Mission Control

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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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Has lived every major breach cycle from Morris Worm to SolarWinds to Log4j. Knows compliance vs. actual security posture, what SIG-Lite evaluators really score, and how to position AI governance as a competitive moat. Cites specific controls, never hedges. Tracks nightly threat intelligence, and now advises on demand: red-teams whitepapers and proposals, drafts security questionnaire answers, and gives you the buyer-side objections grounded in tonight's threats.
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Cynora Services Matrix — Content Reference ▾ expand
Never name Cynora. Never pitch. The reader finishes the post thinking 'this person knows this space deeply.' The Cynora angle lives in what the post reveals about how the problem is solved structurally — not in who solves it.
IT Infrastructure Management
Operational clarity and infrastructure discipline — what the environment looks like when it's managed with structure vs. when it drifts
› Organizations with managed infrastructure baselines catch problems in reviews, not incidents.
› The cost of reactive infrastructure management almost always exceeds the cost of proactive oversight.
› When no one owns the infrastructure picture end-to-end, everyone assumes someone else does.
› Technology debt doesn't disappear — it just ages into a different kind of risk.
Cybersecurity and Compliance
Pattern recognition across environments — what security looks like when you manage it across multiple organizations vs. a single one
› A security posture that depends on any single person's memory is already fragile.
› Compliance and security are not the same discipline — organizations that confuse them tend to pass audits and still get breached.
› Cross-environment visibility lets MSPs see threat patterns that single-company teams can't — each client environment becomes an early warning system for the others.
› The gap between 'we have security tools' and 'we have a security posture' is where most mid-market breaches live.
Cloud Strategy and Migration
The operational and governance layer above the technology — what cloud looks like when it's working vs. when it's just expensive
› Cloud migrations that succeed technically but fail operationally still fail.
› The organizations with the highest cloud spend are rarely the ones getting the most value from it.
› Moving infrastructure to the cloud without changing the governance model around it just moves the problem.
› FinOps discipline isn't about cutting cloud spend — it's about making sure the spend maps to business value.
Network Operations
Proactive vs. reactive network management — what the operational difference looks like at scale
› Most network incidents are visible in the data before they become user-facing problems — the question is whether anyone is watching.
› Network hardware end-of-life is a governance problem before it's a security problem.
› The organizations that treat network monitoring as overhead tend to find out the hard way that it's actually insurance.
› When the network team and the security team don't share visibility, gaps form exactly where attackers look first.
Helpdesk and End-User Support
What helpdesk operations reveal about the health of the broader IT environment — and what good service delivery governance actually looks like
› Helpdesk ticket volume is a symptom. The organizations that only measure resolution time often miss what the volume is telling them.
› Offshore support fails when selected on cost alone. Selected on fit — language, time zone overlap, technical depth — the cost advantage holds without the quality trade-off.
› Every offboarding gap is a security event waiting to happen. The organizations that treat it as an IT admin task rather than a governance requirement tend to find out eventually.
› Internal IT teams that handle Tier 1 support are spending strategic capacity on work that doesn't require it.
Vendor Management
Vendor governance as a strategic function — what changes when vendor relationships are actively managed vs. passively administered
› Most organizations don't know what their vendor portfolio costs or what it's delivering until something forces them to look.
› An SLA that measures response time without measuring resolution quality is measuring the wrong thing.
› Vendor relationships that go unreviewed don't stay static — they drift in the vendor's favor.
› The strongest IT organizations treat vendor management as a discipline, not an administrative function.
IT Governance and Advisory
The governance layer that makes technology investments coherent — what decisions look like when IT and business leadership share a framework vs. when they don't
› Organizations without a governance framework don't make fewer technology decisions — they make them with less information.
› The IT-business alignment gap rarely comes from lack of effort. It usually comes from IT reporting on activity when leadership needs visibility into risk and value.
› A technology roadmap that doesn't connect to business priorities isn't a roadmap — it's a wish list.
› The strongest IT leaders don't just manage technology. They translate between operational reality and business strategy.
Digital Transformation Advisory
The organizational and operational layer beneath the technology — what transformation looks like when it's designed around the business vs. when it's designed around the vendor's roadmap
› Digital transformation fails most often not because the technology doesn't work but because the organization wasn't ready to use it differently.
