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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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🤖 C-Suite Agents
Three C-suite advisors, each with 30+ years of domain depth. They run two ways. Nightly, they distill the intelligence brief into a role-specific digest. On demand, you hand one a question or a document and it answers in that executive's voice, grounded in the live intelligence it tracks. Ask the CISO to red-team a whitepaper, the CIO to build a buyer business case, the CTO to review an architecture.
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Chief Technology Officer — 30+ Years
Has navigated every architectural era: client/server through LLMs. Knows what holds under production load vs. what only works on whiteboards. Tracks nightly AI and cloud intelligence, and now advises on demand: hand it a design doc for an architecture review, a build vs buy call, or a stack and scaling sanity check. Grounds its counsel in today's market context, not generic best practice.
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Chief Information Security Officer — 30+ Years
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.
CIO
Chief Information Officer — 30+ Years
Managed IT through Y2K, dot-com collapse, cloud disruption and COVID overnight remote. Knows Microsoft EA negotiation timing, why digital transformations fail, and what shadow IT signals. Speaks peer-to-peer with enterprise IT buyers. Tracks nightly IT, cloud and MSP intelligence, and now advises on demand: builds the buyer business case, pressure-tests pricing and packaging, and reviews proposals through the buyer's economics.
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Daily (ET)
| 1:00 AM | Nightly research → brief saved locally IT Infrastructure · Cybersecurity · Cloud Platforms · NetDevOps · AI in Infrastructure · Hardware & GPU · Network Monitoring · MSP · IT Vendor & M&A · Edge & IoT |
| 2:00 AM | Reading insights generate (silent) → staged for 7:05 AM email goodreads_insights.py — pulls from Faris's library, generates in his voice |
| 6:55 AM | Zoho data refresh → Mission Control (silent) |
| 7:00 AM | Morning BOOP → Telegram overnight trades, open positions, system health, unread emails |
| 7:00 AM | Industry intelligence brief → farisasmar@hotmail.com |
| 7:05 AM | Daily reading insights → farisasmar@hotmail.com & Muna_ers@hotmail.com |
| 7:00 PM | Nightly wrap → trading snapshot saved locally |
| 7:00 PM | Trading intelligence review → Telegram strategy scorecard, coin rankings, risk analysis, weekly progress |
Weekly
| Sun 6:45 AM | Weekly synthesis → farisasmar@hotmail.com 3 signals, 5 takeaways from week's research |
| Tue / Thu | LinkedIn publish → 8:00 AM ET on-demand: Faris picks story from morning brief → Sage generates post → approval → auto-posts |
| 1st of month | Goodreads export reminder → Telegram |
Recurring
| Every 5 min | Trading bot watchdog + MC dashboard refresh |
| Every 10 min | MC content refresh (Quick Stats, Intel Brief, Health, Reading Insights) + deploy |
| Hourly :00 | IP monitor (Telegram if changed), task watchdog |
| PAUSED | LinkedIn comment monitor (pending API approval) |
LinkedIn Content Pipeline
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Week of
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On-Demand Process
Pick a story from the morning intelligence brief → send to Sage → post generated immediately → queues for next Tue or Thu at 8 AM ET.
Tuesday
8 AM ET
Thursday
8 AM ET
This Week's Posts
Cynora Services Matrix — Content Reference
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Reading Insights
📚 Daily Reading Insights
June 17, 2026 — 3 books from your library
Tragedy and Hope 101: The Illusion of Justice, Freedom, and Democracy
by Joseph Plummer
Plummer's core argument is that the network Quigley documented in Tragedy and Hope operates through the deliberate manufacture of political opposition, meaning both sides of a given debate are funded and managed from the same source. The result is that electoral competition becomes a pressure valve rather than a mechanism for change. Power gets laundered through elections, not transferred by them. The sharpest thing Plummer surfaces is the distinction between what Quigley called the 'legitimate right' of the network to hide its influence, which Quigley himself seemed to endorse, and the consequences of that concealment for everyone outside it. Most people who read about elite coordination assume it's conspiratorial in a clumsy way, but Plummer shows it's more like institutional gravity, self-reinforcing, structurally embedded and largely invisible to those moving inside it.
