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Nihal Ahmed
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Nihal Ahmed

Nihal Ahmed

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14 posts
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Nihal Ahmed
Nihal Ahmed  
8 w

Over the past week, the hacking world has reminded us how fragile our digital lives are. A zero-day in Cisco’s firewall appliances let attackers gain deep persistence — surviving reboots and slipping past basic checks. When critical network gear can be quietly hijacked, it’s no longer a theoretical risk but a direct threat to governments, businesses, and the everyday flow of data.

Meanwhile, WestJet revealed a breach affecting more than a million passengers, with personal and travel documents exposed. Identity theft is a goldmine for cybercriminals, and this breach shows how one compromise can ripple for years. Many such attacks succeed not just through code, but through people — with social engineering and manipulation opening the door.

Even more troubling is the shift in tactics. Hackers increasingly use “living-off-the-land” methods, hiding inside trusted system tools, while companies often stay silent about breaches. Stealth, data theft, and secrecy combine into a dangerous new normal. The challenge isn’t only stronger defenses, but a culture of transparency and resilience to keep pace with those exploiting the cracks.

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Nihal Ahmed
Nihal Ahmed    Heeft zijn profielfoto gewijzigd
8 w

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Nihal Ahmed
Nihal Ahmed  
13 w

A decade ago, “space travel” sounded like science fiction. ?
Now billionaires are racing to send tourists above the clouds, and satellites are giving internet to remote villages.

Here’s the crazy part: your Uber, your GPS, your weather forecast—they all depend on space tech quietly working above your head. ?

The future isn’t just happening on Earth anymore. It’s happening in orbit.

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Nihal Ahmed
Nihal Ahmed  
13 w

Ever notice how we check our phones without even knowing why?
You unlock it… scroll a bit… lock it again… 2 minutes later, repeat. ?

It’s wild how the device that was supposed to “save us time” now eats up most of it.
Not saying phones are bad—but maybe we should control them instead of letting them control us.

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Nihal Ahmed
Nihal Ahmed  
13 w

If you grew up in the 90s, you remember the internet sounding like this: “beeeep… bzzzz… krrrhhkk…” ??

Fast forward—now AI can write songs, paint pictures, and answer your late-night questions.

In one lifetime, we’ve gone from:
?️ Waiting 10 minutes for a page to load…
to
? Asking machines for life advice in real time.

That’s not just progress.
That’s a revolution happening in front of our eyes.

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