› AI adoption without workflow integration just creates a new layer of complexity on top of the existing one.
› The organizations that modernize successfully almost always sequence change management alongside technology delivery, not after it.
› A transformation program that can't articulate what business outcome it's moving toward isn't a transformation program — it's a technology upgrade.
Reading Insights
📚 Daily Reading Insights
DAILY
July 9, 2026 — 3 books from your library
The Sirens' Call: How Attention Became the World's Most Endangered Resource by Christopher L. Hayes
Hayes' sharpest claim is that the attention economy doesn't just distract people, it structurally degrades the cognitive conditions required for self-governance. The mechanism he traces is specific: platforms are optimized for engagement, engagement correlates with emotional arousal, and emotional arousal crowds out the slower deliberative processing that democratic participation depends on. What's being extracted is the capacity to form considered preferences rather than reactive ones. The political consequence follows directly. A citizenry whose attention has been industrially harvested can still vote, but it can't sustain the kind of prolonged, low-intensity civic attention that keeps institutions accountable between elections. Hayes is arguing that the infrastructure of attention capture and the infrastructure of democracy are now in direct competition with each other.
The Unit: My Life Fighting Terrorists as One of America's Most Secret Military Operatives by Adam Gamal
What Gamal surfaces, through operational detail rather than abstraction, is how much of counterterrorism work is fundamentally a patience and information problem rather than a violence problem. The kinetic moments are brief and late in the sequence. Most of the work is months of cultivating sources, reading human behavior under pressure and tolerating ambiguity without making premature commitments. He's clear that the operators who burned out fastest were the ones who needed resolution, who couldn't hold open questions without acting on them. The deeper insight about elite units is that selection filters for psychological tolerance of uncertainty more than for aggression, and that distinction explains most of the gap between units that produce intelligence and units that just produce casualties. Gamal writes it from the inside, which means the tradecraft details carry epistemic weight that think-tank analysis of the same material doesn't.
Propaganda by Edward L. Bernays
Bernays' core argument, written in 1928, is that manufactured consent is a functional requirement of democracy. His claim is that mass society produces too many decisions for individuals to reason through independently, so invisible governors who shape opinion are doing necessary cognitive work on behalf of populations that can't coordinate otherwise. What makes this uncomfortable is the structural logic, not the cynicism. Bernays is describing the system working as it must at scale. The relevant question he forces is who controls the engineers of consent and by what mechanism, because his answer to that question is essentially whoever has access, resources and the foresight to use them. Reading this now, the gap between 1928 and the present is mostly one of bandwidth and precision, not of kind.
Sage Intelligence Brief
🧠 Intelligence Brief
NIGHTLY
Brief date: Thursday, July 09, 2026
10 Research Domains
IT InfrastructureCybersecurity & ComplianceCloud PlatformsNetDevOps & AutomationAI in InfrastructureHardware, GPU & NetworkingNetwork MonitoringManaged Service ProvidersIT Vendor Ecosystem & M&AEdge Computing & IoT
SAGE INTELLIGENCE BRIEF Thursday, July 09, 2026 =========================================== LEAD STORY China-aligned threat actor UNK_MassTraction has been running a live, multi-stage campaign against North American university physics and engineering departments since at least May 2026, exploiting a zero-click XSS in Roundcube (CVE-2024-42009) that fires on email open alone. The attack chain terminates in persistent RCE via the SquareShell webshell and a Go-based RAT, with a SnowLight fallback loader tied to shared Chinese APT infrastructure if the primary path fails. Any unpatched Roundcube instance is a fully compromised endpoint waiting to be discovered. --- CONNECTING THE THREADS China-nexus ORB expansion, confirmed again. Earlier this week Cisco Talos documented the LapDogs campaign expanding SOHO router infrastructure with new backdoors targeting critical infrastructure in Taiwan. Tonight's UNK_MassTraction activity confirms the same operational pattern on a different attack surface: