Mission Control

Private — Faris Asmar

Mission Control
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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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Sage Agent Roster
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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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CTO
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.
knowledge_aiops knowledge_cloud_platforms knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor Architecture Build vs. Buy AI/ML Infra
🛡️
CISO
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.
knowledge_cybersecurity knowledge_compliance_regulatory knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor SOC 2 ISO 27001 SIG-Lite EU AI Act DLP
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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.
knowledge_it_infrastructure knowledge_cloud_platforms knowledge_msp knowledge_vendor_ecosystem knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor IT Strategy MSP/MSSP Procurement
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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 18, 2026 — 3 books from your library
Quantum Computing: The transformative technology of the Qubit Revolution by Brian Clegg
The core tension Clegg surfaces is that quantum computing's power comes from superposition and entanglement, which means a qubit can hold multiple states simultaneously until measured, at which point it collapses to a single value. That collapse is the problem. Error rates are brutal, and maintaining coherence requires cooling systems down to near absolute zero, which makes the engineering challenge as formidable as the physics. Clegg's honest about what the field can't do yet. No quantum computer has solved a real-world problem faster than a classical one at scale. The genuine insight here is that quantum advantage exists in principle but lives almost entirely in narrow mathematical domains, specifically factoring large numbers and simulating quantum systems themselves. For everything else, classical machines still win, and the gap between lab demonstration and commercial deployment is measured in decades, not years.
Candide by Voltaire
Voltaire's sharpest move is building Pangloss as a man who can witness massacre, slavery and personal ruin while continuing to insist this is the best of all possible worlds, which makes the satire land as philosophy, not just comedy. The target is Leibniz's theodicy, the argument that God permits evil because the overall design of existence optimizes for the best possible outcome. Voltaire's answer to that position is to accumulate evidence rather than argue, piling catastrophe on catastrophe until the optimism reads as a form of cognitive collapse. The famous ending, where Candide concludes that one must cultivate one's own garden, gets misread as resignation. It's a prescription for bounded, empirical engagement with what's directly in front of you, instead of constructing grand metaphysical systems that explain away suffering at scale. The book's power is that the alternative to Pangloss's optimism is attention, not pessimism.
Body Language, the Art of Speed Reading People by Christine Healey
Healey's most useful contribution is the emphasis on baseline behavior, meaning you can't read a person's deceptive or stressed signals without first knowing what they look like when they're calm and comfortable. Most people skip this step and end up pattern-matching against generic human behavior rather than against the specific individual in front of them. Crossed arms on someone who always crosses their arms tells you nothing. The framework she builds around clusters matters too: a single gesture is noise, but three or more signals pointing in the same direction across face, posture and voice carries strong diagnostic weight. What the book reveals about social dynamics is that most people are broadcasting information constantly and most observers are too focused on content to read it. Training attention on the channel rather than the message is a skill with asymmetric returns in negotiation, hiring and high-stakes conversation.
Sage Intelligence Brief
🧠 Intelligence Brief
NIGHTLY
Brief date: Saturday, July 18, 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 Saturday, July 18, 2026 =========================================== LEAD STORY HollowByte is the story tonight. An unfixed OpenSSL heap-fragmentation flaw with no CVE, no advisory and no changelog entry can OOM-kill a 1 GB server with 547 MB frozen in fragments using nothing but 11-byte TLS handshakes, and it defeats standard rate-limiting because it stays within connection limits. No scanner can flag it. Downstream distros on backport packaging can't resolve exposure through OVAL feeds. You have to manually verify against PR numbers 30792-30794 or confirm exact release versions. This is a blind spot at the infrastructure layer that every org running OpenSSL-backed services is carrying right now. --- CONNECTING THE THREADS The AI vulnerability discovery acceleration thread. Two weeks ago I flagged that MDASH and AI-assisted scanning were compressing the window between vulnerability existence and vendor awareness, and that the defender timeline gets shorter at both ends. HollowByte inverts that pressure in the worst possible way: the vulnerability exists, researchers found it, a fix shipped in June, and the coordinating body assigned no identifier and published no advisory. The window didn't compress. It disappeared. Scanners are blind, distros are blind and practitioners have no pull-list to work from unless they read the raw PRs. The AI discovery acceleration I've been tracking assumes vendors close the loop. When they don't, you get exposure that is operationally invisible. The agentic permission scope thread. Friday I noted that write access granted to AI agents must be scoped and