The Storm May 14, 2026 david

Web Hackers

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David · 00:00:00

Here's an idea. We need a token-based reward system for bounties. For this sort of thing that I experienced tonight. I mean, there are security services for defending your websites. Lots of different options. But I'm talking about paying someone to go on the offensive. Monitoring and then actively seeking and trying to find the IP address or browser fingerprints or whatever. Who's responsible to whatever degree it is possible.

Someone could specialize in doing this with the AI tools that are coming out. And basically make a living off of operating many small-time bounty contracts. For small-time bounties. For small-time offenses like this. They wouldn't catch everyone, but if this became popular, it would become too risky for most people to engage in this kind of ridiculous behavior. I don't want to spend my time trying to develop a project like that, but that's a younger man's game. Collecting venture capital and rolling out blockchain projects. But it's wide open. Hell, it should probably be subsidized. We all pay enough in taxes.

Do people want the problem solved? Do you think it's going to be solved by causing everyone to put their government ID into a computer to log in? No. That's not going to solve it. Might help some. What you need is an offensive unit. That is intimidating. It won't stop it. Nothing ever will stop it completely. I don't think. We don't want to go down that road. Too much freedom will be eliminated.

Now, I'm not claiming I have the skills to do this, but there are people who do. A hundred percent. And I think that they probably many of them have day jobs, but they prefer to be doing this full time if they could just get paid well enough for it. You government people want this problem solved? You can solve it with taxpayers. I don't think we should stand for this shit anymore.

If somebody was coming to my house in the middle of the day and checking all the doors and windows and floors and ceilings for entry points, that would be actionable by the local authorities. I mean, not here in Houston. Apparently, they don't do anything if you go and make reports. Sorry, people. I'm not going to stop talking shit about you until somebody calls me back about my harassment. It's fucking ridiculous. You're going to make me come down to the police station a third fucking time? Because I'm going to. At some point, I'm coming back down there.

But anyways, this isn't about that. Our digital properties should be easier to secure. And the funds are there to pay teams of people who have the ability to. To at least potentially track down a sizable percentage of who's doing this. Nobody fucking listens to me.

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David · 00:00:00

I mean, these intelligence agencies have access to all of our data. Why are we not holding them responsible to catching people who do this shit? It's not like they're going to release the reins they have on this data. It's not going to happen, people. But don't you think we should hold them quite a bit more tightly responsible for stopping this kind of bullshit?

I mean, shouldn't somebody knock on their door and say, Hey, you guys have access to all of the data going through all of the internet trunks everywhere through Prism. What are you fucking doing to stop cybercrime? Are you sitting over there with your thumbs up your ass? Are you using the FISA court system to target individuals who don't fucking deserve it instead? Fucking clown world. Run by fucking clowns and populated by clowns. Fucking clowns. For the most part. Sorry. It's fucking true.

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David · 00:00:00

Oh hell, I'm just going to let it rip tonight. Here's another thought, or a concern. How can we allow justices that have no fucking idea how this technology works to rule on cases like this? They got to be trained from ground zero or ground 20% every time a new case starts? Sorry people, it's moving too fast now because of AI. They're obsolete already for much of this stuff that's emerging. What are y'all going to do about that? Y'all got your thumbs up your ass over there in the legal system too? Bunch of justices sitting on benches who ain't got a fucking shred of expertise in this kind of technology area? Look, it's a fucking joke. You people are a fucking joke.

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A newly-published reference site, plausibleadmission.org, drew four distinct scanners within hours of its first TLS certificate going live — a CT-log-watching credentials scraper from a bulletproof-hosting cluster, a LeakIX indexing pass, a curated curl recon run, and a ChatGPT-User-vectored LLM-assisted probe. Three videos of the evening reaction and a forensic analysis the next morning.

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