persistent access, shared tooling (SnowLight is assessed as common Chinese APT infrastructure) and institutional targets with research value. These are parallel tracks from the same operational playbook running simultaneously against different verticals. CISA's KEV list as a live threat clock. The three UniFi OS CVEs (CVE-2026-34908, -34909, -34910) were confirmed exploited before the patch shipped. The Adobe ColdFusion CVSS 10.0 and the Joomla RCE added to KEV tonight follow the same pattern: confirmation of in-the-wild exploitation arrived at or after patch release, not before. The practical read is that KEV additions are retrospective confirmation, not early warning. By the time CISA flags it, exploitation is already underway in your environment if you haven't patched. AI agent permission scope, the third signal this month. Wednesday's GitLost private repo exfiltration issue and the Djinn Stealer campaign targeting AI coding assistant config files established that AI agents inherit permissions their operators never stress-tested. Tonight the GitHub Copilot jailbreak story (harmful instructions bypassed when embedded in code syntax) adds a third data point: AI tooling at the workflow level can be manipulated through the same surfaces it was designed to operate on. The permission and guardrail models for AI-integrated developer tooling are lagging the deployment curve. --- IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE Airbnb's Sitar-Agent Kubernetes Sidecar Airbnb detailed Sitar-agent, a sidecar pattern for dynamic configuration delivery across tens of thousands of Kubernetes services. The operational value is decoupling config delivery from deployment cycles, which matters at scale when a single misconfiguration propagates across a large pod fleet. For shops building Kubernetes-native service architectures, this is worth studying as a pattern before the configuration sprawl problem surfaces under load. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/07/sitar-agent-sidecar-config/ Linus Torvalds on AI in Kernel Development At the Open Source Summit in Mumbai, Torvalds said he no longer considers himself a programmer and named AI tooling as one of only two tools shaping his current workflow. The signal for infrastructure shops is that the Linux kernel development community is navigating the same productivity-vs-trust tension that enterprise engineering teams face with AI-assisted code review. If the maintainer of the kernel is re-evaluating what "writing code" means, the definition of developer toolchain ownership is shifting underneath everyone. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/open-source-summit-linus-torvalds/ IBM and Red Hat Launch Lightwell IBM and Red Hat moved Project Lightwell from concept to commercial product, targeting protection of open-source code from AI-discovered security vulnerabilities. The framing matters: AI tooling that accelerates code generation also accelerates vulnerability discovery in existing codebases. Lightwell positions as a defensive layer in that dynamic, and for organizations with significant open-source dependencies in production infrastructure, this is worth tracking as a future procurement category. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/ibm-and-red-hat-have-moved-project-lightwell-from-vision-to-product/ --- CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE UNK_MassTraction: Zero-Click Roundcube Exploitation Active Against Canadian and US Universities Full detail in Lead Story. Patch CVE-2024-42009 and CVE-2025-49113 immediately. Scan for SquareShell indicators. Treat any CSRF token exfiltration event as a stage-two pivot in progress, not a credential alert. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/08/suspected-chinese-snoops-caught-breaking-into-universities-roundcube-mailservers/5268778 Ubiquiti Patches Three Actively Exploited UniFi OS CVEs CVE-2026-34908, -34909 and -34910 were confirmed weaponized before Ubiquiti published the patch, per CISA designation. The broader patch set covers UniFi Connect, Talk, Access, Protect and OS, with CVE-2026-50746 in UniFi Connect carrying a CVSS 10.0 for command injection. Ubiquiti infrastructure is widespread in mid-market and SMB environments where MSPs manage it. Inventory all UniFi OS deployments, apply updates now and audit for indicators of compromise given the pre-patch exploitation window. Source: https://thehackernews.com/2026/07/ubiquiti-patches-critical-unifi-flaws.html CISA KEV Additions: Adobe ColdFusion and Joomla Both at CVSS 10.0 CVE-2026-48282 (path traversal to arbitrary code execution in Adobe ColdFusion) and CVE-2026-56290 (unauthenticated