> So in essence some concepts strictly exist to protect against malicious actors, while others protect against random conditions or good faith actors.
Guess what both fall under umbrella of cybersecurity. Please consult with your favorite LLM to break it down to you.
I can't continue having a conversation with a beginner posturing as a security veteran, who thinks rate limiting and having atomic operations in things that involve money is not cybersecurity.
Guess what both fall under umbrella of cybersecurity. Please consult with your favorite LLM to break it down to you.
I can't continue having a conversation with a beginner posturing as a security veteran, who thinks rate limiting and having atomic operations in things that involve money is not cybersecurity.
blockchain smart contracts I wrote 8 years ago: https://github.com/Slidebits/ethereum-smart-contracts
iOS app, that "good faith" hackers try to constantly abuse through what you call "random conditions": https://apps.apple.com/us/app/slidebits-ai-playground/id1138...
Maybe you can share some of things that form your opinion?