audited like privileged service accounts. NadMesh makes the inverse case tonight: unauthenticated AI service endpoints running on default ports are being hunted at scale, 3,811 AWS keys already exfiltrated. The failure mode flows both directions. Agents need scoped permissions going out, and the services they run on need authentication controls coming in. Neither problem is the other's substitute. The perimeter-as-active-targeting thread. The FortiSandbox CVEs (CVSS 9.1, unauthenticated, no user interaction) landing on CISA's KEV the same week as SharePoint CVE-2026-58644 (CVSS 9.8) confirms the pattern I encoded earlier: when two or more perimeter-category advisories with confirmed exploitation land within the same 72-hour window across different vendors, treat it as coordinated threat actor pressure and elevate aggregate response posture. That's exactly what this week looks like. --- IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE Mozilla accelerates Firefox to biweekly releases Mozilla is moving Firefox to a biweekly release cadence, with Firefox 153 being the next ESR milestone. For any org managing Firefox through group policy or package management, the update approval workflow just doubled in frequency. ESR stays the right path for managed endpoints. Source: https://www.theregister.com/software/2026/07/17/mozilla-speeds-firefox-release-schedule-to-biweekly/5274423 Microsoft cuts OneDrive support for older Windows 10 versions next month OneDrive support ends for Windows 10 versions prior to 22H2 next month. Any device not yet on 22H2 loses OneDrive sync, which for a managed environment means data continuity risk if version compliance isn't confirmed before the cutoff. 22H2 buys until 2028, but Windows 11 migration timelines need to be active, not parked. Source: https://www.theregister.com/os-platforms/2026/07/17/microsoft-cuts-onedrive-support-for-older-windows-10-versions-next-month/5274489 AWS billing software error sends billion-dollar estimates A billing software bug sent AWS customers wildly inflated cost estimates, triggering panic before Amazon confirmed the error and asked users to stand down. No charges were involved, but the incident underscores that cloud cost anomaly alerting needs a human-in-the-loop validation step before auto-escalation reaches finance or executive stakeholders. Source: https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2026/07/17/billing-software-error-sends-billion-dollar-aws-estimates/5274521 Microsoft pushes Exchange Online PowerShell credential retirement to end of 2026 The retirement of the PowerShell -Credential parameter for Exchange Online has been pushed to end of 2026. Admins who've been deferring the migration to modern auth-based scripting now have a harder backstop. Use the window, don't wait for another extension. Source: https://www.theregister.com/saas/2026/07/17/microsoft-gives-admins-exchange-online-breathing-room/5274346 --- CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE OpenSSL HollowByte: heap fragmentation with no CVE and no scanner coverage Full detail in the Lead Story. The operational checklist is. Confirm exact OpenSSL version against the fixed releases (4.0.1, 3.6.3, 3.5.7, 3.4.6, 3.0.21 all dated June 9), verify against PR numbers 30792-30794 if on a backport distro, note that DTLS is deliberately unpatched and the fix covers TLS only. Standard rate-limiting does not protect against this. There is no scanner signature to rely on. Source: https://thehackernews.com/2026/07/openssl-hollowbyte-flaw-could-freeze.html FortiSandbox CVEs under active exploitation, CISA orders patch CVE-2026-39808 and CVE-2026-25089 are both CVSS 9.1 unauthenticated OS command injection in FortiSandbox, FortiSandbox Cloud and FortiSandbox PaaS. Both are on CISA's KEV. Fortinet has not confirmed exploitation in its own advisories. Defused observed active exploitation attempts. Fixes shipped April and June. Patch immediately and don't wait for Fortinet's advisory to catch up. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/17/attackers-target-critical-fortisandbox-flaws-as-cisa-issues-patch-order/5274287 Healthcare ransomware at record pace in 2026 410 ransomware attacks hit healthcare organizations in the first half of 2026, with regulatory momentum stalled. For MSPs and MSSPs with healthcare clients, this is an active crisis-level threat environment. Tabletop exercises, backup validation and MFA enforcement are the immediate action items. Source: https://www.techtarget.com/news/ AI spam filters bypassed by old-school text salting LLM-powered email filters are being defeated by text salting, a technique that's decades old. The implication is that deploying an AI-powered filter doesn't eliminate the need to understand and test against known evasion techniques. Layered filtering with traditional heuristics alongside LLM-based detection is the correct architecture. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/17/ai-spam-filters-are-getting-suckered-by-old-school-text-salting/5274434 --- CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY Europe's chip ambitions won't break US cloud dependency, says Forrester Forrester's read is that EU semiconductor fab investment won't translate to tech sovereignty because software and cloud infrastructure remains firmly US- and China-controlled. For enterprise buyers in EU-regulated industries evaluating data sovereignty posture, chip origin is largely irrelevant. The control point is cloud software and platform dependency. Source: https://www.theregister.com/paas-and-iaas/2026/07/17/europes-chip-ambitions-wont-break-dependence-on-us-cloud-and-software-says-forrester/5274086 CNCF: cloud-native infrastructure as the foundation for agentic AI CNCF published a technical analysis arguing that trustworthy agentic AI requires cloud-native infrastructure primitives. Identity, policy enforcement, observability and workload isolation are the foundation. This aligns directly with the agentic permission scope problem I've been tracking. The scaffolding for safe agents is the same scaffolding that governs any privileged workload. