Andrew Tate reveals that he was offered $55,000,000 to sell his soul. 😳
“I had to shut up about certain issues and change my opinions on certain things.
And I declined the money, and soon after that I was arrested.”
Observe, orient, decide, act. How quickly can you absorb information, orient yourself to that information, express it to your platoon, get them to observe and orient, and then make a decision and all of you act on it in concert? That's the hard part. — Nate Fry
527-0:28:04
🚨 Threat actor claims to have leaked a massive Chinese citizen database containing over 1.2 billion full-identity records allegedly sourced from https://t.co/qAlC0OX4C1 systems.
📌 China 🇨🇳
▪️ Target: https://t.co/qAlC0OX4C1 systems
▪️ Type: National real-name citizen registry
▪️ Format: XLSX archive (36 files) • ~1GB RAR
▪️ Records: ~1.2 billion
▪️ Threat Actor: Solonik
▪️ Samples: Yes
Alleged data includes:
▪️ Full name
▪️ Gender
▪️ Full address
▪️ Phone number
▪️ National ID
▪️ Birthdate
▪️ GPS / geo-coordinates
▪️ Residence registration
▪️ File timestamps
Discipline can snatch victory from defeat in battle. Drill, saluting, and inspections are measures for disciplinary training. Officers as well as enlisted men are subjected to it. Discipline is inculcated so that soldiers fight as a team.
521-1:03:38
Handle yourself. Keep yourself in check. Keep yourself on the path. Lead yourself so that you become a person that others will follow. And they will follow you on the path. The path of discipline, of righteousness, and the path that leads to peace and to freedom.
166-3:04:28
🕵️♀️ OSINT isn’t just about gathering data...it’s about doing it safely, legally, and ethically.
Learn how to practise OSINT the right way. No legal risks, just real cyber skills on TryHackMe
🔗 Read the full blog: https://t.co/N7IzAC5ooL
A combat medic speaks:
That evening, I learned of a severely wounded soldier trapped under enemy surveillance. He had lain there for hours, motionless, while a Russian drone circled overhead, waiting to strike any rescue team.
The company commander didn’t hesitate. He seized the moment and ran into danger to reach him. Against all odds, they made it back to the nearest shelter.
Late that night, I arrived hoping I could still help. He was barely alive. We tried five, maybe six times to insert an IV. Nothing. His veins had collapsed. Then, somehow, I found one. We pushed fluids. His blood pressure rose. A few more injections — he stabilized.
The evacuation team arrived. We loaded him in. I told him, “That’s it, boy. Hold on. The doctors are waiting. Just a little longer and you’ll be fine.”
They drove off. I sat down, exhausted. Another combat medic snapped a photo of me in that moment. A second later — a deafening explosion. Then, silence.
The evac team never checked in again. The Russians had been waiting.
Everyone was killed.
When I joined the army, people asked: “Are you here to avenge your husband? Do you want blood?” I always said no. I wasn’t here to kill — I was here to save lives. So that no one, like my husband, would die without medical care on the battlefield.
They asked if I’d treat prisoners. I said yes. It was my duty.
Not anymore.
I don’t want to save them. I want to kill. I want to watch them die. I want to see their mothers and wives screaming over their graves.
I won’t help any prisoner.
I don’t care about your humanity, your rules of war, your conventions.
Damn you, Russians.
You, your children, your grandchildren — for all the grief you’ve brought to our land.
Text/photo: combat medic Nadiia Bila
🚨 80% of cyber incidents now start in the browser.
Enter Scattered Spider—a hacking group that hijacks Chrome & Edge sessions to steal logins, cookies, even your calendar.
The scary part? MFA won’t save you.
Here’s how they do it—and how to stop them ↓ https://t.co/8rMeRnlBK4