luisingles

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luisingles

luisingles

@luisingles0

Partner @ FreeMVP

El Salvador เข้าร่วม Şubat 2020
365 กำลังติดตาม133 ผู้ติดตาม
Jeremy Haynes
Jeremy Haynes@TheJeremyHaynes·
Burnout formula: Sell to people you don't respect, at prices that attract skeptics, while pretending to be someone you're not The get fucked special
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Marin.Istvanic
Marin.Istvanic@IstvanicMarin·
@andreilunev You keep pumping AI slop just for the sake of you can say you launched 1000s of ads, and I'll focus on quality
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Jeremy Haynes
Jeremy Haynes@TheJeremyHaynes·
Rich people want 2-5 minute VSLs General public can handle up to an hour Your conversion problem might just be a length mismatch Know your audience
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Ryan Clogg
Ryan Clogg@RyanClogg·
Holy call funnel alpha.
Ryan Clogg tweet media
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luisingles
luisingles@luisingles0·
@Lukealexxander They can’t lie to info twitter folks… you all know the real scammers 🤣
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Luke Alexander
Luke Alexander@Lukealexxander·
Had a sales call with Delve before we started SOC II with Drata Sales rep was literally reading a script off of his screen (reflective in his glasses) and told me these claims were “competitors trying to take them down” Intuition wins again
Ryan@ohryansbelt

Delve, a YC-backed compliance startup that raised $32 million, has been accused of systematically faking SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, and GDPR compliance reports for hundreds of clients. According to a detailed Substack investigation by DeepDelver, a leaked Google spreadsheet containing links to hundreds of confidential draft audit reports revealed that Delve generates auditor conclusions before any auditor reviews evidence, uses the same template across 99.8% of reports, and relies on Indian certification mills operating through empty US shells instead of the "US-based CPA firms" they advertise. Here's the breakdown: > 493 out of 494 leaked SOC 2 reports allegedly contain identical boilerplate text, including the same grammatical errors and nonsensical sentences, with only a company name, logo, org chart, and signature swapped in > Auditor conclusions and test procedures are reportedly pre-written in draft reports before clients even provide their company description, which would violate AICPA independence rules requiring auditors to independently design tests and form conclusions > All 259 Type II reports claim zero security incidents, zero personnel changes, zero customer terminations, and zero cyber incidents during the observation period, with identical "unable to test" conclusions across every client > Delve's "US-based auditors" are actually Accorp and Gradient, described as Indian certification mills operating through US shell entities. 99%+ of clients reportedly went through one of these two firms over the past 6 months > The platform allegedly publishes fully populated trust pages claiming vulnerability scanning, pentesting, and data recovery simulations before any compliance work has been done > Delve pre-fabricates board meeting minutes, risk assessments, security incident simulations, and employee evidence that clients can adopt with a single click, according to the author > Most "integrations" are just containers for manual screenshots with no actual API connections. The author describes the platform as a "SOC 2 template pack with a thin SaaS wrapper" > When the leak was exposed, CEO Karun Kaushik emailed clients calling the allegations "falsified claims" from an "AI-generated email" and stated no sensitive data was accessed, while the reports themselves contained private signatures and confidential architecture diagrams > Companies relying on these reports could face criminal liability under HIPAA and fines up to 4% of global revenue under GDPR for compliance violations they believed were resolved > When clients threaten to leave, Delve reportedly pairs them with an external vCISO for manual off-platform work, which the author argues proves their own platform can't deliver real compliance > Delve's sales price dropped from $15,000 to $6,000 with ISO 27001 and a penetration test thrown in when a client mentioned considering a competitor

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Anubhav
Anubhav@Anubhavhing·
Crawling an entire website used to take: A Python script. Playwright or Selenium. Proxy rotation. Rate limiting logic. Error handling. 3 hours of debugging why page 47 returned a 403. Now it's one API call. Every web scraping startup that raised millions to solve this problem just became a single endpoint. Every freelancer charging $500 to "extract website data" just lost their entire business model to a /crawl command. HTML. Markdown. JSON. Pick your format. No scripts. No browser. No headache. The entire web scraping industry just got reduced to one line of code. Someone is going to use this to clone every competitor's website by Friday. 💀
Cloudflare Developers@CloudflareDev

Introducing the new /crawl endpoint - one API call and an entire site crawled. No scripts. No browser management. Just the content in HTML, Markdown, or JSON.

