🚨 ¿Quién es ‘Angelita’, el hacker que una fuente de inteligencia señala como la ‘pieza clave’ del Pacto Histórico para la segunda vuelta presidencial?
Se trata de Andrés Mauricio Ángel Peña, alias Angelita o Papu, descrito como uno de los hackers más hábiles de Colombia. Según una fuente de inteligencia consultada por El Expediente, opera actualmente como contratista de Coljuegos y sería un activo clave en las estrategias digitales del gobierno de Gustavo Petro y el Pacto Histórico.
El señalamiento es grave y directo: su pericia técnica lo posicionaría para intervenir los sistemas de la Registraduría Nacional en la segunda vuelta del 21 de junio, donde Iván Cepeda (Pacto) enfrentará a Abelardo de la Espriella tras una primera vuelta muy ajustada.
Mientras el país vota en medio de denuncias de irregularidades y desconfianza en el software electoral, Petro y su círculo estarían apostando a un hacker de élite para asegurar el control del preconteo y los resultados.
Esto no es un rumor de esquina, sino una alerta de inteligencia que pone en jaque la legitimidad del proceso electoral. ¿Confiarán los colombianos en unas elecciones limpias si un hacker con acceso estatal puede tocar los sistemas de la Registraduría?
La pregunta es: ¿hasta dónde está dispuesto el oficialismo a llegar para no perder el poder?
¿Fraude digital en marcha? El tiempo y las investigaciones lo dirán, pero la señal de alarma ya está encendida. Los colombianos merecen elecciones transparentes, no manipuladas desde las sombras.
Fuente @EIExpedienteCol
@petrogustavo Llamado velado al "estallido social". Pides que no se metan en asuntos internos de Colombia pero si nos metemos en los de Chile, Ecuador, Bolivia, Estados Unidos, etc., un poquito más de coherencia.
@IvanCepedaCast@FCF_Oficial Sr Cepeda lo invito a que en vez de empezar a proponer prohibiciones a la libertad, invite a sus seguidores a también vestir la camiseta que representa como usted dice a todos los colombianos, tanto que el mismo Petro la usó en su campaña hace 4 años.
Invito a todos los colombianos a que a partir de hoy usemos la camiseta de la Selección Colombia todas las veces que nos sea posible en la semana.
Así apoyaremos a nuestros jugadores, pero también será un símbolo de libertad, democracia y respeto a la Constitución de 1991
🇨🇴
@IvanCepedaCast@FelipeAcevedoM Podrían Sr Cepeda aprovechar para también hacer un debate de vicepresidentes. Sería bueno ahora escuchar a la Sra Quilcue explicar, justificar y debatir su plan de gobierno para que no nos pase lo de experiencias pasadas.
@caucatrapped @MarioNawfal Wow, that comment reveals more about your ignorance, xenophobia and your fears than anything else, please stop spreading your hate and bigotry, and go get that checked with a mental health professional.
@namcios OK, I created a text file with the word 'nothing', ha! named it weights.bin, replaced the 4.27Gb one with this new 7 byte one and (on MacOS) locked the file. I have restarted Chrome many times and it doesn't seem able to regenerate and rewrite the original file over.
@namcios OK, I created a text file with the word 'nothing', ha! named it weights.bin, replaced the 4.27Gb one with this new 7 byte one and (on MacOS) locked the file. I have restarted Chrome many times and it doesn't seem able to regenerate and rewrite the original file over.
@namcios Did you find a definitive way to disable this permanently, I have disabled all the prompt/on-device/gemini-nano/prompt related flags, deleted the folder several time but after relaunch of chrome the 4.2Gb file is redownloaded again and again!
A blog post just wiped $30 billion off IBM in a single afternoon.
Not a product launch. Not an earnings miss. Not a competitor undercutting on price.
A five-minute blog post explaining that Claude can read COBOL.
IBM dropped 13%. Worst single-day loss since October 2000. Twenty-five years of stock resilience ended by one AI company publishing a capability update.
Here’s what happened:
95% of ATM transactions in America run on COBOL. Hundreds of billions of lines power banking, airlines, and government systems. The developers who built them retired decades ago. The knowledge left with them. Finding engineers who can even read COBOL gets harder every quarter.
IBM’s moat was never the technology. It was the fact that nobody else could understand it. Entire consulting empires existed because the code was too old, too tangled, and too critical to touch. Companies paid IBM billions because the alternative was catastrophic system failure.
Then Anthropic published a blog post saying Claude Code can map dependencies across thousands of lines of COBOL, document workflows, identify migration risks, and translate legacy logic into modern languages. Modernization in quarters instead of years.
The market heard: the priesthood just lost its monopoly on the sacred language.
And this isn’t the first time. Last week Anthropic announced Claude Code Security for vulnerability scanning. CrowdStrike dropped. Okta dropped. Cloudflare dropped. One company is serially destroying legacy moats with blog posts.
Now here’s where it gets surreal.
This same company, on the same day, also published evidence that three Chinese AI labs ran 24,000 fake accounts and 16 million exchanges to steal Claude’s capabilities. DeepSeek used it to build censorship tools. MiniMax pivoted within 24 hours when a new model dropped, redirecting half its traffic to steal the latest version.
And yesterday, the Pentagon summoned this same company’s CEO for what officials called a “sh*t-or-get-off-the-pot meeting,” threatening to blacklist them like Huawei for refusing to let the military use Claude without safety restrictions.
Three stories. One company. Twenty-four hours.
The company destroying legacy moats faster than the market can reprice them is simultaneously being threatened by its own government and looted by foreign competitors.
Anthropic is valued at $380 billion. Its CEO says a 12-month delay in AI would make him bankrupt. The Pentagon wants to designate it a supply chain risk. Chinese labs are running industrial espionage against it. And it just proved it can vaporize $30 billion in market cap with a Monday morning blog post.
Whatever you think about AI disruption, IBM’s stock just settled the argument.
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