Let’s talk about something serious — not in a boring, policy-wonk kind of way, but in a “we should actually care about this before things go south” kind of way. Because while we’re busy arguing online, stuck in traffic, or watching another Senate hearing that feels more like a teleserye, the rest of the world is playing 4D chess with
Tag: cyber threats
Short answer: Yes. Long answer: LOL, definitely yes. Let’s go back in time — before TikTok, before Wi-Fi, before we were arguing with strangers in the comments section of anything. We’re talking 1960s to 1980s, when the Internet (then called ARPANET) was just a bunch of universities and nerds trying to make computers talk to each other across wires and
Have you ever read something that feels like the global version of your family group chat—chaotic, full of drama, and somehow still functional? That’s how I felt digging through the ODNI’s 2025 Annual Threat Assessment (link here) right after publishing The Global Frenemies Report You Didn’t Know You Needed. Let’s just say the vibes matched. If my first post was
So the U.S. Intelligence Community dropped their 2025 Annual Threat Assessment — aka the “here’s who’s causing us migraines this year” report — and it’s a wild ride. Think of it like the world’s most serious group chat, where the ODNI (Office of the Director of National Intelligence) spills the tea on all the countries and chaos threatening America’s peace
When a few government websites got defaced, it wasn’t just a prank—it was a wake-up call that the Philippines is already caught in the crosshairs of a silent cyber war. I didn’t get hacked. No virus took down my PC. No ransomware locked up my files. But when I saw a few Philippine government websites defaced—replaced with foreign symbols, strange