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@echedeylr@catcatnya.com Yep, kind of the predictable result when an industry consists almost entirely of those kind of people, unfortunately... :/

it's actually really wild that the story of a black guy who somehow managed to deracialize klan members by befriending them is still being used as a positive example of.....anything?

the way that story, and variations like it, continue to circulate around the internet as a good example of anything is truly.....dark comedy

a perfect example of the failures of antiracism, specifically self-styled white antiracism, as a political project

to the people who reply to any- and everything with random, uncommented YouTube links:

would you click on an uncommented tiktok or Facebook link sent to you by a random stranger?

let me guess, you don't have auditory processing disorder and the sound in videos doesn't physically hurt you?

let me guess, you're not on mobile and opening another app doesn't immediately reset the memory of the one you're currently using?

please just stop. I am NEVER gonna click that. I WILL eventually mute you.

The problem with the infosec industry is actually pretty easy to summarize. In the infosec industry, there are roughly three things you can do:

1. Sell people reactive patchwork fixes for problems that have already happened. Good business, you'll have customers forever.
2. Put work into fixing security problems on a structural, worldwide level so that they just can't happen anymore. Years of work on the public commons, and no one company can profit from it. Therefore nobody will pay for this.
3. Do lucrative contracting work for the government. Sometimes reactive, sometimes structural. But whatever it is will always advance specifically *their* nation state interests.

Well, guess what the industry works on.

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... paid work, that is.

There's plenty of genuinely important structural work that isn't getting done because it's not profitable, of course.

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(Inspired by another toot)

If you're thinking of getting into infosec, you should know that the industry is like 99% military, cops, and bootlickers - and this largely holds true for the available work as well.

re: tootsite 

@meave@toot.site This is one of those "everybody in the industry knows this yet nobody outside of the industry understands it" things, isn't it

Folks have mentioned that Twitter is an extremely important space for sharing #protest news across the world and as a result we should keep preserving it despite the takeover.

I get it, I am #Iranian, I have relied heavily on twitter for news sharing re protests in #Iran over the years.

But what you are missing is that those same activists and protesters are MOST vulnerable to the new Twitter regime. Misinformation campaigns will be easy, and #Putin/#China/Islamic republic will use it.

mh- 

@skye Unfortunately my brain just stacks up those experiences onto the "worry about forever" pile, rather than dropping them from memory :|

@ShadowJonathan@tech.lgbt It didn't even save any time, they did like a few meters of pavement, putting on and taking off the whole leafblower setup took more time than it would've taken to just remove them with a rake

@ShadowJonathan@tech.lgbt Oh they were at least blowing them off the pavement into the bushes here, so in this case the *goal* was at least legitimate.

But like, use a fucking rake, man!

“gender self-determination will always be a better argument than “born this way””
-- @tr4nsfem@twitter.com

🏷 #trans #transliberation
🔗 twitter.com/tr4nsfem/status/15

BREAKING: Growing radical movement embraces extremist politics, claiming that life is "about more than just paying bills and dying". To learn more about how this might affect your investments, click here.

Echt, hoe de fuck zijn die energieslurpers nog steeds een ding voor de kleinste wissewasjes terwijl er (ook door groenbedrijven) steen en been geklaagd wordt over de energiekosten

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