@kcalvinalvinn You don’t even need to look at the ETH/BTC chart to know it’s dumping.
Like clockwork it’s signalled by the dot-eths coming out of the woodwork trying to redefine words and rewrite history
@badcryptobitch@hashcloak Yes I’ve seen some interesting results here in that AI is more likely to find certain classes of vulnerability more often than meat based intelligence
Leveraging AI for internal security is increasingly necessary because the adversary is definitely using it
@badcryptobitch@hashcloak Yes I’ve seen some interesting results here in that AI is more likely to find certain classes of vulnerability more often than meat based intelligence
Leveraging AI for internal security is increasingly necessary because the adversary is definitely using it
@badcryptobitch@hashcloak How certain are you that the reported non-vibe-coded output is correctly labeled as such?
Also, there’s a reported effect on certain patterns of AI use eroding the user’s judgement capacity over time
Could be one or more of these reasons
River CEO @Leishman built a time-lock encryption oracle as a side project.
Upload a file, choose when it should be unlockable, and the system encrypts it with an RSA key that only becomes available at the specified time. Anyone with the encrypted file can decrypt it in their browser once the key is released.
It publishes RSA keys for each minute over the next 30 days, then releases the corresponding private key at the top of each new minute. Works in the browser for humans and via curl and openssl for developers and AI agents.
Use cases: delayed data access, embargoes, sending messages or files to the future, or anything else that needs a trustless time delay.
We are investigating unauthorized access to GitHub’s internal repositories. While we currently have no evidence of impact to customer information stored outside of GitHub’s internal repositories (such as our customers’ enterprises, organizations, and repositories), we are closely monitoring our infrastructure for follow-on activity.