cole-harding
cole-harding
15 posts
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cole-harding · 3 days ago
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Green thumb incoming
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cole-harding · 5 days ago
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Good day for it
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cole-harding · 7 days ago
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Should I say something
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cole-harding · 9 days ago
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Life is sweet
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cole-harding · 13 days ago
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Good vibes
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cole-harding · 16 days ago
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cole-harding · 20 days ago
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Life was going good too
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cole-harding · 23 days ago
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G'day
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cole-harding · 26 days ago
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It's getting unruly
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cole-harding · 28 days ago
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Will sell these when I get them dialed in 🤙
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cole-harding · 29 days ago
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cole-harding · 1 month ago
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Had to stretch her out
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cole-harding · 1 month ago
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cole-harding · 1 month ago
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Sunday sweat
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cole-harding · 1 month ago
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C. Harding. 26. LA
Cole never considered himself a criminal—just a guy with a keyboard and a grudge against greed.
He sat alone in his dimly lit apartment, the glow of six monitors casting shadows across the walls. The logo of Monolith Industries blinked on his primary screen — a conglomerate lauded for innovation but infamous in certain circles for its exploitation of third-world labor and secret shell companies funneling money into offshore tax havens.
Cole had the evidence. Internal audits, forged compliance reports, suppressed whistleblower emails. He'd spent the past few weeks embedded in their systems, silently watching, mapping.
Monolith’s financial systems were robust, but not invincible. Their offshore accounts used a third-party transfer service with a known vulnerability in its authentication layer — a flaw Cole had quietly discovered during a penetration test. He had reported it, of course. The company had dismissed it. Typical.
His plan was surgical. No flashy ransomware or Bitcoin ransom letters. Just a clean, untraceable siphon—millions in stolen wage funds and environmental penalties rerouted into nonprofit organizations.
At 03:14 UTC, Cole executed the breach from a secure node in Iceland. Using a zero-day exploit in Monolith’s AI-managed treasury subsystem, he bypassed biometric authentication and triggered a silent override to reassign access credentials. The screen blinked.
Access Granted.
Within ten minutes, the accounts were liquidated into an elaborate maze of crypto wallets, masking the origin of the funds. By 03:27, the transfers were complete—$68.4 million redirected to various verified humanitarian causes and a small portion for himself.
The next morning, the media exploded with coverage. Monolith's CEO stammered through a press conference; the FBI called it “an act of cyberterrorism.”
Cole logged off.
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