blog.david.ulevitch.com
Yahoo!
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/yahoo
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. July 18, 2012. By now, you’ve read the news. Marissa Meyer is Yahoo! Yahoo is many things to many people, but it only needs to be one thing A viable alternative to Google: Ads, Search, Gmail. The rest is noise. I put ads first, before search, because I think it’s an area where Yahoo! Marissa, good luck. I’m rooting for you. We all are.
blog.david.ulevitch.com
Pulling the alarm doesn’t cause a fire
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/pulling-the-alarm-doesnt-cause-a-fire
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. June 5, 2012. Pulling the alarm doesn’t cause a fire. Wrote that If you haven’t raised money yet, lower your expectations for fundraising. He attributes this positions to a conversation he had with a promenant investor who seemed sure the bad performance of the Facebook IPO will hurt the funding market for earlier stage startups. Every time Facebook raised money, someone sat on the sidelines arguing the valuation was too high. They were wrong, every time. As fo...
blog.david.ulevitch.com
Symantec and Websense
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/symantec
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. July 26, 2012. This past weekend I ended my TechCrunch guest post about disruption in the security space. With these words: But change is coming, and it’s going to be ugly for the old guard. I didn’t know how fast it would start, or how ugly it would be. It’s starting now, and it’s uglier than I imagined. I wish Symantec good luck. They will need it. Every major security company today will cease to exist or be relevant in the next 3-5 years.
blog.david.ulevitch.com
This is what I live for.
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/this-is-what-i-live-for
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. July 2, 2012. This is what I live for. It’s Monday, July 2nd. OpenDNS is absolutely on fire. By 8am this morning, I think there were at least a dozen folks buzzing around the office hard at work. Or how we will become the largest security company in the world, but some are starting to figure it out, and that’s really exciting. For six years we’ve been building this company, and pieces of the puzzle are starting to fall into place. As we look to hire our 100...
blog.david.ulevitch.com
Fact: As your company’s success grows, so does the number of co-founders LinkedIn claims you had.
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/rule-n-as-your-companys-success-grows-so-does-the-number-of-cofounders-linkedin-claims-you-have
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. May 10, 2012. Fact: As your company’s success grows, so does the number of co-founders LinkedIn claims you had. Also, just discovered some guy named @dom. Claims to be a Twitter Co-Founder here: [ http:/ www.youtube.com/watch? Also, that video is more bubblicious than anything I’ve seen yet. What a tremendous waste of misguided energy. And now I blog.
blog.david.ulevitch.com
Page 2
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/page/2
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. Founder and CEO of @OpenDNS. I play the long game. May 1, 2012. And now I blog. So @dcurtis set me up with a blog. My plan is to write at least once per week. My goals are as follows:. Improve my writing by writing regularly. Improve my creative thought process by writing regularly. Share my perspectives on recurring themes I see in the various SF, startup, security industry and DNS ecosystems. I don’t plan to enable comments. Why? Continue reading →.
blog.david.ulevitch.com
It’s not that hard.
http://blog.david.ulevitch.com/its-not-that-hard
Per veritatem vis is writing on the Svbtle. November 20, 2012. It’s not that hard. I wrote a draft over somewhere else Should probably have posted it here, which I’ll do next time. We reached for the stars, acted like men, aspired to intelligence. And we didn’t belittle it.
arcbound.blogspot.com
Arcbound Dimension
http://arcbound.blogspot.com/2008/12/secret-geek-team-hacks-back-defends.html
Wednesday, December 03, 2008. Secret Geek A-Team Hacks Back, Defends Worldwide Web. Kaminsky was alone in his Seattle apartment when he discovered a security vulnerability that could leave banks, online retailers, and ISPs open to hackers. In June 2005,. Did it well. He had a knack for breaking thingsâ bones and software alike. But now, laid up in bed, he couldn't think clearly. His mind drifted. Running hadn't worked out so well. Should he buy a stationary bike? Pay for Starbucks Wi-Fi. He could now sup...
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