| ▲ | Cybersecurity looks like proof of work now(dbreunig.com) |
| 353 points by dbreunig 2 days ago | 123 comments |
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| ▲ | somesortofthing 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| There's still the question of access to the codebase. By all accounts, the best LLM cyber scanning approaches are really primitive - it's just a bash script that goes through every single file in the codebase and, for each one and runs a "find the vulns here" prompt. The attacker usually has even less access than this - in the beginning, they have network tools, an undocumented API, and maybe some binaries. You can do a lot better efficiency-wise if you control the source end-to-end though - you already group logically related changes into PRs, so you can save on scanning by asking the LLM to only look over the files you've changed. If you're touching security-relevant code, you can ask it for more per-file effort than the attacker might put into their own scanning. You can even do the big bulk scans an attacker might on a fixed schedule - each attacker has to run their own scan while you only need to run your one scan to find everything they would have. There's a massive cost asymmetry between the "hardening" phase for the defender and the "discovering exploits" phase for the attacker. Exploitability also isn't binary: even if the attacker is better-resourced than you, they need to find a whole chain of exploits in your system, while you only need to break the weakest link in that chain. If you boil security down to just a contest of who can burn more tokens, defenders get efficiency advantages only the best-resourced attackers can overcome. On net, public access to mythos-tier models will make software more secure. |
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| ▲ | anitil 8 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | On that latest episode of 'Security Cryptography Whatever' [0] they mention that the time spent on improving the harness (at the moment) end up being outperformed by the strategy of "wait for the next model". I doubt that will continue, but it broke my intuition about how to improve them [0] https://securitycryptographywhatever.com/2026/03/25/ai-bug-f... | | |
| ▲ | conception 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | This is basically how you should treat all AI dev. Working around AI model limits for something that will take 3-6 months of work has very little ROI compared to building what works today and just waiting and building what works tomorrow tomorrow. | | |
| ▲ | sally_glance 6 hours ago | parent [-] | | This is the hard part - especially with larger initiatives, it takes quite a bit of work to evaluate what the current combination of harness + LLM is good at. Running experiments yourself is cumbersome and expensive, public benchmarks are flawed. I wish providers would release at least a set of blessed example trajectories alongside new models. As it is, we're stuck with "yeah it seems this works well for bootstrapping a Next.js UI"... |
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| ▲ | theptip 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | It’s a good thing to keep in mind, but LLM + scaffolding is clearly superior. So if you just use vanilla LLMs you will always be behind. I think the important thing is to avoid over-optimizing. Your scaffold, not avoid building one altogether. | | |
| ▲ | fragmede 4 hours ago | parent [-] | | It's wild to me that a paragraph or 7 of plain English that amounts to "be good at things" is enough to make a material difference in the LLM's performance. | | |
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| ▲ | argee 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | > it broke my intuition about how to improve them Here we go again. http://www.incompleteideas.net/IncIdeas/BitterLesson.html | |
| ▲ | bitexploder 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | And if you have the better harness and the next model? |
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| ▲ | btown 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | The problem, though, is that this turns "one of our developers was hit by a supply chain attack that never hit prod, we wiped their computer and rotated keys, and it's not like we're a big target for the attacker to make much use of anything they exfiltrated..." into "now our entire source code has been exfiltrated and, even with rudimentary line-by-line scanning, will be automatically audited for privilege escalation opportunities within hours." Taken to an extreme, the end result is a dark forest. I don't like what that means for entrepreneurship generally. | | |
| ▲ | linkregister 8 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | This is a great example of vulnerability chains that can be broken by vulnerability scanning by even cheaper open source models. The outcome of a developer getting pwned doesn't have to lead to total catastrophe. Having trivial privilege escalations closed off means an attacker will need to be noisy and set off commodity alerting. The will of the company to implement fixes for the 100 Github dependabot alerts on their code base is all that blocks these entrepreneurs. It does mean that the hoped-for 10x productivity increase from engineers using LLMs is eroded by the increased need for extra time for security. This take is not theoretical. I am working on this effort currently. | | |
| ▲ | pixl97 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | I disagree that it's extra time for security, it's the time we should have been spending in the first place. | |
| ▲ | fragmede 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | It's great news for developers. Extra spend on a development/test env so dev have no prod access, prod has no ssh access; and SREs get two laptops, with the second one being a Chromebook that only pulls credentials when it's absolutely necessary. | | |
| ▲ | linkregister 15 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Yes, having a good development env with synthetic data, and an inaccessible, secure prod env just got justification. I never considered the secondary SRE laptop but I think it might be a good idea. |
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| ▲ | eru 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | > Taken to an extreme, the end result is a dark forest. Sorry, how does that work? | | |