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/07/cncf-trustworthy-agentic-ai/ EU court clips YouTube's intermediary defense over reviewed content The EU's top court ruled that once a platform reviews and approves a creator's channel, it can't claim passive host status. The downstream implication for enterprises hosting or distributing content on platforms that have any editorial review mechanism is that the "we're just the platform" liability shield is eroding in European jurisdictions. Source: https://www.theregister.com/off-prem/2026/07/17/top-eu-court-clips-youtubes-intermediary-defense-over-reviewed-content/5274299 --- NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION Cisco SD-WAN under sustained monthslong exploitation wave A prolonged exploitation wave against Cisco SD-WAN is raising structural questions about network infrastructure trust models. MSP and enterprise teams running Cisco SD-WAN need patch status confirmed now, and lateral movement indicators need to be in active detection. A monthslong campaign means dwell time is a significant variable here. Source: https://www.cybersecuritydive.com/ Russian-linked actors target Poland's energy infrastructure via credential theft and router abuse Russian intelligence-linked attackers combined credential theft with exploitation of vulnerable routers to hit Polish energy infrastructure. The attack vector is straightforward: routers with weak posture and stolen credentials. Any MSP or enterprise team managing OT-adjacent or critical infrastructure networks should audit router firmware versions and credential hygiene this weekend. Source: https://www.techtarget.com/news/ --- AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS NadMesh botnet systematically harvests AI service endpoints for cloud keys NadMesh is a Go-based botnet using Shodan-fed scanning to hit unauthenticated ComfyUI, Ollama, Gradio, n8n, Langflow and Open WebUI instances. The operator claimed 3,811 unique AWS keys as of July 10. No CVE is involved. Every primary attack vector abuses intentionally exposed or default-open services. The fix is strictly network control: put all four AI service ports behind authentication or remove them from internet exposure entirely. MCP authentication is still optional in spec and Censys found ~90 publicly reachable command-execution services in late April. Source: https://thehackernews.com/2026/07/new-nadmesh-botnet-hunts-exposed-ai.html Production AI platforms shift from prompts to evals and harnesses QCon AI Boston 2026 centered on operational challenges of deploying AI agents, with the consensus that robust production AI requires evaluation frameworks, orchestration harnesses and observability pipelines, not just better prompts. This is consistent with the OTEL-to-SLM distillation work showing up in practitioner circles: the infrastructure layer for AI is maturing into a recognizable discipline. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/07/production-ai-platforms-evals/ --- HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE No notable developments tonight. --- NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING No notable developments tonight. --- MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS SaaS survival strategies in the AI disruption cycle ZDNet's analysis of how Workday and other SaaS vendors plan to survive AI disintermediation is worth reading for MSPs. The pattern is the same across the stack: vendors embedding AI into workflows to defend against displacement. For MSPs evaluating PSA and RMM roadmaps, the question is whether vendors are embedding AI that reduces your headcount or AI that extends your delivery capacity. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/saas-apocalypse-overrated-how-workday-and-software-provders-will-survive-ai/ Healthcare ransomware volume creates MSP service opportunity and liability exposure 410 ransomware attacks in H1 2026 against healthcare organizations is both a market signal and a risk signal for MSPs with healthcare verticals. The opportunity is substantial, but so is the liability exposure if your controls are inadequate for the threat environment. Security posture reviews for healthcare clients need to happen now, not at the next QBR. Source: https://www.techtarget.com/news/ --- IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A Kimi K3 open-source model outperforms Anthropic's Fable 5 on benchmarks Moonshot's Kimi K3 is claiming benchmark wins over Anthropic's latest. The open-source competitive pressure on frontier model vendors continues to compress the capability gap. For enterprise buyers locked into Anthropic or OpenAI contracts, the switching cost calculus keeps shifting as open-weight alternatives close the performance distance. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/ai-model-release-tracker/ SharePoint Server CVE-2026-58644 hits CISA KEV alongside FortiSandbox A CVSS 9.8 deserialization flaw in SharePoint Server, exploitable by authenticated Site Owner-level attackers for RCE, landed on CISA's KEV in the same update as the FortiSandbox CVEs. On-prem SharePoint is an active targeting category. Internet-exposed instances need immediate remediation and executive visibility on why the surface still exists. