Adam Caudill
@adamcaudill.com
Security Engineer, Researcher, & Developer. Formerly at 1Password, BSI / AppSec Consulting, Numorian, etc. https://adamcaudill.com
I just realised that I've been actively blogging (with varying definitions of actively) for more than 23 years. Over that time I published 216,972 words, 1,400,237 keystrokes, and spent (by a rough calculation) 43,394 minutes writing. Hopefully that's been time well invested!
November 11, 2025 at 2:28 PM
I just realised that I've been actively blogging (with varying definitions of actively) for more than 23 years. Over that time I published 216,972 words, 1,400,237 keystrokes, and spent (by a rough calculation) 43,394 minutes writing. Hopefully that's been time well invested!
Often, security work is 80% archaeology - digging through layers of past decisions, half-documented assumptions, and old mistakes disguised as design choices. Documentation is critical for understanding, institutional knowledge is vital for insight, and one must have the tenacity to dig for clarity.
November 10, 2025 at 2:27 PM
Often, security work is 80% archaeology - digging through layers of past decisions, half-documented assumptions, and old mistakes disguised as design choices. Documentation is critical for understanding, institutional knowledge is vital for insight, and one must have the tenacity to dig for clarity.
Given the shifting ownership of US news orgs, I keep wondering if there's a viable option for an alternative that can compete effectively. There are certainly a number of non-profits, but most have a local focus and rather small staff. If there's a time to invest in independent journalism, it's now.
November 9, 2025 at 12:50 PM
Given the shifting ownership of US news orgs, I keep wondering if there's a viable option for an alternative that can compete effectively. There are certainly a number of non-profits, but most have a local focus and rather small staff. If there's a time to invest in independent journalism, it's now.
The thing I miss most about early forums: people actually wrote paragraphs. Today, if you see actual paragraphs, you have to wonder if it's just AI. Attention spans have shrunk from long and complex discourse which could run into several thousand words, to single sentences.
November 8, 2025 at 2:27 PM
The thing I miss most about early forums: people actually wrote paragraphs. Today, if you see actual paragraphs, you have to wonder if it's just AI. Attention spans have shrunk from long and complex discourse which could run into several thousand words, to single sentences.
It looks like FedEx and UPS are grounding MD-11s at Boeing's recommendation following the UPS-2976 crash. I really wonder if they are going to find pylon damage on the grounded planes (similar to AA-191). www.npr.org/2025/11/08/g...
UPS and FedEx grounding MD-11 planes following deadly Kentucky crash
UPS and FedEx will ground their fleets of McDonnell Douglas MD-11 planes "out of an abundance of caution" following a deadly crash at the UPS global aviation hub in Kentucky.
www.npr.org
November 8, 2025 at 1:54 PM
It looks like FedEx and UPS are grounding MD-11s at Boeing's recommendation following the UPS-2976 crash. I really wonder if they are going to find pylon damage on the grounded planes (similar to AA-191). www.npr.org/2025/11/08/g...
Periodic reminder: Archive Team is still doing important work in preserving our history, and if you have some spare CPU time & bandwidth, it would be great to spend some of that helping them. It only takes a few minutes to setup, and it'll take care of itself from there. tracker.archiveteam.org
ArchiveTeam Warrior
The ArchiveTeam Warrior is a virtual archiving appliance. You can run it to help with the ArchiveTeam archiving efforts. It will download sites and upload them to our archive — and it’s really easy…
tracker.archiveteam.org
November 7, 2025 at 2:48 PM
Periodic reminder: Archive Team is still doing important work in preserving our history, and if you have some spare CPU time & bandwidth, it would be great to spend some of that helping them. It only takes a few minutes to setup, and it'll take care of itself from there. tracker.archiveteam.org
Lately, I’ve been thinking about empathy - how easily it’s dismissed as weakness by those who mistake cruelty for strength. When someone mocks empathy, what they’re really rejecting is accountability for the harm they cause.
November 7, 2025 at 11:35 AM
Lately, I’ve been thinking about empathy - how easily it’s dismissed as weakness by those who mistake cruelty for strength. When someone mocks empathy, what they’re really rejecting is accountability for the harm they cause.
There’s a very specific joy in deploying something new - equal parts anxiety, pride, and disbelief that it actually works.
November 6, 2025 at 2:30 PM
There’s a very specific joy in deploying something new - equal parts anxiety, pride, and disbelief that it actually works.
Randomly Scheduled Reminder: You should use a tool like Loqseq or Obsidian to keep notes and a journal of your life, work, and what you're doing. Future you will thank you. Having those details handy and searchable comes in handy in so many ways.
My approach: adamcaudill.com/2022/06/05/l...
My approach: adamcaudill.com/2022/06/05/l...
Logseq: My External Brain
Over the years I’ve used most of the major note taking tools around, I’ve been a paying customer of Evernote for over a decade, I’ve used Standard Notes, Good Notes, pen & paper, and a bunch of…
adamcaudill.com
November 5, 2025 at 2:07 PM
Randomly Scheduled Reminder: You should use a tool like Loqseq or Obsidian to keep notes and a journal of your life, work, and what you're doing. Future you will thank you. Having those details handy and searchable comes in handy in so many ways.