| ▲ | bryanrasmussen an hour ago | parent [-] | | since the suggestion is that the new security bug finding LLMs will increase protection because it will have access to the full source code then, the dark forest fear would be, if it is possible for an attacker to get all the source the attacker will be in a better position. This seems wrong however, as it ignores the arrow of time. The full source code has been scanned and fixed for things that LLMs can find before hitting production, anyone exfiltrating your codebase can only find holes in stuff with their models that is available via production for them to attack and that your models for some reason did not find. I don't think there is any reason to suppose non-nation state actors will have better models available to them and thus it is not a dark forest, as nation states will probably limit their attacks to specific things, thus most companies if they secure their codebase using LLMs built for it will probably be at a significantly more secure position than nowadays and, I would think, the golden age of criminal hacking is drawing to a close. This assume companies smart enough to do this however. Furthermore, the worry about nation state attackers still assumes that they will have better models and not sure if that is likely either. |
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| ▲ | bryanrasmussen an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | >By all accounts, the best LLM cyber scanning approaches are really primitive It seems like that is perhaps not the case anymore with the Mythos model? | |
| ▲ | eru 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | > There's a massive cost asymmetry between the "hardening" phase for the defender and the "discovering exploits" phase for the attacker. Well, you need to harden everything, the attacker only needs to find one or at most a handful of exploits. | |
| ▲ | Retr0id 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Tokens can also be burnt on decompilation. | | |
| ▲ | tptacek 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Yes, and it apparently burns lots of tokens. But what I've heard is that the outcomes are drastically less expensive than hand-reversing was, when you account for labor costs. | | |
| ▲ | jeffmcjunkin 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Can confirm. Matching decompilation in particular (where you match the compiler along with your guess at source, compile, then compare assembly, repeating if it doesn't match) is very token-intensive, but it's now very viable: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46080498 Of course LLMs see a lot more source-assembly pairs than even skilled reverse engineers, so this makes sense. Any area where you can get unlimited training data is one we expect to see top-tier performance from LLMs. (also, hi Thomas!) | | |
| ▲ | stackghost 8 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | My own experience has been that "ghidra -> ask LLM to reason about ghidra decompilation" is very effective on all but the most highly obfuscated binaries. Burning tokens by asking the LLM to compile, disassemble, compare assembly, recompile, repeat seems very wasteful and inefficient to me. | | |
| ▲ | mikestaas 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | LaurieWired did a good episode about that kind of thing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2vQapLAW88 | |
| ▲ | kimixa 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | That matches my experience too - LLMs are very capable in "translating" between domains - one of the best experience I've had with LLMs is turning "decompiled" source into "human readable" source. I don't think that "Binary Only" closed-source isn't the defense against this that some people here seem to think it is. |
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| ▲ | echelon 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Has anyone used an LLM to deobfuscate compiled Javascript? | | |
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| ▲ | gfosco 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Yeah, it's token intensive but worth it. I built a very dumb example harness which used IDA via MCP and analyzed/renamed/commented all ~67k functions in a binary, using Claude Haiku for about $150. A local model could've accomplished it for much less/free. The knowledge base it outputs and the marked up IDA db are super valuable. | | |
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| ▲ | somesortofthing 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Another asymmetric advantage for defenders - attackers need to burn tokens to form incomplete, outdated, and partially wrong pictures of the codebase while the defender gets the whole latest version plus git history plus documentation plus organizational memory plus original authors' cooperation for free. | |
| ▲ | echelon 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | > Tokens can also be burnt on decompilation. Prediction 1. We're going to have cheap "write Photoshop and AutoCad in Rust as a new program / FOSS" soon. No desktop software will be safe. Everything will be cloned. Prediction 2. We'll have a million Linux and Chrome and other FOSS variants with completely new codebases. Prediction 3. People will trivially clone games, change their assets. Modding will have a renaissance like never before. Prediction 4. To push back, everything will move to thin clients. |
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| ▲ | kelvinjps10 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | what about open source software? |
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| ▲ | j2kun 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| The article heavily quotes the "AI Security Institute" as a third-party analysis. It was the first I heard of them, so I looked up their about page, and it appears to be primarily people from the AI industry (former Deepmind/OpenAI staff, etc.), with no folks from the security industry mentioned. So while the security landscape is clearly evolving (cf. also Big Sleep and Project Zero), the conclusion of "to harden a system we need to spend more tokens" sounds like yet more AI boosting from a different angle. It raises the question of why no other alternatives (like formal verification) are mentioned in the article or the AISI report. I wouldn't be surprised if NVIDIA picked up this talking point to sell more GPUs. |
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| ▲ | tptacek 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | I would be interested in which notable security researchers you can find to take the other side of this argument. I don't know anything about the "AI Security Institute", but they're saying something broadly mirrored by security researchers. From what I can see, the "debate" in the actual practitioner community is whether frontier models are merely as big a deal as fuzzing was, or something signficantly bigger. Fuzzing was a profound shift in vulnerability research. (Fan of your writing, btw.) | | |
| ▲ | j2kun 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | It's less that I think they would take the other side of the argument, than that they would lend some credence to the content of the analysis. For example, I would not particularly trust a bunch of AI researchers to come up with a representative set of CTF tasks, which seems to be the basis of this analysis. | | |
| ▲ | tptacek 7 hours ago | parent [-] | | Yeah, you might be right about this particular analysis! The sense I have from talking to people at the labs is that they're really just picking deliberately diverse and high-profile targets to see what the models are capable of. |