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Jeremy Haynes
Jeremy Haynes@TheJeremyHaynes·
At my last quarterly mastermind, nine entrepreneurs got their million-dollar-month trophies Eight out of nine were running webinar funnels when they broke through If you're stuck at a plateau and not running webinars, that might be the new strategy you need to add
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MotionViz
MotionViz@Motion_Viz·
Stop prompting AI to "make me a landing page." 200+ hours testing taught me this: Generic prompts → pretty pages My prompts → pages that sell The pack includes: → 3D Landing Hero Section → Sentient 3D Core → Cyberpunk Volumetric Shaders → Microlender Protocol → Hyper-Futuristic MCP-2099 Like + reply "PROMPT" for the library. (following required for DM)
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Kris
Kris@Swagg·
Landed in Mexico, got an Uber and got messaged this. Am I cooked?
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Henry Labs
Henry Labs@Henrylabss·
@jakezward Simple, how do you know all these? You are not Google or Reddit or Chatgpt.
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Jake Ward
Jake Ward@jakezward·
Reddit just lost 82% of its AI citations overnight. (and Wall Street noticed) ChatGPT's Reddit citations dropped from 29.2% to 5.3% in days. And their stock fell 15% over 8 days. The cause? Google changed a single indexing parameter that limited what LLMs could access in search results. One technical tweak. Billions in market value gone. Here's what nobody's talking about: Reddit didn't change anything. Their content is still there. Their users are still posting. Their traffic didn't collapse. But their value to AI companies evaporated. This reveals something critical about the new internet economy. We're not just building on platforms anymore. We're building on whether AI models can see those platforms. Reddit's entire AI strategy was based on being visible to LLMs. They signed a $60M deal with Google for AI training data. Then Google's indexing change made Reddit less accessible to ChatGPT specifically. The market reacted like Reddit lost a major revenue stream. Because in a way, they did. The dependency goes both ways now: Companies depend on AI visibility the same way they used to depend on SEO. AI companies depend on access to fresh, human-generated content. When that connection breaks, billions disappear. Here's the irony: Reddit signed that $60M data-sharing deal with Google over a year ago. They're now in talks for deeper AI integration to funnel Google traffic into Reddit forums for content generation. They're negotiating with the same company whose parameter change caused the damage... Did we just watch the first major AI visibility crisis play out in real time?
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luisingles รีทวีตแล้ว
Nozz
Nozz@NoahEpstein_·
Just leaked 110+ plug-and-play n8n templates that multiple industries are paying me $10K+ for. Your weekend project: Pick any industry, copy-paste a workflow, start printing money. The vault includes: - Real estate lead machines (sold to 2 companies) - Automotive inventory bots - YouTube-to-TikTok content farms - E-commerce customer journey automations - SDR agents that close without you - Healthcare patient follow-ups - Legal document processors - Social media engagement bots From study agents (because fuck school) to manufacturing systems - every industry that prints money is covered. The difference: These aren't broken templates with outdated nodes. They're battle-tested, profitable, and actually work in 2025. Half sold for serious cash. Half are experiments that became goldmines. All are ready to deploy. Follow, RT + Comment "vault" and I'll drop the entire collection before my accountant kills me for giving away the farm. (Sorry to every consultant charging $10K for basic automations)
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luisingles
luisingles@luisingles0·
6. Deployment 🚀 Now you can deploy your app, replace any tools as needed, attach it to your own domain, or leave it on a Replit domain. Then, start using your tool for your business and your team ❤️
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luisingles
luisingles@luisingles0·
5. Debugging 🐛 It’s something that’s often forgotten, but debugging is an important step. With AI, you’re most likely going to get a lot of crappy code. Prepare yourself to ask the assistant what’s happening with the free questions (don’t spend the 5 cents every time).
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luisingles
luisingles@luisingles0·
Replaced Framer ($240/yr) with Vibe Coding, with an IQ of 87. I bought a landing page for my agency on Framer, and within three days, it got replaced by a better looking result. What I've learned so far in... 🧵
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