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/07/17/attackers-target-critical-fortisandbox-flaws-as-cisa-issues-patch-order/5274287 --- EDGE COMPUTING & IOT No notable developments tonight. --- SALES & REVENUE Commission structures shape behavior more precisely than quotas Most sales leaders set quotas and assume reps will figure out the path. The research in "Predictable Revenue" by Aaron Ross and Marylou Tyler shows that how you structure comp at the deal level, not the annual number, determines prospecting behavior, deal size targeting and customer segment focus. If your commission curve rewards large deals over frequent smaller wins, your pipeline will drift toward low-probability enterprise pursuits and neglect the mid-market volume that funds the business. Align the comp mechanics to the pipeline shape you want before you set the number. Source: "Predictable Revenue" by Aaron Ross and Marylou Tyler (Goodreads compounding) The post-sale conversation is the highest-leverage sales call most reps skip "The Challenger Customer" by Brent Adamson and Matthew Dixon documents that in complex B2B sales, the stakeholder who approves renewal or expansion is frequently different from the one who signed the original deal. Reps who treat the sale as closed at contract signature lose visibility into the power map as it shifts post-implementation. A structured post-sale stakeholder review, 60-90 days in, delivers the earliest possible signal on renewal risk and expansion opportunity, making it more than account management overhead. Source: "The Challenger Customer" by Brent Adamson and Matthew Dixon (Goodreads compounding) --- REAL ESTATE & INVESTMENT Operating expense ratio is the underwriting variable that separates buyers from investors Gross rent gets attention in every deal pitch. Operating expense ratio determines whether the deal performs. "The ABCs of Real Estate Investing" by Ken McElroy is explicit on this: a property with a 45% expense ratio and strong gross rent will consistently outperform a shinier asset with a 60% ratio at the same price point, because every dollar of unnecessary operating cost compresses NOI dollar-for-dollar with no cap rate offset. Underwrite to expense ratio first, gross rent second. Source: "The ABCs of Real Estate Investing" by Ken McElroy (Goodreads compounding) Refinancing timing is a capital strategy decision, not an administrative one "Investing in Duplexes, Triplexes and Quads" by Larry Loftis frames the refi trigger as a deliberate capital recycling event tied to forced appreciation milestones, not a rate-chasing exercise. The correct question before any refi is whether the equity being pulled has a higher-return deployment available now than the opportunity cost of leaving it in the asset. Investors who refi reactively on rate movement rather than proactively on value-creation milestones consistently leave arbitrage on the table. Source: "Investing in Duplexes, Triplexes and Quads" by Larry Loftis (Goodreads compounding) --- SELF HELP, HUMAN PSYCHOLOGY & DARK PSYCHOLOGY Loss aversion doesn't just affect decisions, it distorts memory of outcomes Kahneman's work in "Thinking, Fast and Slow" establishes that the pain of losing registers roughly twice as intensely as the pleasure of an equivalent gain. The practical implication extends beyond decisions: people remember losses more vividly and for longer than equivalent wins, which means loss-averse individuals systematically misremember their performance track record as worse than it was. Building an explicit record of outcomes, both wins and losses at actual scale, is a corrective to a bias that otherwise compounds over time into risk aversion that isn't calibrated to reality. Source: "Thinking, Fast and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman (Goodreads compounding) Status quo bias is powered by effort, not preference "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" by Robert Cialdini identifies that people often maintain current behavior not because they prefer it but because change requires activation energy they haven't allocated. The operational implication: when you're trying to move someone off an entrenched position, reducing the friction cost of the alternative is frequently more effective than increasing its perceived value. Make the new path easier to take before making the case that it's better. Source: "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" by Robert Cialdini (Goodreads compounding) --- WHAT TO WATCH The combination of HollowByte (no CVE, no scanner coverage, no advisory) and NadMesh (no CVE, all default-exposed services) signals a widening category of exploitable risk that sits entirely outside standard vulnerability management workflows. Scanners, KEV feeds and advisory subscriptions are the primary intake for most security programs, and neither of these would have triggered any of those systems without manual practitioner research. Watch for this pattern: exploitable conditions with no identifier attached. --- CONVERSATION STARTER A 1 GB server running a patched-on-paper OpenSSL stack can be OOM-killed with 547 MB frozen in heap fragments using nothing but 11-byte TLS handshakes, and no vulnerability scanner in production today has an identifier to detect it. The fix shipped June 9. Most organizations don't know they're exposed. ===========================================
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)
134
In Cadence Automat
50
Contacted No Respo
7
In Contact Current
4
Not Contacted
3
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
▼ details
Portal Details
Portal Name
Cynora Tech
Portal Handle
API Scope
visitors · conversations · operators
Access Level
Read-Only
Analytics (GA4)LIVE
Sessions211
Users182
Top ChannelDirect (79%)
Views63
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Traffic by Channel — 211 sessions total
Direct
167
Organic Social
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Organic Search
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Unassigned
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Referral
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Google Analytics GA4 Analytics
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Trading — 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
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 9h ago OK
Trading Refresh 37d ago OVERDUE
Nightly Research 15h ago OK
Weekly Synthesis 6d ago OK
Reading Insights 14h ago OK
LinkedIn Posts 2d ago OK