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| ▲ | VorpalWay 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | > but they're saying something broadly mirrored by security researchers. You might well be right, it is not an area I know much of or work in. But I'm a fan of reliable sources for claims. It is far to easy to make general statements on the internet that appear authorative. |
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| ▲ | ButlerianJihad 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | The "S" in "Artificial Intelligence" stands for "Security"! |
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| ▲ | nostrademons 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Relevant Tony Hoare quote: “There are two approaches to software design: make it so simple there are obviously no deficiencies, or make it so complex there are no obvious deficiencies”. |
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| ▲ | tekacs 9 hours ago | parent [-] | | I think this is so relevant, and thank you for posting this. Of course it's trivially NOT true that you can defend against all exploits by making your system sufficiently compact and clean, but you can certainly have a big impact on the exploitable surface area. I think it's a bit bizarre that it's implicitly assumed that all codebases are broken enough, that if you were to attack them sufficiently, you'll eventually find endlessly more issues. Another analogy here is to fuzzing. A fuzzer can walk through all sorts of states of a program, but when it hits a password, it can't really push past that because it needs to search a space that is impossibly huge. It's all well and good to try to exploit a program, but (as an example) if that program _robustly and very simply_ (the hard part!) says... that it only accepts messages from the network that are signed before it does ANYTHING else, you're going to have a hard time getting it to accept unsigned messages. Admittedly, a lot of today's surfaces and software were built in a world where you could get away with a lot more laziness compared to this. But I could imagine, for example, a state of the world in which we're much more intentional about what we accept and even bring _into_ our threat environment. Similarly to the shift from network to endpoint security. There are for sure, uh, million systems right now with a threat model wildly larger than it needs to be. |
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| ▲ | jzelinskie 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Security has always been a game of just how much money your adversary is willing to commit. The conclusions drawn in lots of these articles are just already well understood systems design concepts, but for some reason people are acting like they are novel or that LLMs have changed anything besides the price. For example from this article: > Karpathy: Classical software engineering would have you believe that dependencies are good (we’re building pyramids from bricks), but imo this has to be re-evaluated, and it’s why I’ve been so growingly averse to them, preferring to use LLMs to “yoink” functionality when it’s simple enough and possible. Anyone who's heard of "leftpad" or is a Go programmer ("A little copying is better than a little dependency" is literally a "Go Proverb") knows this. Another recent set of posts to HN had a company close-sourcing their code for security, but "security through obscurity" has been a well understand fallacy in open source circles for decades. |
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| ▲ | pmontra an hour ago | parent [-] | | Yes, there is nothing novel in "to harden a system we need to spend more tokens discovering exploits than attackers spend exploiting them." That's what security always looked like, physical security included (burglars, snipers, etc.) So when AI is available you have to throw more AI at securing your system than your adversaries do. What a surprise. Maybe we could start with the prompts for the code generation models used by developers. |
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| ▲ | dataviz1000 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > to harden a system you need to spend more tokens discovering exploits than attackers will spend exploiting them. I, for the NFL front offices, created a script that exposed an API to fully automate Ticketmaster through the front end so that the NFL could post tickets on all secondary markets and dynamic price the tickets so if rain on a Sunday was expected they could charge less. Ticketmaster was slow to develop an API. Ticketmaster couldn't provide us permission without first developing the API first for legal reasons but told me they would do their best to stop me. They switched over to PerimeterX which took me 3 days to get past. Last week someone posted an article here about ChatGPT using Cloudflare Turnstile. [0] First, the article made some mistakes how it works. Second, I used the [AI company product] and the Chrome DevTools Protocol (CDP) to completely rewrite all the scripts intercepting them before they were evaluated -- the same way I was able to figure out PerimeterX in 3 days -- and then recursively solve controlling all the finger printing so that it controls the profile. Then it created an API proxy to expose ChatGPT for free. It required some coaching about the technique but it did most of the work in 3 hours. These companies are spending 10s of millions of dollars on these products and considering what OpenAI is boasting about security, they are worthless. [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47566865 |
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| ▲ | snowwrestler 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| It looks like proof of work because: > Worryingly, none of the models given a 100M budget showed signs of diminishing returns. “Models continue making progress with increased token budgets across the token budgets tested,” AISI notes. So, the author infers a durable direct correlation between token spend and attack success. Thus you will need to spend more tokens than your attackers to find your vulnerabilities first. However it is worth noting that this study was of a 32-step network intrusion, which only one model (Mythos) even was able to complete at all. That’s an incredibly complex task. Is the same true for pointing Mythos at a relatively simple single code library? My intuition is that there is probably a point of diminishing returns, which is closer for simpler tasks. In this world, popular open source projects will probably see higher aggregate token spend by both defenders and attackers. And thus they might approach the point of diminishing returns faster. If there is one. |
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| ▲ | SyneRyder 7 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Worth pointing out that as impressive as the 32-step network takeover is, Mythos wasn't able to achieve it on every attempt, and the network itself did not have the usual defence systems. I wouldn't use those as excuses to dismiss AI though. Even if this model doesn't break your defences, give it 3 months and see where the next model lands. | |
