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Channi Greenwall Profile
Channi Greenwall

@ChanniGreenwall

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465
Following
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Statuses
2K

Talk cyber to me @olympix_ai

Joined October 2020
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
3 years
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
17 minutes
Mutation testing forces your code to evolve or die. Survival of the fittest in every deployment line.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 hour
If your smart contract security strategy relies solely on audits, you're only reading the last chapter of a very long book.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
2 hours
Adding AI to your security protocol?. It’s pressure, not a panacea.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
3 hours
CI green?. Your assumptions haven’t been challenged yet.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
4 hours
Unquestioned assumptions are the breeding ground for exploits.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
5 hours
Audit is a checkpoint, not a shield.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
6 hours
When protocols break, it’s rarely the code alone. It’s the code assuming the human would never click that, paste that, trust that. Assumptions are the real L2.
@bernard_xyz
Bernard ⚡️⚡️⚡️
7 hours
5/ Crypto security used to be only about lines of Solidity. Now, it’s as much about social cues, muscle memory, and good habits. The biggest vulnerabilities are in DMs, emails, or the copy-paste command from a fake Discord mod. The attack vector is human, and it’s working.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
6 hours
Social engineering hits humans. Mutation testing hits assumptions. Smart attackers exploit both. Smart teams defend both.
@bernard_xyz
Bernard ⚡️⚡️⚡️
7 hours
1/ In 2025, crypto’s top risks aren’t just in the code anymore. Social engineering has joined smart contract bugs at the top of the threat list. Even as code gets tighter, attackers get smarter exploiting humans, not just logic.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Every unchallenged assumption is a potential exploit.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Every update to your codebase, no matter how minor, is an opportunity for new vulnerabilities to sneak in. Continuous integration isn't just about adding new features; it's about continuously defending against new threats. Treat every update like it could be potentially.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
When you inherit code through a fork, you inherit every misstep and shortcut the original developers took. Before you build on top of inherited code, dig deep to understand its foundation. It's not just about finding bugs; it's about understanding the architectural decisions.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Treat every line of code as if it had the potential to be weaponized. Because it does.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Test like your code is going to run on a battlefield, because in web3 security, it is.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Inherited code comes with inherited risks. The deeper you fork, the darker the waters.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
The most secure systems are not those that have merely passed tests but those that have survived trials by fire. Extensive, rigorous, and often brutal testing regimes that go far beyond standard checks.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
1 day
Every line of code is a potential attack vector. This isn't just about bugs or vulnerabilities; it's about the inherent risks in the logic and structures we create. Understand this, and you'll approach coding with the caution it demands.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
2 days
RT @areta_io: One of the most recurring themes in our research: teams are overindexing on audits. This pattern risks turning audits into th….
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
2 days
Security isn’t a checkpoint; it’s the entire race.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
2 days
Every 'minor' bug fix today could be preventing a major breach tomorrow.
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@ChanniGreenwall
Channi Greenwall
2 days
The silent logic drift in code is like termites in wood. It's slow, silent, and nearly invisible until the integrity of the structure is compromised. Regular, rigorous, and ruthless testing is the only way to catch and address these issues before they lead to failure.
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