BEEN A LONG ONE
But I can say now, I finally done it.
Reintroducing my self.
Olatunle Emmanuel Ayomide (B.ENG, GMNSE)
A product designer
An Orator
A leader
A media personality
A Tech preacher
And a Cyber Enthusiast
I celebrate my wins, cause I worked for them. 🥰
#Engineering
Just completed an intensive 3-day cybersecurity bootcamp at @IlorinHub with @WeHacKwara and the exposure was incredible.
Throughout the whole three days we covered:
• Networking fundamentals
• TCP/IP, DNS, HTTP/HTTPS
• Ping, nslookup & curl
• SQL & XSS concepts
• Burp Suite & JWT analysis
• Linux terminal commands
• Cyber Kill Chain
• AI in cybersecurity
• Deepfakes & AI-powered SOC automation
• OSINT & Google dorking
• Bug bounty & vulnerability reporting
We also had sessions from experienced security researchers and professionals working with major companies, sharing insights on:
- Ethical hacking
- Responsible disclosure
- Bug bounty hunting
- Professional growth in cybersecurity
Platforms introduced:
HackerOne
Bugcrowd
Intigriti
YesWeHack
Synack
Immunefi
This bootcamp completely changed how I see cybersecurity.
It’s not just about “hacking” it’s about understanding systems, identifying weaknesses, thinking critically, and building secure technologies.
Still learning. Still building. 🚀
@WeHacKwara@TheSage960931@bash_voice@techsociety_
#CyberSecurity #BugBounty #EthicalHacking #OSINT #WebSecurity #AI #Tech #Nigeria #hackwara @Cc_HUB
I’ll say this again.
Nmap is free.
Hydra is free.
Allison is free.
OpenVAS is free.
Kali Linux is free.
Wireshark is free.
Burp Suite is free.
Metasploit is free
Portswigger is Free.
John the Ripper is free.
OSINT Framework is free.
Shodan (basic tier) is free.
TryHackMe & Hack The Box (basic tiers) are free. A lot more free platforms around.
You claim you want to learn cybersecurity yet you give excuses about resources.
Nothing has to be perfect.
Not a fancy certification to begin.
Not a $1,000 course to practice.
Or even the “perfect” setup.
All you need is your laptop, phone, an internet connection, and the decision to start today.
Every day you delay, someone else is learning, practicing, and moving closer to the career you say you want.
Stop waiting for the “right time.”
Stop blaming the lack of resources.
Stop making excuses.
Start now. Learn now. Improve now.
You don’t need a mentor to start.
Snapchat users, just so you know: with the current wave of cyberattacks happening worldwide, anything saved in “For My Eyes Only” still exists on a physical device somewhere. Sometimes all it takes is a “fat thumb” on a bad day to create an opening for bad actors to access and potentially sell your private photos and videos online. 😩🤷🏾♂️
Cybersecurity skills will always be in demand. It’s not just about reacting to attacks, but staying ahead of them.
If you are in this field, keep learning. If you are looking to break in, now is still the right time. The threats are evolving.
Just finished my first OSINT challenge 😭 thought they sent me a blank image by mistake.
Turns out it had everything hidden inside it the whole time. We leave way too much online without realising 👀 #TryHackMe#OSINT
https://t.co/hUk5musCiK #tryhackme via @tryhackme
Most people assume that because Linux is free, the person who created it must not be making any money from it.
But that’s not how open source works.
Linus Torvalds doesn’t sell copies of Linux. There are no licenses to buy, no subscriptions, no product keys. Instead, he’s paid to maintain it.
For years, Linus has worked for organizations whose entire businesses rely on Linux staying fast, stable, and secure. Today, he works full-time at the Linux Foundation, which is funded by major tech giants like Intel, Google, IBM, and Microsoft.
And they’re not donating out of kindness.
They’re paying because their entire infrastructure depends on Linux.
Linux powers most of the internet, cloud platforms, Android devices, enterprise servers, supercomputers, and massive data centers around the world. If Linux has serious bugs or instability, it’s not just a technical problem; it’s a billion-dollar business problem.
So instead of “owning” Linux, these companies invest in the people who keep it reliable.
Linus’s job is to review code, approve what gets merged into the kernel, reject risky changes, and guide the technical direction of the system. Think of him less like a seller and more like the chief architect and gatekeeper. His expertise and judgment are what companies are really paying for.
Beyond that, he also earns from speaking engagements, recognition awards, and compensation from past roles. But the core idea stays the same: the money isn’t in selling Linux; it’s in maintaining trust in Linux.
That’s what many people miss about open source.
The business model doesn’t disappear. It simply shifts.
Instead of charging for access to software, companies pay for reliability, support, and long-term stability.
Get a hair cut every 2 weeks .
Buy new set of boxers
Buy some polo and shirt
Make sure you have atleast 5 footwear
Have atleast 2 perfumes
Use roll on (not antiperspirant)
Brush your teeth and scrub your tongue every morning
Drink a cup of water and push up daily
Make sure you use the toilet before going out in the morning.
Lastly ; always dress well no matter where you’re going.
@DRUNKPEEPS1 Is it too late to bring this back?
Not to make a mockery though, but two years isn't up, and mans gone. Wishing him all the best but at the same time, two wrongs can't make a right.
Whatever AMORIM is doing with United it's not working, consistency is not consistent, whatever SYSTEM he has got, is not working, if your style of play doesn't work with these guys, then adapt a new one. You are wasting the fans energy. We HAVE BEEN PATIENT ENOUGH #ASVMUN
@DRUNKPEEPS1 I would pin this, then revisit in two years.
No long talks.
Amorim ball and building yeah.
One season almost out. Let's see the team building exercises.