| ▲ | janalsncm 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Knowing nothing about cybersecurity, maybe the question is whether it costs more tokens to go from 32 steps to 33, or to complete the 33rd step? If it’s cheaper to add steps, or if defense is uncorrelated but offense becomes correlated, it’s not as bad as the article makes it seem. For instance, if failing any step locks you out, your probability of success is p^N, which means it’s functionally impossible with enough layers. |
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| ▲ | creatonez 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I mostly agree with the article. > You don’t get points for being clever Not sure about this framing, this can easily lead to the wrong conclusions. There is an arms race, yes, and defenders are going to need to spend a lot of GPU hours as a result. But it seems self-evident that the fundamentals of cybersecurity still matter a lot, and you still win by being clever. For the foreseeable future, security posture is still going to be a reflection of human systems. Human systems that are under enormous stress, but are still fundamentally human. You win by getting your security culture in order to produce (and continually reproduce) the most resilient defense that masters both the craft and the human element, not just by abandoning human systems in favor of brute forcing security problems away as your only strategy. Indeed, domains that are truly security critical will acquire this organizational discipline (what's required is the same type of discipline that the nuclear industry acquires after a meltdown, or that the aviation industry acquires after plane crashes), but it will be a bumpy ride. This article from exactly 1 year ago is almost prophetic to exactly what's going on right now and the subtle ways in which people are most likely to misunderstand the situation: https://knightcolumbia.org/content/ai-as-normal-technology |
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| ▲ | mikewarot 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Long ago, during the Viet Nam conflict, the US government learned that computers needed to be able to securely process data from multiple levels of classification simultaneously. Research in the 1970s found solutions that were adopted in the Mainframe world, like KeyKOS and EROS. Then the PC revolution swept all that away, and we're here 40+ years later, with operating systems that trust every bit of code the user runs with that user's full authority. It's nuts. If the timing were slightly different, none of this "Cybersecurity" would even be a thing. We'd just have capabilities based, secure general purpose computation. |
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| ▲ | chromacity 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I discussed this in more detail in one of my earlier comments, but I think the article commits a category error. In commercial settings, most of day-to-day infosec work (or spending) has very little to do with looking for vulnerabilities in code. In fact, security programs built on the idea that you can find and patch every security hole in your codebase were basically busted long before LLMs. |
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| ▲ | Muromec 9 hours ago | parent [-] | | Commercial infosec is deleting firefox from develop machines, because it's not secure and explaining to muggles why they shouldn't commit secret material to the code repository. That and blocking my ssh access to home router of course. | | |
| ▲ | chromacity 8 hours ago | parent [-] | | I mean, often, yep. The real reason why they are unhappy with you having an unsupported browser is simply that it's much harder to reason about or enforce policies across bespoke environments. And in an enterprise of a sufficient scale, the probability that one of your employees is making a mistake today is basically 1. Someone is installing an infostealer browser extension, someone is typing in their password on a phishing site, etc. So, you really want to keep browsers on a tight leash and have robust monitoring and reporting around that. Yeah, it sucks. But you're getting paid, among other things, to put up with some amount of corporate suckiness. | | |
| ▲ | gerdesj 7 hours ago | parent [-] | | "The real reason why they are unhappy with you having an unsupported browser" I tend to encourage Firefox over Cr flavoured browsers because FF (for me) are the absolute last to dive in with fads and will boneheadedly argue against useful stuff until the cows come home ... Web Serial springs to mind (which should finally be rocking up real soon now). Oh and they are not sponsored by Google errm ... 8) I'm old enough to remember having to use telnet to access the www (when it finally rocked up and looked rather like Gopher and WAIS) (via a X.25 PAD) and I have seen the word "unsupported" bandied around way too often since to basically mean "walled garden". I think that when you end up using the term "unsupported browser" you have lost any possible argument based on reason or common decency. |
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| ▲ | choeger an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| To me it looks like formal verification is going to be the answer. We're going to move up the ladder and write formal specs and proofs soon. |
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| ▲ | xarope 13 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I can see the dichotomy forming in the "post AI" world; 1) massive companies spending millions of tokens to write+secure their software 2) in the shadows, "elite" software contractors writing bespoke software to fulfill needs for those who can't afford the millions, or fix cracks in (1) (Oh wait, I think this is what is happening now, anyway, minus the millions of tokens) |
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| ▲ | pcblues 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| As a result of all this AI "find a zero-day" business, when I boot to windows I open the task manager and order by pid. I kill anything I didn't start or don't recognise. The only process that scared me was windowgrid. It kept finding a way back when I killed all the "start with boot" locations I know. Run, runonce, start up apps, etc. Surely it's not in autoexec.bat :) |
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| ▲ | int32_64 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| By using these services, you're also exfiltrating your entire codebase to them, so you have to continuously use the best cyber capabilities providers offer in case a data breach allows somebody to obtain your codebase and an attacker uses a better vulnerability detector than what you were using. |
