Tim Nash

@tnash
21 Followers
40 Following
46 Posts
34SP.com Platform Lead, I do Dev/Sec/Ops and occasionally talk about it.
Bloghttps://timnash.co.uk
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/tnash
Workhttps://www.34sp.com

Nursery: we need a safe word for if yourselves are not picking her up.

Me: No problem, generates random 16 digit string.

Nursery: we were thinking something simple like Apples.

Me: looks at what clearly is a book of kids safe words and notes how many fruit there are.

Hello Pals,

I'm looking for a new challenge. I'm looking to go back into a UX and design role, but I'm also into front-end development, so a hybrid role could work too.

I made a ​page describing what I'm looking for: https://hankchizljaw.io/hire-me

Boosts are very much welcomed, thank you 🙂

Hire me - HankChizlJaw

@[email protected] wait what, where you going?
@hankchizljaw @magicroundabout @mike My wife has an iPhone always has I switched to android a good few years ago. A lot of the niggles I had have gone or been wiped from my eyes. The interesting thing I still had iPhone envy till recently now she has OnePlus envy. Though admittently I have a large screen phone
Not In Our Name: Why European Creators Should Oppose the EU's Proposal To Limit Linking and Censor The Internet

The European Copyright Directive vote is in three days and it will be a doozy: what was once a largely uncontroversial grab bag of fixes to copyright is now a political firestorm, thanks to the actions of Axel Voss, the German MEP who changed the Directive at the last minute, sneaking in two widely...

@hankchizljaw
@mike
To save time, nope it's huge and nope it's not happening.

@magicroundabout
I did, though tempered with why it's paradigm breaking and how to use it combined with passphrases.

Social engineering is an interesting topic, hardest part even more then normal is convincing people to listen without getting clickybaity titles

10 of the silliest social engineering tricks and how you fell for them

@meredevelopment Thats an interesting idea, its also a huge amount of work if no one reads it. At least in a usergroup they can't escape :p

@magicroundabout When not if a site is hacked, custom code was written and the owners of the site are taken to court for the data breach which will occur more often.

They will come to the agency and look to recoup the costs. Unless the agency can demonstrate it took at least the most basic steps in secure, mapping and identifying treats and provided advice to the owners, they are going to be up shit creek without a paddle.

@magicroundabout the problem is these should be standard dev things. Or at least have enough knowledge to choose to not do so and understand the risks and liabilities.

I honestly think no senior or lead developer at an agency should not have at least the basics of these talks down and as such should be well in the mid dev level.