I do the same thing - it's a brag book. I make sure nothing proprietary goes into it but it always stays at home. Mostly, I keep it because I use it as a source of information when I update my resume' every few months.
drwho
Easily. A lot of people aren't capable of (and I'm not trying to spin a pun here, I swear) reflection anymore.
Because CEOs are actual people, while the rest of us are just proles and don't matter.
cdparanoia. Still do.
Waah. My hydraulics leak for them.
Our security@ address at $dayjob gets about that many a month. Lots of folks blindly sending bug reports and "politely requesting a finder's fee for disclosing properly."
The shit of it is, they'll all for stuff we don't even use. IIS vuln reports when we only use Apache. Stuff like that.
Minor victories on Sunday (got VPN access to my home net working again), but the rest of the week has been a slog through pig shit and concrete so far.
I think I still have a copy of that book in a box somewhere. I know I have a scanned copy in my archive. Lots of fun.
Low hundreds of billions?
They sure make the task of keeping an eye on the chuds easier. Their OPSEC eats donkey ass.
Why would they hide anymore? They figure they won. No sense in not taking advantage of everything that implies.
Depends on whether or not they have local phys.sec and how much of an asshole they want to be.