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| ▲ | tptacek 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| It looks like it, but it isn't. It's the work itself that's valued in software security, not the amount of it you managed to do. The economics are fundamentally different. Put more simply: to keep your system secure, you need to be fixing vulnerabilities faster than they're being discovered. The token count is irrelevant. Moreover: this shift is happening because the automated work is outpacing humans for the same outcome. If you could get the same results by hand, they'd count! A sev:crit is a sev:crit is a sev:crit. |
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| ▲ | keeda 5 hours ago | parent [-] | | I think the premise is: 1) The number of vulnerabilities surfaced (and fixed?) in a given software is roughly proportional to the amount of attention paid to it. 2) Attention can now be paid in tokens by burning huge amounts of compute (bonus: most commonly on GPUs, just like crypto!) 3) Whoever finds a vulnerability has a valuable asset, though the value differs based on the criticality of the vulnerability itself, and whether you're the attacker or the defender. More tokens -> more vulns is not a guarantee of course, it's a stochastic process... but so is PoW! |
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| ▲ | chaitanyya 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| What do they mean when they say "no diminishing returns?" does this essentially mean the code you are testing has no bounded state space and you continue to find infinite paths? Because we have tools and techniques that can guarantee the absence of certain behavior in a bounded state space using formal methods (even unbounded at times) Sure, it's hard to formally verify everything but if you are dealing with something extremely critical why not design it in a way that you can formally verify it? But yeah, the easy button is keep throwing more tokens till you money runs out of money |
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| ▲ | jerf 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I've said for decades that, in principle, cybersecurity is advantage defender. The defender has to leave a hole. The attackers have to find it. We just live in a world with so many holes that dedicated attackers rarely end up bottlenecked on finding holes, so in practice it ends up advantage attacker. There is at least a possibility that a code base can be secured by a (practically) finite number of tokens until there is no more holes in it, for reasonable amounts of money. This also reminds me of what I wrote here: https://jerf.org/iri/post/2026/what_value_code_in_ai_era/ There's still value in code tested by the real world, and in an era of "free code" that may become even more true than it is now, rather than the initially-intuitive less valuable. There is no amount of testing you can do that will be equivalent to being in the real world, AI-empowered attackers and all. |
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| ▲ | mapontosevenths 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | >in principle, cybersecurity is advantage defender I disagree. The defender must be right every single time. The attacker only has to get lucky and thanks to scale they can do that every day all day in most large organizations. | | |
| ▲ | janalsncm 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | My understanding of defense in depth is that it is a hedge against this. By using multiple uncorrelated layers (e.g. the security guard shouldn’t get sleepier when the bank vault is unlocked) you are transforming a problem of “the defender has to get it right every time” into “the attacker has to get through each of the layers at the same time”. | |
| ▲ | NegativeK 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | The defender must be right every single time, and the attacker right only once. Until the attacker has initial access. Then the attacker needs to be right every single time. | |
| ▲ | traderj0e 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Well, the attacker has something to lose too. It's not like the defender has to be perfect or else attacks will just happen, it takes time/money to invest in attacking. | |
| ▲ | coldtea 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Not to mention an attacker motivated by financial gain doesn't even need a particular targer defender. One/any found available will do. | |
| ▲ | tptacek 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | The attacker and defender have different constant factors, and, up until very recently, constant factors dominated the analysis. |
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| ▲ | traderj0e 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | I agree for the type of attacks the article focuses on, but DDoS and social engineering seem like advantage attacker. |
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| ▲ | DerSaidin 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > Cybersecurity looks like proof of work now Imo, cybersecurity looks like formally verified systems now. You can't spend more tokens to find vulnerabilities if there are no vulnerabilities. |
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| ▲ | jldugger 10 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | I misread the title as "proof work" not "proof _of_ work." The analysis makes sense, but has kinda always been true. So mostly depressing rather than insightful. But part of me has been wondering for a while now whether proofs of correctness is the way out of the NVIDIA infinite money glitch. IDK if we're there yet but it's pretty much the only option I can imagine. | |
| ▲ | AlexCoventry 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | I think there's definitely more scope for ruling out vulnerabilities by implementing simpler designs and architectures. | |
| ▲ | deepsun 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Every formal verification depends highly on requirements. It's pretty easy to make a mistake in defining the task itself. In the end, you'd want to verify system behavior in real world, and it's impossible to completely define real world. You always make some assumptions/models to reason within, and it impossible to verify the assumptions are correct. | |
| ▲ | drdrey 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | good luck formally verifying everything | | |
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| ▲ | karmasimida 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Trusted software will be so expensive that it will effectively kill startups for infrastructure, unless they can prove they spent millions of dollars hardening their software. I predict the software ecosystem will change in two folds: internal software behind a firewall will become ever cheaper, but anything external facing will become exponential more expensive due to hacking concern. |
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| ▲ | riffic 6 hours ago | parent [-] | | those hacking concerns are just as valid inside as well as outside the firewall. | | |
| ▲ | karmasimida 6 hours ago | parent [-] | | You can enforce physical isolation to make sure hacking isn’t possible at least without some level of physical intrusion |