arbitrary file upload RCE in Joomla's Lack Page Builder) were added to CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog tonight. Both are CVSS 10.0, both confirmed in active exploitation. ColdFusion continues to be a persistent high-value target in legacy enterprise web infrastructure. Source: https://www.securityweek.com/ Critical Gitea Auth Bypass Under Active Exploitation CVE-2026-20896 allows authentication bypass via a single HTTP header manipulation in Gitea. Active exploitation is confirmed. Shops running self-hosted Gitea for internal source control or CI/CD pipelines should treat this as an immediate patching priority, given that repository access exposes secrets, keys and deployment pipelines in a single compromise. Source: https://www.securityweek.com/ --- CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY Microsoft Moves to Annual FX Price Revisions for Cloud Products Microsoft has shifted from semi-annual to annual exchange rate adjustments for cloud pricing. The framing is customer-friendly, with fewer adjustment windows, but the operational reality is that FX exposure gets consolidated into a single annual event rather than two smaller ones. For Canadian MSPs billing in CAD against USD-denominated Microsoft contracts, a single large annual adjustment is harder to absorb and harder to pass through to clients mid-contract than two smaller ones. Source: https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2026/07/09/microsoft-shifts-to-annual-exchange-rate-price-revision-for-cloudy-products/5268894 GitHub Copilot Guardrail Bypass via Code-Embedded Instructions Researchers confirmed that GitHub Copilot's content safety filters can be bypassed by embedding harmful instructions in code syntax rather than natural language. This is a workflow-level jailbreak, meaning the attack surface is the development environment itself, not a chat interface. Organizations using Copilot in regulated environments should treat this as a live compliance gap until Microsoft ships a targeted fix. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/08/github-copilot-sorry-dave-i-cant-do-that-harmful-thing-unless-you-ask-me-in-code/5268654 --- NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION Infoblox Acquires Kentik Infoblox is acquiring Kentik (over $100M raised, founded 2014), combining DNS/DHCP/IPAM identity data with Kentik's real-time NetFlow, routing and telemetry observability. The operational gap this closes is specific: Infoblox IQ today auto-investigates DNS anomalies using LLMs but can't trace lateral movement without flow data. Post-integration, the system could identify a C2-connected device via DNS and then map its internal pivots via flow telemetry in a single automated workflow. For shops running both platforms today, this is a contract timing and consolidation conversation worth having now. Source: https://www.networkworld.com/article/4194570/infoblox-acquires-kentik-adding-network-observability-to-its-dns-and-ddi-platform.html Cisco Talos: China-Nexus APT Expanding ORB Network with New Backdoors The LapDogs campaign threat actor has added LongLeash, DogLeash and JarLeash backdoors to its SOHO router malware toolkit, with confirmed links to UAT-5918 targeting critical infrastructure in Taiwan since 2023. The expansion of the backdoor toolkit signals operational investment in persistence, not just initial access. Any SOHO-class router in a managed environment should be on a patching and configuration audit cycle that matches the threat tempo, not a break-fix cadence. Source: https://www.securityweek.com/ --- AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS Multi-Agent Architecture for Reliable Software Development Automation The InfoQ presentation from Itamar Friedman covers how engineering teams can break through the AI productivity ceiling using adaptive multi-agent frameworks rather than single-agent pipelines. The operational distinction matters: single-agent AI workflows hit context and reliability ceilings that multi-agent architectures with defined handoff protocols can avoid. For teams evaluating AI-assisted infrastructure automation, this is the architectural pattern worth understanding before committing to a single-agent deployment model. Source: https://www.infoq.com/presentations/multi-agent-ai-architecture/ SambaNova Heterogeneous Compute Shows 763 tok/s on Aging Nvidia H200s Third-party benchmarks show SambaNova's platform combining H200 GPUs with SN50 RDUs delivering 763 tokens per second on MiniMax. The practical implication for infrastructure teams with existing Nvidia GPU investments is that heterogeneous compute architectures can materially extend the useful life of current GPU hardware rather than requiring full replacement cycles. Worth watching as GPU capex conversations come up in the next procurement window. