Posts

How Malware Uses Fake LinkedIn Job Offers

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Fake job offers are the perfect delivery vehicle for malware. They don't rely on some obvious "Urgent: Your Account is Locked" scare tactic. Instead, they target your professional ambition and the basic trust you have in someone who says they want to pay you a lot of money to solve a hard problem. Last week, I got a LinkedIn message from a recruiter at a small crypto startup. We chatted for a few days. She described a broken proof-of-concept they needed a lead engineer for, which sounded exactly like the kind of mess I enjoy cleaning up. Then she sent me a public GitHub repo to review. I didn't clone it to my machine. I've seen this movie before. Instead, I spun up a throwaway VPS on Hetzner and pointed Pi at it in read-only mode, using only file-reading tools. It turns out the "broken proof-of-concept" was actually a very clever trap. The Social Engineering Hook Attackers don't start with malware; they start with a persona. They build L...

Does Iroh 1.0 Eliminate the P2P Networking Tax?

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Peer-to-peer networking usually feels like a tax you pay in engineering hours. If you want to move data without a central server, you're suddenly dealing with NAT traversal, DHTs, and the general nightmare of figuring out why two computers can't see each other. It's a lot of overhead for something that should be simple. Iroh handles this by treating decentralized data transfer like a standard API. It doesn't pretend the complexity isn't there, but it hides it behind an interface that actually makes sense. I've spent enough time with P2P stacks to know that the "magic" usually breaks the moment you hit a restrictive firewall, but Iroh's approach to connectivity feels different. The real question is whether this abstraction actually holds up when you're scaling beyond a few nodes. It's one thing to move a file between two laptops on the same Wi-Fi, but it's another to maintain that performance across a fragmented network. The P...

Why Reflowable ePub Outperforms Proprietary eBook Formats

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We've spent the last few years rushing toward proprietary formats and interactive PDFs, pretending that "rich media" is what makes a document better. It isn't. Most of the time, it just makes a file harder to open and impossible to read on a phone. We've forgotten that a reflowable, open standard is actually what a reader wants. I've spent a lot of time fighting with fixed-layout documents. There is nothing more frustrating than pinching and zooming on a mobile screen just to read a single paragraph of text. It's a lazy way to handle design that puts the burden on the user instead of the author. The industry seems to think that adding a few embedded videos or fancy animations justifies locking content into a closed ecosystem. But the real win isn't in the bells and whistles. It's in the ability for text to adapt to whatever screen it happens to be on. The question is why we're moving backward when the tools to do this right already ex...

Earning a Billion Dollars Through Scalable Equity

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Most people think becoming a billionaire is about working harder than everyone else or having a better idea. It isn't. I've watched enough cycles of boom and bust to know that raw effort is just the baseline. The real path to that kind of money is usually a mix of timing, extreme risk tolerance, and knowing exactly which levers to pull in a system that's already tilted in your favor. Since this is apparently the future prime ministers' club, I think it's time we talk about how this actually happens. It's a specific kind of alchemy that politicians often misunderstand, usually because they're too busy talking about "innovation" to look at the actual mechanics of wealth accumulation. Whether you're planning to run a country or you're just curious about how the game is rigged, the logic is the same. There are a few specific patterns that repeat every single time someone hits ten figures. Technical Overview The core of the system is...

US Census Bureau Bans Noise Infusion in Statistical Products

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The U.S. Department of Commerce just decided that "noise infusion" is out. Last week, they issued an order banning the practice for all statistical products coming out of the Census Bureau and the Bureau of Economic Analysis. For anyone who cares about how we protect sensitive data, this is a weird move. The goal of disclosure avoidance is simple. You have a secret dataset full of private information, and you want to publish a set of numbers based on that data without accidentally doxxing the people in it. For years, the gold standard has been adding mathematical noise to the results. It's a way to keep the statistics useful while ensuring no one can reverse engineer the original records. Now, the government is stepping away from that. We're left with older, clunkier methods like swapping records or just refusing to publish any count below five. These aren't just different tools. They're fundamentally different ways of thinking about privacy. The que...

Anthropic Response to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Suspension

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The US government just pulled the plug on foreign access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5. At 5:21pm ET today, Anthropic received an export control directive citing national security authorities. The move is blunt. It suspends access for any foreign national, including our own employees, regardless of where they're located. The weirdest part is that the government didn't actually explain why. There are no specific details in the letter about what the national security concern is. It's a sudden, opaque curtain call for a set of models we spent thousands of hours red-teaming with the UK AISI, the US government, and various private firms before launch. We did the work. We invited the regulators in. We spent weeks trying to break the safeguards so we could fix them. Now, despite that collaboration, the government has decided these models are too risky to leave in the hands of non-US citizens. It makes you wonder what exactly they found during those red-teaming sessions that shi...

Proof of Effort: Combating AI-Generated Noise

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The only way to get a human to actually listen to you now is to prove you spent time on the request. We're drowning in AI-generated noise. When a teammate sends over a block of code or a debug summary, the first thing most of us do is scan for the tells of a LLM. If it looks like a raw prompt output, we subconsciously value it less. It's a weird new etiquette problem. On one hand, an AI that has deep access to our internal codebase and docs can produce something genuinely useful in seconds. It's efficient. But forwarding that raw output to a colleague feels like a shortcut that signals a lack of effort. We've reached a point where the quality of the answer matters less than the perceived work that went into it. So, where do we draw the line between being productive and being lazy? The Signal-to-Noise Crisis LLMs have made the cost of generating "perfect" communication zero. When everyone can produce a polished, professional email in two seconds, th...