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RT @HedgieMarkets
🦔 Cybersecurity firm Wiz found that Moltbook, the "social network for AI agents" that went viral last week, exposed private messages between agents, email addresses of over 6,000 users, and more than a million credentials. The vulnerability allowed anyone to post to the site, bot or not. There was no verification of identity.

Moltbook's creator Matt Schlicht said he "didn't write one line of code" for the site, championing "vibe coding" where AI builds the program. Wiz cofounder Ami Luttwak called it a classic byproduct of that approach: "Although it runs very fast, many times people forget the basics of security."

The flaw has been fixed.

My Take
I wrote about this two days ago when security researcher Jamieson O'Reilly found the same issues. Now Wiz is confirming it independently. Same pattern: ship fast, capture attention, figure out security later. Schlicht's response to being told about a major vulnerability was "I'm just going to give everything to AI."

There is so much irony here. A site pitched as AI agents chatting amongst themselves had no way to verify whether posts were from AI or humans. Luttwak laughed and said "I guess that's the future of the internet." He's not wrong. We're building systems where nobody knows what's a bot and what isn't, secured by code that nobody actually wrote or reviewed, exposing user data because basic database configuration got skipped. The New York Post worried about AI plotting humanity's downfall. The actual risk was a misconfigured Supabase instance leaking a million credentials because the guy who built it was proud he didn't write any code.

Hedgie🤗

x.com/HedgieMarkets/status/201

@chpollin @ingridbmason "integrating domain experts". I'd suggest reconsidering this formulation to better reflect what roles you would like to give to people and agents. It might not sound like a big thing, but human-in-the-loop is kinda the opposite of computer-assisted.

Specific evidence is rather missing, but the modus operandi of Epstein and the Maxwells are way too similar to how the KGB is storically known to work. There are no moral or financial reasons to think that any of the two sides would want to shy away from such a partnership. On the contrary, it has very evident potential benefits.

There’s been a lot of comparisons of ICE tactics to Hitler. But a better historical comparison is the fascist dictatorship of Spain’s Franco, according to a scholar of Spanish culture. theconversation.com/what-franc

@TheConversationUS "Today, the European members of NATO and America’s allies in Asia are among the world’s wealthiest countries. These governments are easily rich enough to afford the sort of national militaries needed to deter potential aggressors and uphold stability in their respective regions. Indeed, they can likely do a better job of securing themselves than the United States presently manages on their behalf."

From Argentina’s dictatorship to today’s ICE raids, mothers have turned grief into resistance.

A political scientist who lived through Argentina’s junta draws urgent parallels.

A collaboration with Rewire News Group:
theconversation.com/how-govern

@histodons #Histodons

Anti-ICE protesters are following same nonviolent playbook used by people in war zones across the world to fight threats to their communities

Even if anyone doubts their ability to effectively resist, they have the advantage to have their work extensive documented.

Here are some observed takeaways from Oliver Kaplan from the University of Denver:

Organizing is the first step
Adopting nonviolent strategies
Setting up safe zones
Finding the facts
Standing up for others

I don't disagree that we are at the stage of having overseas conferences on how to protect US cultural heritage and historical records from a regime bent on erasing them, but it's still striking to see. ucl.ac.uk/laws/events/2026/mar

Netherlands built turbines to make energy — but under the ocean, they “produce” something nobody talks about ecoportal.net/en/wind-turbines

@isolyth.dev notice that this site misrepresents its contents. Whereas it appears to be agents to be writing the posts, they only do it if their creators intended to do so. Thus, it is a forum of what a particular group of creators would like to automate and brag about.

Thank you to all the Virginia Indivisibles who visited DC to demand their senators get ICE Out For Good.

Wow! Once the Rhine, the Thames and the Seine were all tributaries of the same big river that flowed out where the English Channel is now!

It's called the Channel River:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_

This river system began forming after catastrophic megafloods breached some ridges and formed the Dover Strait between roughly 450,000 and 180,000 years ago

During any glacial period since then, the sea level drops, Britain becomes connected to Europe, and the Channel River forms. Its most recent appearance was during the Last Glacial Maximum 20,000 years ago, when sea levels were about 130 meters lower than today.

Those megafloods were pretty wild, but that's a story for another day!

(hat-tip to @julesh)

@kottke well, fortunately there's PeerTube now. Yet, I personally still have doubts about the financial sustainability of ad-free video streaming services. I really hope I'm wrong and independent platforms thrive.

“WA Senate passes bill barring masked law enforcement” seattletimes.com/seattle-news/

The feds will sue if/when state enforces a law like this against them. But every state should pass such a law. The American Civil War II demands legislation like this from every state committed to fighting Republican Fascism.

Starmer gives an average man's response to Carney's call for everyday heroes

But it isn't Britishness that makes him average. It's his refusal to stand up to the position he was elected at.

politico.eu/article/keir-starm

@balkanika It’s understandable to feel frustrated with political leaders of the past having manoeuvred Europe into this conundrum, or with those of today remaining in the “comfort zone of cowardice and inaction”, as Nathalie Tocci wrote. But we should also ask what role we have to play in this – the kind of people on the liberal left who enjoy thoughtful European arthouse cinema, or indeed those who make it

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Did you know that data protection should be part of your communication activities?

It might not be the flashiest part of your work, but it’s super important!

Use our practical checklist to ensure your work complies with EU data protection rules: link.europa.eu/dNq4jv

Using too much salt on sidewalks and driveways can harm local streams and drinking water.

An environmental scientist shares 3 easy tips to de-ice responsibly this winter:
theconversation.com/oversaltin

Moms who resist can change history.

In Argentina, state terror inspired mothers to “became a potent force in resisting authoritarianism and ultimately restoring democracy,” according to a political scientist who lived through the dictatorship in her native country.

theconversation.com/how-govern

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