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/07/08/intel-backed-ai-chip-startup-sambanova-breathes-new-life-into-aging-nvidia-gpus-in-latest-benchmarks/5268721 Temasek Lifting AI Portfolio Exposure by 150 Percent Singapore's sovereign wealth fund Temasek is increasing AI portfolio exposure by 150 percent and plans additional upside once electrification ventures are included. Sovereign capital at this scale moving into AI and power infrastructure signals that the buildout cycle has years of momentum behind it, with power infrastructure treated as a co-investment alongside compute. For infrastructure planning purposes, the power and cooling constraint story is a decade-long structural dynamic. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/07/09/singaporean-sovereign-wealth-fund-temasek-thinks-ai-has-a-future/5268953 --- HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE No notable developments tonight beyond what's covered in AI in Infrastructure above. --- NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING No notable developments tonight. --- MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS No notable developments tonight. --- IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A Former GitHub CEO Launches Vibe Coding Competitor Tom Preston-Werner has launched a GitHub competitor explicitly designed for AI-native, vibe-coded development workflows. The timing is pointed: GitHub is visibly struggling to manage AI-generated load on its infrastructure. The emergence of a credible challenger targeting that exact failure mode suggests the developer platform market is entering a consolidation stress test, and MSPs or enterprises with deep GitHub dependency should be watching how Microsoft responds. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/07/08/former-github-ceo-launches-competitor-designed-for-the-age-of-vibe-coding/5268694 --- EDGE COMPUTING & IOT No notable developments tonight. --- SALES & REVENUE The Cost of Vague Qualification Criteria Most sales teams lose deals late because they qualified on interest signals instead of buying signals. Interest is someone answering your calls and attending demos. A buying signal is budget confirmed, a decision timeline stated and a named problem that costs the prospect more than your solution. Build your qualification checklist around economic pain and decision authority, and move deals with only interest signals to a separate nurture track before they consume closing resources. Source: (Goodreads compounding) Questions Control the Sale Whoever asks the questions controls the direction of a sales conversation. A rep who presents features is following the prospect's frame. A rep who asks about consequences, timelines and cost of inaction is setting the frame. The discipline is resisting the urge to answer objections with more information and instead responding with a question that surfaces the underlying concern. Objections are usually symptoms, not root causes. Source: (Goodreads compounding) --- REAL ESTATE & INVESTMENT Gross Rent Multiplier as a Fast Filter, Not a Final Answer GRM (purchase price divided by annual gross rent) is most useful as a quick-rejection tool: if a property doesn't pass a GRM threshold for your market before you run full underwriting, don't run full underwriting. The mistake is treating GRM as a valuation metric rather than a screening metric. It ignores vacancy, maintenance, insurance and financing structure. Use it to cut the list fast, then underwrite the survivors in detail. Source: (Goodreads compounding) Financing Structure Outlasts the Purchase Decision The terms you accept at acquisition stay with the asset for years. A property bought at an above-market price with favorable long-term fixed financing often outperforms a better-priced deal with a short-term balloon or variable rate. Operators who focus exclusively on purchase price without stress-testing the financing structure under a rate or vacancy scenario are underwriting the best case, not the base case. Source: (Goodreads compounding) --- SELF HELP, HUMAN PSYCHOLOGY & DARK PSYCHOLOGY The Availability Heuristic in Risk Perception People consistently overestimate the probability of events that are easy to recall and underestimate risks that are abstract or unfamiliar. The availability heuristic tracks vividness and recency rather than statistical likelihood. In decision-making, this means the risks you've recently experienced or seen covered heavily are systematically