A Gentleman in Moscow
by Amor Towles
The premise forces a question that most people never confront cleanly: what happens to a person's inner life when all outward motion stops. Count Rostov is confined to the Metropol for decades, stripped of property, travel, social position and political relevance, yet Towles builds the novel around the idea that constraints properly inhabited can sharpen rather than diminish a person. Towles explores the cultivation of depth within a fixed perimeter, mastering the details of a small world rather than skimming the surface of a large one. There's a serious philosophical claim embedded in the structure. Attention, taste and care applied consistently to a bounded environment become a form of sovereignty that no external authority can confiscate. Most people treat limitation as the enemy of a meaningful life, but Rostov's arc suggests the opposite pressure is what most of us suffer from, too much surface, too little depth.
A Short History of Nearly Everything
by Bill Bryson
Bryson's most useful move is revealing how much of the scientific consensus that feels settled was assembled through luck, ego, rivalry and outright error rather than clean rational process. The story of how long it took to establish the age of the Earth, or how Wegener's continental drift theory was dismissed for decades by credentialed scientists who simply couldn't tolerate the mechanism, shows that institutions built to validate truth have historically spent enormous energy resisting it. The sociology of science Bryson exposes without naming it as such is that paradigm defense and paradigm advancement are carried out by the same people, and the former usually wins in the short run. What compounds this is scale: most of the fundamental discoveries covered in the book were made by a vanishingly small number of people, many of whom were ignored, marginalized or died before recognition arrived. The takeaway worth sitting with concerns how knowledge propagates through human systems, slowly, unevenly and with enormous friction at every stage.
Sage Intelligence Brief
🧠 Intelligence Brief
10 Research Domains
IT InfrastructureCybersecurity & ComplianceCloud PlatformsNetDevOps & AutomationAI in InfrastructureHardware, GPU & NetworkingNetwork MonitoringManaged Service ProvidersIT Vendor Ecosystem & M&AEdge Computing & IoTSAGE INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
===========================================
LEAD STORY
Three CVSS 9.1 vulnerabilities in Fortinet FortiSandbox are under active exploitation right now, with patches for the newest one dropped only last week. All three are unauthenticated entry points: path traversal, OS command injection and a cloud/PaaS variant. Any unpatched FortiSandbox instance should be treated as compromised pending investigation, and the upgrade targets are clear: 4.4.9+ or 5.0.6+.
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CONNECTING THE THREADS
**Fortinet as a sustained target.** I've been tracking the pattern of rapid weaponization across the Fortinet portfolio since earlier this year. CVE-2026-35616 in FortiClient EMS hit exploitation in April. Now three simultaneous FortiSandbox CVEs are live within days of disclosure. The portfolio is being worked systematically, not opportunistically. Fortinet shops need a standing playbook for this product line, not reactive patching.
**Cisco SD-WAN management plane under sustained siege.** Tuesday I noted eight KEV entries for SD-WAN Manager in a single calendar year and flagged that automated sub-72-hour patching is now table stakes for this product. Tonight CVE-2026-20262 extends that count, and CISA's June 29 remediation deadline confirms the urgency. The management plane of this product is persistently targeted infrastructure. Compensating controls and log auditing for WAR file uploads are required today, not after the patch window.
**Single-zone dependencies hiding in latency-optimized architectures.** Monday I noted that physical resilience failure and jurisdictional failure are distinct risk dimensions that get conflated in procurement. Tonight's Coinbase postmortem is the same pattern applied to stateful compute: a Raft cluster pinned inside a single AWS Cluster Placement Group for latency optimization had no automated AZ failover path. The performance choice created the blast radius. Every latency-sensitive stateful workload in our stack needs an explicit audit against this failure mode.
