Snake oil or genius? Crown Sterling tells its side of Black Hat controversyhttps://arstechnica.com/?post_type=post&p=1559757 …
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Replying to @thepacketrat
I see stuff like this and idgaf
I think of all the other people working hard in this sector without VC or advantage and what an ars interview would do for them
BH had to change keynote this year, many events are the same. All of it is deliberate even sales pitches1 reply 0 retweets 7 likes -
Replying to @MlleLicious
So, I gotta tell you... there are so many more layers to this than the content of that interview. [T]hey [H]ave [E]very [R]eason [A] [N]ew [O]rganization [S]hould to be noticed. If you know what I mean.
3 replies 0 retweets 31 likes -
Replying to @thepacketrat @MlleLicious
Hopefully part 2 covers the magic crystals they're selling. Not joking. Seriously though, part 1 repeated a lot of the marketing copy and gives it credence. Someone reading this might actually believe it. Nobody credible outside their company called this anything but Snake Oil.
1 reply 0 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @sweis @MlleLicious
Since this was written for an Ars Technica audience, I assumed that our readers could tell by my repeatedly pointing out of actual facts that this guy might be lying, but I can't say he's lying without getting legal involved.
1 reply 0 retweets 16 likes -
I had kinda assumed it was all delusion until this "The only difference there is we did a demonstration right after the presentation decrypting RSA encryption", I can't think of any explanation for that other than dishonesty?
1 reply 0 retweets 6 likes -
They're demonstrating on 512-bit keys, which anyone can do with a laptop.
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
Yeah obviously, but using GNFS or whatever would be dishonest, not delusional.
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