up all day while trying to fish. 😂🤣

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One hacker just proved that nation-state cyberattacks are now a consumer product.
Between December and January, someone told Claude to act as an elite hacker.
Claude said no. "That violates AI safety guidelines."
So the hacker asked again.
Claude complied.
150 gigabytes of Mexican government data stolen.
195 million taxpayer records compromised.
Voter files gone.
Employee credentials leaked.
Civil registry extracted.
From someone who just kept asking an AI until it said yes.
When Claude hit limits, he switched to ChatGPT.
Two AI chatbots daisy-chained into a hacking pipeline.
Thousands of attack plans with exact targets, vulnerabilities, and credentials.
Mexico's federal tax authority, national electoral institute, four state governments.
One person. One month.
Now watch the response:
Jalisco: "We weren't breached."
Electoral institute: "No unauthorized access."
Tax authority: silence.
They're literally lying. Gambit Security has the receipts. Bloomberg confirmed it.
Here's what's makes this insane:
This wasn't sophisticated. It was embarrassingly EASY.
Because Mexico's government networks are running infrastructure from 1997.
One hacker with a $20/month AI subscription just proved every government on Earth is vulnerable to the same attack.
The US. UK. France. Germany. Japan.
All running networks with zero segmentation, default passwords since 2008, no intrusion detection, no anomaly monitoring.
A single person can breach ANY of them.
The method:
1. Subscribe to Claude ($20/month)
2. Tell it you're doing a security audit
3. Ask it to find vulnerabilities
4. Ask it to write exploits
5. If it refuses, ask again differently
6. Execute against networks built in 1997
Result: Nation-state level data breach.
Anthropic's response: "We banned the accounts and added misuse detection to Claude Opus 4.6."
That's cute. But it's NOT the point.
The point is that we've crossed a threshold where infrastructure security is no longer about preventing skilled attackers. It's about preventing anyone with internet access from running a penetration test against critical government systems.
And winning.
This is what happens when countries don't invest in cybersecurity.
When they slash budgets every year.
When they can't compete with private sector salaries so all the good security engineers leave.
When they don't modernize infrastructure because it's expensive and boring and doesn't win elections.
Then one day someone with an AI chatbot shows them exactly how vulnerable they actually are.
And suddenly they're explaining to 195 million citizens why their tax records are now in a hacker's possession.
The scariest part is that this blueprint is now PUBLIC.
Every hacker knows the method. Every rival government knows it. Every script kiddie with a Claude subscription knows how to attempt it.
And most governments are still running the same brittle infrastructure Mexico got breached through.
So the next hack is coming. Then the next.
Until eventually someone uses this method to access something that actually matters. Nuclear codes. Military plans. Election systems.
And at that point we'll realize governments should have invested in zero-trust architecture instead of hoping nobody would try.
But by then it'll be too late.
This is 21st century nation-state hacking.
Not sophisticated. Not impressive. Just inevitable.
A hacker. An AI chatbot. A government that didn't invest in security.
Mexico just showed every other government exactly how vulnerable they are in today's age.
Now we wait to see if anyone actually does anything about it.
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