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| ▲ | rgmerk 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Maybe I’m missing something, but there’s also the idea that you don’t need to be perfectly secure, you just need to be secure enough that it’s not worth the effort to break in. In the case of crooks (rather than spooks) that often means your security has to be as good as your peers, because crooks will spend their time going with the best gain/effort ratio. |
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| ▲ | peterbell_nyc 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Why crack one website when you can crack all of them? For a well funded (especially nation state) attacker, if $1 in compute and effort returns $2 in ransoms, when it's possible to access another n x $1 of compute and if you don't hit diminishing returns or cashflow limitations, why wouldn't you just keep spending $'s until you p0wned all the systems? If there is only one bear, you just need to run faster than your friends. If there's a pack of them, it you need to start training much harder! | |
| ▲ | linkregister 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | The supply chain attack is interesting in that it doesn't require any marginal effort for an attacker to get an initial exploit for additional targets. Then the bottleneck is post-exploitation efforts and value of the targets. |
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| ▲ | weddpros 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Maybe code quality shouldn't be considered cybersecurity in the first place? When things are tagged "cybersecurity", compliance/budget/manager/dashboard/education/certification are the usual response... I don't think it would be an appropriate response for code quality issues, and it would likely escape the hands of the very people who can fix code quality issues, ie. developers. |
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| ▲ | Openpic 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| The PoW analogy completely ignores the actual hard part: fixing the stuff. It’s cool if you burn millions of tokens to find 1,000 bugs, but it's completely useless if your small team only has the bandwidth to safely patch 5 of them without taking down prod. |
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| ▲ | bmitch3020 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > If corporations that rely on OSS libraries spend to secure them with tokens, it’s likely going to be more secure than your budget allows. That's a really big "if". Particularly since so many companies don't even know all of the OSS they are using, and they often use OSS to offload the cost of maintaining it themselves. My hope is when the dust settles, we see more OSS SAST tools that are much better at detecting vulnerabilities. And even better if they can recommend fixes. OSS developers don't care about a 20 point chained attack across a company network, they just want to secure their one app. And if that app is hardened, perhaps that's the one link of the chain the attackers can't get past. |
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| ▲ | NegativeK 4 hours ago | parent [-] | | > Particularly since so many companies don't even know all of the OSS they are using, and they often use OSS to offload the cost of maintaining it themselves. Companies that market to the EU are going to need to find out real fast. |
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| ▲ | Briannaj an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| really, really? After how many years of "shifting left" and understanding the importance of having security involved in the dev and planning process, now the recommendation is to vibe code with human intuition, review then spend a million tokens to "harden"? I understand that isn't the point of the article and the article does make sense in its other parts. But that last paragraph leaves me scratching my head wondering if the author understands infosec at all? |
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| ▲ | danieltk76 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| There are never ending ways to make agents better at hacking. Defense is clearly behind. At my startup we are constantly coming up with new defensive measures to put our hacking agent Sable against, and I've determined that you basically need to be air gapped in the future for a chance of survival. A SOC of AI agents can't keep up with 1 AI hacker on a network that is even remotely stealthy. it is a disaster. wrote an article about it:
https://blog.vulnetic.ai/evading-an-ai-soc-with-sable-from-v... |
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| ▲ | dangero 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Agree with this — the economics have completely changed. Along these lines, we all need to re-scope our personal cybersecurity. For example, developers should no longer run dev environments on the same machine where they access passwords, messages, and emails — no external package installation on that box at all. SaaS Password Managers — assume your vault will be stolen from whichever provider is hosting it. Ubikeys will be more important than ever to airgap root auth credentials. | |
| ▲ | ofjcihen 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | “Sable began with an initial port scan of 10.10.1.10 and then authenticated to the target.” That would have started a P2 and woken up a senior IR responder anywhere that I’ve worked. Are you sure you’re running a realistic defender environment? |
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| ▲ | smj-edison 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I'm curious to see if formally verified software will get more popular. I'm somewhat doubtful, since getting programmers to learn formally math is hard (rightfully so, but still sad). But, if LLMs could take over the drudgery of writing proofs in a lot of the cases, there might be something there. |
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| ▲ | gjadi 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | How is getting proof one doesn't understand going to help build safer system? I want to believe formal methods can help, not because one doesn't have to think about it, but because the time freed from writing code can be spent on thinking on systems, architecture and proofs. | | |
| ▲ | smj-edison 8 hours ago | parent [-] | | That's a fair question, and looking at my post I now realize I have two independent points: 1. A proof mindset is really hard to learn. 2. Writing theorem definitions can be hard, but writing a proof can be even harder. So, if you could write just the definitions, and let an LLM handle all the tactics and steps, you could use more advanced techniques than just a SAT solver. So I guess LLMs only marginally help with (1), but they could potentially be a big help for (2), especially with more tedious steps. It would also allow one to use first order logic, and not just propositional logic (or dependant types if you're into that). |