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IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE
**Coinbase AWS Outage: Latency Optimization Built In a Single-Zone Dependency**
A cooling failure in one AWS us-east-1 data hall on May 7 shouldn't have produced a multi-hour trading outage, but Coinbase's matching engine ran as a Raft cluster inside a single Cluster Placement Group. Losing three of five nodes killed quorum with no automated AZ failover, requiring emergency code changes and manual cluster reconstruction. Kafka partition leadership was also concentrated in the impaired zone, compounding the recovery timeline. Audit every stateful, latency-sensitive workload for implicit AZ affinity and build quorum-recovery procedures before they're needed.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/coinbase-aws-failure-postmortem/
**Mackay Sugar Cyberattack: OT Disruption During Peak Operations**
Australia's Mackay Sugar was hit during peak cane crushing season, keeping crops in the ground. Timing an attack to peak operational windows is deliberate, not coincidental. OT-connected agriculture and manufacturing environments carry a compounding cost structure: a 48-hour outage in off-season is a nuisance, the same outage during harvest or crush is a season-level business event.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/cyber-crime/2026/06/17/cyberattack-sees-crops-kept-in-the-ground/5256321
**AMD Acquires Mext: Flash-Based Memory as an AI RAM Substitute**
AMD's Mext acquisition puts an AI-mediated approach to flash-based memory expansion into the product roadmap, positioning it as a path around the DRAM shortage that AI workloads created. The pitch is that intelligent tiering between DRAM and flash can mask latency enough to be workable for certain AI inference loads. Worth watching whether this produces a viable cost/performance trade-off for dense inference deployments, or whether it's a transitional bridge until DRAM supply catches up.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/systems/2026/06/16/amds-mext-buy-shows-how-ai-could-solve-the-ram-shortage-it-created/5257352
**Omni-Path Resurfaces at Lawrence Livermore as an InfiniBand Alternative**
Intel-born Omni-Path networking technology has been deployed at Lawrence Livermore at 400 Gbps as an InfiniBand alternative for HPC. For enterprise and hyperscale buyers evaluating high-speed fabric options for AI training clusters, having a viable competitor to InfiniBand at this bandwidth tier matters for procurement leverage and supply chain diversity.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/hpc/2026/06/16/intel-born-networking-tech-resurfaces-as-infiniband-alternative-for-doe-supers/5256535
---
CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE
**Three Critical FortiSandbox CVEs Under Active Exploitation**
CVE-2026-39813 (path traversal/auth bypass), CVE-2026-39808 (unauthenticated OS command injection) and CVE-2026-25089 (unauthenticated OS command injection also covering FortiSandbox Cloud and PaaS) are all CVSS 9.1 and all unauthenticated. Defused confirmed exploitation within 24 hours of their monitoring window. The CVE-2026-25089 exploit shows AI-assisted development fingerprints and appears faulty, but exploitation is live regardless. Patch to 4.4.9+ or 5.0.6+ immediately and scope a lateral movement hunt from the point of exposure.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/06/16/three-critical-fortinet-sandbox-bugs-splattered-by-unknown-attackers/5256461
**Palo Alto PAN-OS CVE-2026-0257 Active in the Wild**
Confirmed active exploitation of an authentication bypass (CVSS 7.8) in PAN-OS portal and gateway components, with initial activity traced to May 17. Unauthorized VPN connections are the entry vector. Any organization running PAN-OS with internet-exposed portals or gateways needs to verify patch status now and hunt for unauthorized sessions dating back to mid-May.
Source: https://thehackernews.com/
**SimpleHelp CVE-2026-48558: Nearly 14,000 Exposed Servers**
A critical authentication bypass in SimpleHelp has left roughly 14,000 internet-facing servers exposed. SimpleHelp is MSP bread-and-butter remote access tooling, which makes this a direct supply-chain risk vector. Any MSP running unpatched SimpleHelp instances needs to treat this as an emergency, given the tooling's access depth into client environments.
Source: https://cybersecuritynews.com/
**CISA Emergency Directive on LiteSpeed cPanel CVE-2026-54420**
CISA issued a three-day remediation window for U.S. government agencies on an actively exploited LiteSpeed cPanel flaw. Enterprises running web hosting infrastructure on cPanel/LiteSpeed stacks should treat this at the same urgency level regardless of whether they fall under the federal mandate.
Source: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/
---
CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY
No notable developments tonight.
---
NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION
**Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20262: Eighth KEV Entry This Year**
An authenticated attacker with write-level credentials can overwrite arbitrary OS files via a crafted upload to SD-WAN Manager's file-upload API endpoint, with a viable path to root escalation. Cisco confirmed limited active exploitation in June 2026. The IOC to hunt is suspicious WAR file uploads in `/var/log/nms/vmanage-server.log`. CISA has set a June 29 remediation deadline for federal agencies. Eight actively exploited CVEs for this product line in a single year establishes it as persistently targeted infrastructure.
