Ryan Graves
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Podcast Appearances
I think they typically refer to that as a man-in-the-middle attack. So you think you're connecting to the regular Wi-Fi, but you're actually connecting to the adversary's Wi-Fi, sending your data through there, and then they send that to the original box that you thought you were communicating with. And so they get all the information.
That's how they try to crack the Tor network as well.
That's how they try to crack the Tor network as well.
That's how they try to crack the Tor network as well.
If you're familiar with that, yeah, by setting up their own servers essentially to serve as a man-in-the-middle attack. But back to your point about China trying to work on quantum computing, on AI, I think China is probably one of the biggest motivating factors that the government has right now for opening up the conversation on UAP. Yeah.
If you're familiar with that, yeah, by setting up their own servers essentially to serve as a man-in-the-middle attack. But back to your point about China trying to work on quantum computing, on AI, I think China is probably one of the biggest motivating factors that the government has right now for opening up the conversation on UAP. Yeah.
If you're familiar with that, yeah, by setting up their own servers essentially to serve as a man-in-the-middle attack. But back to your point about China trying to work on quantum computing, on AI, I think China is probably one of the biggest motivating factors that the government has right now for opening up the conversation on UAP. Yeah.
So we haven't had this peer threat that we have to worry about that has a totally different investment government structure than we have. So in the United States, we have this capitalist market and we have innovations that break out through that model like open AI. But there are some capabilities where they are not appetizing to the market itself.
So we haven't had this peer threat that we have to worry about that has a totally different investment government structure than we have. So in the United States, we have this capitalist market and we have innovations that break out through that model like open AI. But there are some capabilities where they are not appetizing to the market itself.
So we haven't had this peer threat that we have to worry about that has a totally different investment government structure than we have. So in the United States, we have this capitalist market and we have innovations that break out through that model like open AI. But there are some capabilities where they are not appetizing to the market itself.
For example, how do we just suddenly stand up a chip fabrication facility in the United States that competes with the operations in Taiwan? It's not something that a VC is going to invest in. It's going to take billions and billions of dollars.
For example, how do we just suddenly stand up a chip fabrication facility in the United States that competes with the operations in Taiwan? It's not something that a VC is going to invest in. It's going to take billions and billions of dollars.
For example, how do we just suddenly stand up a chip fabrication facility in the United States that competes with the operations in Taiwan? It's not something that a VC is going to invest in. It's going to take billions and billions of dollars.
Exactly. Well, they did that because the government took a new approach. They stepped in and said, we're going to financially support this. We're going to open up the piggy banks. We're going to help with regulations and laws, and we're going to make this happen as soon as practically possible. That's the model that China uses all the time.