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| ▲ | stringfood 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | I am so exhausted with being asked to learn difficult and frankly confusing topics - the fact that it is so hard and so humbling to learn these topics is exactly why everyone is so happy to let AI think about formal programming and I can focus on getting Jersey Shore season 2 loaded into my Plex server. It's the one where Pauly D breaks up with Shelli |
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| ▲ | codazoda 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > Classical software engineering would have you believe that dependencies are good (we’re building pyramids from bricks) Would it? I’m old school but I’ve never trusted these massive dependency chains. That’s a nit. We’re going to have to write more secure software, not just spend more. |
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| ▲ | c1ccccc1 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| If you have a limited budget of tokens as a defender, maybe the best thing to spend them on is not red teaming, but formalizing proofs of your code's security. Then the number of tokens required roughly scales with the amount and complexity of your code, instead of scaling with the number of tokens an attacker is willing to spend. (It's true that formalization can still have bugs in the definition of "secure" and doesn't work for everything, which means defenders will still probably have to allocate some of their token budget to red teaming.) |
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| ▲ | Jolter an hour ago | parent | next [-] | | Is it possible to prove security properties about a web application? | |
| ▲ | pxc 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | > If you have a limited budget of tokens as a defender, maybe the best thing to spend them on is not red teaming, but formalizing proofs of your code's security. You can only do this if you have a very clear sense of what your code should be doing. In most codebases I've ever worked with, frankly, no one has any idea. Red teaming as an approach always has value, but one important characteristic it has is that you can apply red teaming without demanding any changes at all to your code standards, or engineering culture (and maybe even your development processes). Most companies are working with a horrific sprawl of code, much of it legacy with little ownership. Red teaming, like buying tools and pushing for high coverage, is an attractive strategy to business leaders because it doesn't require them to tackle the hardest problems (development priorities, expertise, institutional knowledge, talent, retention) that factor into application security. Formal verification is unfortunately hard in the ways that companies who want to think of security as a simple resource allocation problem most likely can't really manage. I would love to work on projects/with teams that see formal verification as part of their overall correctness and security strategy. And maybe doing things right can be cheaper in the long run, including in terms of token burn. But I'm not sure this strategy will be applicable all that generally; some teams will never get there. |
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| ▲ | samuelknight 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I don't know about Mythos but the chart understates the capability of the current frontier models. GPT and Claude models available today are capable of Web app exploits, C2, and persistence in well under 10M tokens if you build a good harness. The benchmark might be a good apples-to-apples comparison but it is not showing capability in an absolute sense. |
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| ▲ | _pdp_ 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| All of the recent news read like something that could happen in a cyberpunk novel - AIs that defend vs AIs that do the attacks. I think were are already here. I wrote something about this, if you are interested: https://go.cbk.ai/security-agents-need-a-thinner-harness |
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| ▲ | jp0001 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I'm starting to think that Opus and Mythos are the same model (or collection of models) whereas Mythos has better backend workflows than Opus 4.6. I have not used Mythos, but at work I have a 5 figure monthly token budget to find vulnerabilities in closed-source code. I'm interested in mythos and will use it when it's available, but for now I'm trying to reverse engineer how I can get the same output with Opus 4.6 and the answer to me is more tokens. |
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| ▲ | nickdothutton 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Although not an escape from the "who can spend the most on tokens" arms race, there is also the possibility to make reverse engineering and executable analysis more difficult. This increases the attacker's token spend if nothing else. I wonder if dev teams will take an interest. Better to write good, high-quality, properly architected and tested software in the first place of course. Edited for typo. |
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| ▲ | carlcortright 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| My first thought seeing the title: "always has been" https://imgflip.com/memetemplate/Always-Has-Been |
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| ▲ | BloondAndDoom 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Security always had “defender’s dilemma” (an attacker needs to find one thing, but defender needs to fix everything) problem, nothing is new in terms of AI’s impact just application of different resources and units. |
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| ▲ | wheelerwj 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Cybersecurity has always been proof of work. Fuck, most of software development is proof of work by that logic. Thats why many attacks originate from countries were the cost of living is a fraction of the COL in the United States. They can throw more people at the problem because its cheaper to do so. But I don't really get the hype, we can fix all the vulnerabilities in the world but people are still going to pick up parking-lot-USBs and enter their credentials into phishing sites. |
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| ▲ | otiose 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Everything in modern corporate is just proof of work. Security is filling out forms. Engineering is just endless talking. Token-maxing is the new meta. |
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| ▲ | protocolture 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| >You don’t get points for being clever. You win by paying more. Really depends how consistently the LLMs are putting new novel vulnerabilities back in your production code for the other LLMs to discover. |
