Born and raised in Manila;
Breaker of codes;
handler of incidents;
administrator of systems;
hacker of websites;
crafter of policies;
reanimator of dead computers;
first of his name.
My friend Debbie, a classmate from way back in Elementrary and High School invited me again to their town fiesta at Mataas na Kahoy, Batangas City. Having previously visited their place, I promptly brought wifey and kiddo with me and had lunch there. The visit was capped by a sumptuous lunch and the main highlight of the meal was a boneless lechon by Dante's Lechon de Kahoy . As with our other visits, I was still in awe at the place, the beauty of which is accentuated by the cool Tagaytay-level cool wind. To get a feel of the place, just click on the video above. A day well spent with my family and friend at a very relaxing place.
We live in such wonderful times. More and more people are exposed to technology that, years ago, were too expensive a few years ago. Information is now available to a lot more people thanks to the high adoption rate of smartphones, tablets and laptops. Students never had it so good because I still remember having to commute to different libraries in order to write research papers. People who need to do banking can do a lot of financial transactions simply by downloading and using the mobile banking applications of their respective banks. Mobile payment platforms are slowly replacing the need to carry cash in order to pay for their groceries, medicines, monthly bills etc. However, with all these conveniences, comes danger. Hackers and fraudsters are taking advantage of this to take advantage of people who are not-too-savvy with technology to steal information and even money. Text messages purporting to come from government agencies, dubious foundations even famous peopl
A lot has happened since the Philippine SIM Registration Act has been implemented. There are people who are for and against its implementation. That is an issue that can only be resolved in time. However there is a bigger issue has stemmed from it. The law is now being leveraged by threat actors that seeks to gather personal information from their potential victims. While reviewing my SPAM folder for legitimate messages that have slipped into the cracks, I noticed this interesting sender. A casual look makes it appear as if it came from GCash, a service I use for my digital wallet needs. Although the display name says "admin@gcashmobile.com", it was sent "via sendgrid". Just to let you know, legitimate emails from GCash comes from the "@gcash.com" email domain so this is already a big red flag. Here is the body of the message: Looks convincing, right? However, one thing that everyone should be aware of is this: Companies will always refer to you b
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