rsobers | 9 years ago | on: Cylance Discloses Voting Machine Vulnerability
rsobers's comments
rsobers | 9 years ago | on: The 2016 Election
1. A rich and powerful person parroting Trump's evil statements --> ban from YC.
2. A rich and powerful person helping put Trump in a position to turn his evil statements into reality for an entire country --> No ban from YC.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Segment Sources – Load Salesforce, Zendesk, Stripe into Redshift and Postgres
Doing this right now manually piping data into PostgreSQL via Heroku and using Chartio to visualize and query.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Show HN: Building a Market for Penetration Testing
I'd just want more proof than "Bob says he does a bang-up job" -- there's so much incest in enterprise, recommendations and upvotes mean nothing.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Show HN: Building a Market for Penetration Testing
But why must demonstration of skill be limited to elite red-team style pentesting? You could devise challenges geared at demonstrating all sorts of knowledge (HIPAA, PCI, websec) basic or advanced.
If you've seen the sad state of PCI audits in particular these days, you'll get my drift. I think there's a huge opportunity here to raise the quality bar with your marketplace.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Show HN: Building a Market for Penetration Testing
I think what patio11 is doing with Starfighters.io is orders of magnitude better. Run developers through a gambit of supremely difficult tests via a fun CTF-type game and pair the best hackers with the highest enterprise bidder. Works not just for pentesters, but all devs really.
Also, I know where to get the best pentesters because they're listed on all the top companies' bug bounty pages. It's proof of skill I'm after, not some Gartner-esque gatekeeper telling me who's best because they've "background checked" them.
Give me a system more like StackOverflow or Starfighters where I can see the work. Not something subjective like eBay or Yelp, which can be easily gamed.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Twitter announces layoffs
> Moments, which we launched last week, is a great beginning.
To:
> Moments, which we launched last week, illustrates the problem. It missed the mark.
I honestly don't think Jack or Ev think Moments, in its current incarnation, embodies what Twitter is or should be.
rsobers | 10 years ago | on: Why Fogbugz lost to Jira
Atlassian has over 1,100 employees. When I was at Fog Creek we had ~30.
So if we're talking about profit per employee, I can assure you the people who built FogBugz don't feel like they've lost anything.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: AeroFS is now free up to 30 users
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Uber’s Worst Screw-Ups
Revolutionary, fast-growing, successful companies are going to be scrutinized no matter what. It's up to the Uber exec and PR teams to decide when to put on the brakes--at the expense of growth--to avoid it.
Certainly there are other groundbreaking companies (e.g., SpaceX) that haven't found themselves in Uber's position, and it's likely due to their leadership, not their ability or willingness to pay off journalists.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Uber VP: we could spend $1M to take revenge on journalists
Also, those articles you linked to are examples of journalists providing commentary around direct quotes or facts/reports about the company. AFAIK, Sarah Lacy didn't dig up and expose personal information about people at Uber nor their families.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Lecture 12: Building for the Enterprise
The numbers don't lie: "Box’s average customer value (ACV) is $3,653, much lower than the median of 59,600." [1]
They're selling "enterprise" software at SMB price points.
Setting aside security concerns, getting a big enterprise to move a substantial part of their IT infrastructure to the cloud is a logistical nightmare. Perhaps they underestimated this.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: What is your daily rate?
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Kevin Rose’s New App Tiiny Lets You Share Photos That Disappear in 24 Hours
> [North] has a peculiar strategy. Rather than languish on building one app, North is trying to use a small team of about 3 people to launch a new mobile app every three months.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Tech Has a Depression Problem
But when you strive for hyper-ambitious outcomes, whether it be selling your company for $2B, trying to change the world, or training to become a world champion fighter, you're likely going to suffer some injuries that you might not fully recover from.
I feel for all the people who are depressed AND struggling to find their next meal--working in fast food or in factories, being treated as if they were less-than-human.
I find it super-hard to get worked up when we founders and startup employees get to have health insurance, good salaries, free food and education, and a chance to win the lottery.
rsobers | 11 years ago | on: Uber's playbook for sabotaging Lyft
Regardless of whether you agree w/ tactics, the attitude and behavior leaves a bad taste.
rsobers | 12 years ago | on: Instagram Dropping Foursquare for Facebook Places
rsobers | 12 years ago | on: Founders with Kids
When your spouse doesn't work, you can often pull off late nights knowing your kids and house are under control. But when both parents have high-stakes jobs it's super hard because you're almost always subject to a hard stop.
It's also a mindset thing--keeping your startup's problems in your head and trying to think and plan for the family (who has practice this weekend? is the preschool application in? who's meeting the plumber today? etc.).
rsobers | 12 years ago | on: Baremetrics for Buffer
rsobers | 12 years ago | on: Baremetrics for Buffer