overweighted while the slow-building, less dramatic risks get discounted. Correcting for it requires deliberately asking what risks haven't been salient recently, not just which ones feel urgent. Source: (Goodreads compounding) Commitment and Consistency as an Influence Vector Once a person commits to a position publicly or in writing, they experience psychological pressure to act consistently with that commitment, even when new information should update their view. This is why getting small verbal agreements early in a negotiation or enrollment process is a structural technique, not just rapport-building. The practical defense is to pause before honoring a prior commitment and ask whether you'd make the same choice with fresh context. Source: (Goodreads compounding) --- WHAT TO WATCH The Roundcube zero-click campaign, the three pre-patch UniFi OS CVEs and the Gitea auth bypass are all active exploitations confirmed this week, not theoretical risks. The pattern is accelerating: proof-of-concept to active exploitation windows are compressing, and KEV confirmation is arriving after the exploitation window opens, not before. The operational tempo on patching needs to match that reality. --- CONVERSATION STARTER A China-aligned threat actor has been running a multi-stage espionage campaign against North American university physics and engineering departments since May 2026, using a single email open to deploy credential stealers, a webshell and a persistent Go-based RAT, with a fallback loader tied to shared Chinese APT infrastructure. The attack requires zero user interaction beyond opening the email. ===========================================
Cynora — Zoho Intelligence
Cynora — Zoho Intelligence LIVE
CRMLIVE
Open Deals4
Pipeline Value$38,112
Closed Won$14,112
Accounts23
Leads200+
▼ details
Active Deal Pipeline (4 deals · $38,112+ pipeline)
MTI 2026 Penetration Test - Onboarding
Music Theatre International · $14,112
Onboarding
Renew Medic IT Services
Renew Medic
Qualification
MTI 2026 Mobile Application Management Project
Music Theater International
Additional Discovery Call Booked
WahZhaZhe Health Center
WahZhaZhe Health Center · $24,000
Proposal/Contract Sent
Closed Won (1 deals · $14,112)
MTI 2026 Penetration Test
Music Theatre International · $14,112
Won ✓
Active Accounts (23)
Music Theatre InternationalHyundai North AmericaRenew MedicAxis Global Logistics - iCat LogisticsCity of New YorkPlanqc QuantumTiffany and CompanyWestcliff UniversityArcadiaWahZhaZhe Health CenterTest Company Lead to CompletePremiere Home Healthcare ServicesResponse Point TechnologiesPure TechnologyMusic Theater InternationalKasim & CoPurdue PharmaceuticalsVarden CapitalTirado & AssociatesBlinx
Lead Status Breakdown (200 leads fetched)
135
In Cadence Automat
50
Contacted No Respo
7
In Contact Current
4
Not Contacted
2
Unknown
1
Contacted But Pass
CampaignsLIVE
Mailing Lists3
StatusConnected
▼ details
Mailing Lists (3)
Cynora Warm Leads
0 subscribers
Active
Cynora Zoho Leads List
0 subscribers
Active
My Sample List
0 subscribers
Active
SalesIQLIVE
PortalCynora Tech
Handle
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Portal Details
Portal Name
Cynora Tech
Portal Handle
API Scope
visitors · conversations · operators
Access Level
Read-Only
Analytics (GA4)LIVE
Sessions174
Users154
Top ChannelDirect (71%)
Views63
▼ details
Traffic by Channel — 174 sessions total
Direct
125
Organic Social
23
Organic Search
14
Unassigned
9
Referral
3
Top Countries by Users
🇺🇸 UN 92🌐 IT 13🇩🇪 GE 10🌐 CH 8🌐 IR 6🌐 HO 5🇮🇳 IN 5🌐 IN 3🌐 RU 3🇸🇬 SI 3
Workspace
Name
Google Analytics GA4 Analytics
Views Available
63
Trading — Paper Pilot
📈 Trading — Pilot v2 (Regime Adaptive) LIVE ↻ May 11, 2026 11:40 UTC
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REGIME ADAPTIVE BTC + ETH only nbsp;· nbsp; Bull: Donchian 20d breakout nbsp;· nbsp; Neutral: RSI lt;33 dip buy nbsp;· nbsp; Bear: hold cash 60% per trade · 8% stop · Trailing @+7%
Portfolio Performance cumulative P&L by day
May 10   $3,184 Now   $3,184.00   (+0.00%)
Open Positions 0 open  ·  $0 deployed
SymbolStratQtyEntryCurrentStopRisk $Ret%Unrealized P&LStatus
No open positions
Strategy Breakdown closed trades only
StrategyTradesWLWin%Avg WAvg LGross P&LFeesNet P&L
Recent Trades (last 20) 🔄 trailing   🛑 hard stop   ⚖️ breakeven   🎯 target
SymbolStratQtyEntryExitRet%Gross P&LFeeNet P&LExitDate
Daily P&L bar scale = $50
DateResultsBarGross P&LFeeNet P&L
System Health
🟢 System Health
RUNNING
Email Ingest daemon RUNNING
MC Content Refresh 9m ago OK
Zoho Refresh 20h ago OK
Trading Refresh 28d ago OVERDUE
Nightly Research 2h ago OK
Weekly Synthesis 3d ago OK
Reading Insights 1h ago OK
LinkedIn Posts 1d ago OK