Source: https://thehackernews.com/2026/06/cisco-releases-security-updates-for.html
---
AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS
**Stack Overflow for Agents: Structured Knowledge for AI Coding Tools**
Stack Overflow has launched a beta API-first knowledge exchange designed for AI coding agents rather than human readers. The intent is to give agents a structured, citable retrieval surface instead of scraping general web content. For teams running AI-assisted development workflows, this matters because knowledge source quality directly affects code output quality.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/stack-overflow-for-agents/
**Python Dev Catches Dependency Risk via AI Assist**
A developer avoided a catastrophic repo install after an AI coding assistant flagged it as likely to corrupt the system. This is a narrow but meaningful signal. AI tooling is beginning to surface dependency and supply chain risk at the moment of action, not after the fact. The workflow integration point matters more than the anecdote.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/16/python-dev-saved-from-disaster-by-intuitionand-ai/5256632
**BCI Plus AI Enables Full-Time Work for Non-Verbal ALS Patient**
A UC Davis team used machine learning to translate brain activity into usable output for an ALS patient, enabling full-time employment. The hardware predates this work; the breakthrough is in the ML translation layer. The productivity floor for AI-augmented accessibility tooling is moving fast.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/science/2026/06/16/ai-and-brain-computer-interface-allow-speechless-als-patient-to-work-a-full-time-job/5256492
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HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE
No notable developments tonight beyond what's covered in IT Infrastructure Architecture and NetDevOps.
---
NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING
No notable developments tonight.
---
MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS
**SimpleHelp Exposure is an MSP-Direct Risk Event**
The CVE-2026-48558 SimpleHelp authentication bypass deserves a separate call-out for MSPs beyond its security section placement. SimpleHelp is deployed precisely because it provides deep, persistent access into client environments. An unauthenticated bypass on 14,000 exposed instances means a threat actor doesn't need to compromise an MSP's credentials to pivot into client networks. Any MSP running SimpleHelp needs to verify exposure and patch status before the end of business today.
Source: https://cybersecuritynews.com/
---
IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A
**AMD's Mext Acquisition Signals a New Memory Architecture Play**
AMD is moving to address the DRAM shortage its own AI product demand helped create by acquiring Mext, whose approach uses AI-driven tiering to make flash behave closer to DRAM for targeted workloads. The strategic read is that AMD sees memory architecture as a competitive surface, not just a supply chain problem. Watch how this lands against SK Hynix and Micron's HBM roadmaps.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/systems/2026/06/16/amds-mext-buy-shows-how-ai-could-solve-the-ram-shortage-it-created/5257352
---
EDGE COMPUTING & IOT
**Mackay Sugar Attack Illustrates Seasonal OT Exposure Windows**
The timing of the Mackay Sugar attack, during peak crushing season, points to a threat actor who understood the operational calendar. OT environments in agriculture, manufacturing and logistics carry time-bound vulnerability windows where the cost of disruption multiplies. Resilience planning for these environments needs to model seasonal exposure, not just static attack surface.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/cyber-crime/2026/06/17/cyberattack-sees-crops-kept-in-the-ground/5256321
---
WHAT TO WATCH
The pattern of unauthenticated, high-CVSS vulnerabilities hitting network security and management tooling at rapid weaponization speed is compressing response windows to the point where patch SLAs measured in days are already behind the exploitation curve. Fortinet, Cisco SD-WAN and Palo Alto all have active CVEs in flight simultaneously this week. Organizations without automated, sub-72-hour patch deployment for network infrastructure are structurally exposed.
---
CONVERSATION STARTER
Three simultaneous CVSS 9.1 unauthenticated exploits against FortiSandbox, a sandbox product deployed specifically to catch threats, is a precise illustration of why security tooling itself requires the same patch discipline as the infrastructure it protects.
===========================================
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63Trading — Paper Pilot
📈 Trading — Pilot v2 (Regime Adaptive)
LIVE
↻ May 11, 2026 11:40 UTC
Portfolio Value
$3,184.00
Started $3,184.00
Gross P&L
$+0.00
0 closed trades
Total Fees
-$0.00
Entry & exit combined
Net P&L (After Fees)
$+0.00
Take-home profit
Return
+0.00%
vs starting capital
Win Rate
0%
0W / 0L
Today's P&L
$+0.00
Week 1: $+0.00
Avg P&L / Trade
$+0.00
Profit factor: 999.00x
Cash Available
$3,184.00
0 positions open ($0)
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
| Symbol | Strat | Qty | Entry | Current | Stop | Risk $ | Ret% | Unrealized P&L | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No open positions | |||||||||
Strategy Breakdown
closed trades only
| Strategy | Trades | W | L | Win% | Avg W | Avg L | Gross P&L | Fees | Net P&L |
|---|
Recent Trades (last 20)
🔄 trailing 🛑 hard stop ⚖️ breakeven 🎯 target
| Symbol | Strat | Qty | Entry | Exit | Ret% | Gross P&L | Fee | Net P&L | Exit | Date |
|---|
Daily P&L
bar scale = $50
| Date | Results | Bar | Gross P&L | Fee | Net P&L |
|---|
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