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| ▲ | singpolyma3 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| If you run this long enough presumably it will find every exploit and you patch them all and run it again to find exploits in your patches until there simply... Are no exploits? |
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| ▲ | zachdotai 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| we did a lot of thinking around this topic. and distilled it into a new way to dynamically evaluate the security posture of an AI system (which can apply for any system for that matter). we wrote some thoughts on this here: https://fabraix.com/blog/adversarial-cost-to-exploit |
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| ▲ | umvi 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > You don’t get points for being clever. You win by paying more. And yet... Wireguard was written by one guy while OpenVPN is written by a big team. One code base is orders of magnitude bigger than the other. Which should I bet LLMs will find more cybersecurity problems with? My vote is on OpenVPN despite it being the less clever and "more money thrown at" solution. So yes, I do think you get points for being clever, assuming you are competent. If you are clever enough to build a solution that's much smaller/simpler than your competition, you can also get away with spending less on cybersecurity audits (be they LLM tokens or not). |
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| ▲ | adriancooney 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Does this mean all code written before Mythos is a liability? |
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| ▲ | samuelknight 7 hours ago | parent [-] | | All code is a liability in general. All code written before LLMs and during the current in-between years are vulnerable to the next frontier model. Eventually we will settle into a new paradigm that correctly addresses the new balance of effort. |
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| ▲ | saidnooneever 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| people biting into what companies say about their own products had always been the frustration in cyber. now more than ever. nothing is better or worse, basically as its always been. if you think otherwise, stop ignoring the past. |
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| ▲ | saidnooneever 9 hours ago | parent [-] | | thanks for the down vote. i am not cynical though. how many billion dollar companies claim 109% detection rates and bullet proof security. i worked at one of these companies as they bought another and suffered through trying to make broken promises a reality. (they did it partly, an epic achievement. amazing engineers.) its a broken game. you are addicted to dopamine. think carefully and take good care of yourself |
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| ▲ | amarant 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Am I the only one who thinks this is exactly like it was before AI, when we used small batch hand crafted tokens made by organic engineers to find vulnerabilities? These mass-produced tokens are just cheaper... |
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| ▲ | aidenn0 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | Cheaper and more fungible. Companies pay lots of money for mediocre security audits. Most attackers aren't very good either. However it only takes one good attacker. If the attacker and defender are using the same AI model, then (up to some inflection point) whoever spends more finds the most vulnerabilities. |
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| ▲ | devmor 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| > to harden a system you need to spend more tokens discovering exploits than attackers will spend exploiting them. If we take this at face value, it's not that different than how a great deal of executive teams believe cybersecurity has worked up to today. "If we spend more on our engineering and infosec teams, we are less likely to get compromised". The only big difference I can see is timescale. If LLMs can find vulnerabilities and exploit them this easily (and I do take that with a grain of salt, because benchmarks are benchmarks), then you may lose your ass in minutes instead of after one dedicated cyber-explorer's monster energy fueled, 7-week traversal of your infrastructure. I am still far more concerned about social engineering than LLMs finding and exploiting secret back doors in most software. |
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| ▲ | Mistletoe 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Everything eventually turns into Bitcoin. That’s what I plan to see in the future years and decades. |
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| ▲ | sdevonoes 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Please. Are we going to rely now in Anthropic et al to secure our systems? Wasn’t enough to rely on them to build our systems? What’s next? To rely on them for monitoring and observability? What else? Design and mockups? |
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| ▲ | a34729t 8 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | If we rely on Anthropic to write our system, it's only natural to rely on them to secure it. Seriously, at the big tech companies were rapidly approaching all code being written by LLMs... so at least we have the close the security chain quickly. | |
| ▲ | tptacek 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | The nice thing about vulnerability research is that you either have a vulnerability or you don't. There's no such thing as a "slop vulnerability". | | |
| ▲ | lopityuity 8 hours ago | parent [-] | | "We burned 10 trillion tokens and the Amazon rain forest is now a desert, but our stochastic parrot discovered that if a user types '$-1dffj39fff%FFj$@#lfjf' 10 thousand times into a terminal that you can get privilege escalation on a Linux kernel from 10 years ago. The best part? We avoided paying anyone outside of the oligarchy for the discovery of this vulnerability." In your embarrassingly reductive binary vulnerability state worldview? Have. |
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| ▲ | TZubiri 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I remain skeptical, security is not a notch that you can turn, you can't shove more money or more tokens and make the thing more security. Not saying security will never be dominated by AI like it happened with chess, with maps, with Go, with language. But just braindead money to security pipeline? Skeptical. |
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| ▲ | cmrx64 9 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Dijkstra would shake his head at our folly. |
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| ▲ | heliumtera 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| In other news, token seller says tokens should be bought |
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| ▲ | Mistletoe 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Everything eventually turns into Bitcoin. That’s what I plan to see in the future years and decades. Satoshi just saw it first. |