My approach: adamcaudill.com/2022/06/05/l...
My approach: adamcaudill.com/2022/06/05/l...
I had been busy watching the incredible US election results tonight, and missed that Isaacman was re-nominated as NASA administrator. As someone that cares deeply about space and science in general, this really does seem to be the least-bad option for NASA's future. techcrunch.com/2025/11/04/t...
Trump flips and re-nominates Jared Isaacman to lead NASA | TechCrunch
The reversal comes after weeks of pressure from people like Elon Musk, who accused Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy of being ill-equipped for the job.
techcrunch.com
November 5, 2025 at 8:57 AM
I had been busy watching the incredible US election results tonight, and missed that Isaacman was re-nominated as NASA administrator. As someone that cares deeply about space and science in general, this really does seem to be the least-bad option for NASA's future. techcrunch.com/2025/11/04/t...
It’s strange how artefacts of your professional life - old emails, commits, photos - become personal archaeology. It's also strange what you can learn about yourself when you look at these things objectively.
November 3, 2025 at 2:27 PM
It’s strange how artefacts of your professional life - old emails, commits, photos - become personal archaeology. It's also strange what you can learn about yourself when you look at these things objectively.
I found some old thumb drives, and I'm a bit too nervous to plug them in to see what they are - as they may be old BadUSB test/demo devices. Most of those were fairly harmless and focused on hiding data, but a few were rather nasty (attacking the root USB controller).
November 3, 2025 at 12:42 PM
I found some old thumb drives, and I'm a bit too nervous to plug them in to see what they are - as they may be old BadUSB test/demo devices. Most of those were fairly harmless and focused on hiding data, but a few were rather nasty (attacking the root USB controller).
Talk about a blast from the past - I just logged into my first Gmail account from shortly after the service launched back in 2004. The first email is from a ticket I opened with Gmail support, suggesting that they add POP3 support.
November 2, 2025 at 3:20 AM
Talk about a blast from the past - I just logged into my first Gmail account from shortly after the service launched back in 2004. The first email is from a ticket I opened with Gmail support, suggesting that they add POP3 support.
Is it just me, or is (non-political) conversation a dying thing across social media? I'm seeing fewer and fewer replies to non-political posts both here and on Mastodon (my posts and those I follow). It's not dead, buy it seems to be dying.
October 28, 2025 at 4:24 AM
Is it just me, or is (non-political) conversation a dying thing across social media? I'm seeing fewer and fewer replies to non-political posts both here and on Mastodon (my posts and those I follow). It's not dead, buy it seems to be dying.
I missed this being published: patents.google.com/patent/US202...
One of my biggest accomplishments from my time at 1Password, and solved a huge challenge in enabling SSO / passwordless while maintaining security. Proud to see my name here & very grateful for the incredible team that I was part of.
One of my biggest accomplishments from my time at 1Password, and solved a huge challenge in enabling SSO / passwordless while maintaining security. Proud to see my name here & very grateful for the incredible team that I was part of.
US20250202882A1 - Methods and systems for facilitating single sign-on and passwordless sign-on
- Google Patents
Computer-implemented methods and systems for facilitating single sign-on (SSO) and passwordless sign-on to a web service provider are provided. A client device authorized for SSO or passwordless sign-...
patents.google.com
October 25, 2025 at 11:35 AM
I missed this being published: patents.google.com/patent/US202...
One of my biggest accomplishments from my time at 1Password, and solved a huge challenge in enabling SSO / passwordless while maintaining security. Proud to see my name here & very grateful for the incredible team that I was part of.
One of my biggest accomplishments from my time at 1Password, and solved a huge challenge in enabling SSO / passwordless while maintaining security. Proud to see my name here & very grateful for the incredible team that I was part of.
I don't do a lot of true street photography, as I mostly avoid making people the center of most of my work, but this is my favourite of all the street photos I've taken. The contrast is just so striking between these two having a friendly chat.
Photo of the Day: "Contrast" exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
Contrast — by Adam Caudill - Exposera
Contrast
exposera.com
October 23, 2025 at 1:43 AM
I don't do a lot of true street photography, as I mostly avoid making people the center of most of my work, but this is my favourite of all the street photos I've taken. The contrast is just so striking between these two having a friendly chat.
I really do love what you can see in cities, when you take a moment to find a different perspective. Another photo of Toronto from 2022. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
Glass & Steel — by Adam Caudill - Exposera
There's so much beauty to be seen in cities, if we only take the time to look around and see it. Sometimes it's as simple as just looking up. A small change in perspective can show much that would eas...
exposera.com
October 13, 2025 at 11:20 PM
I really do love what you can see in cities, when you take a moment to find a different perspective. Another photo of Toronto from 2022. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
I've been going through some of my photos from a trip to Toronto a couple years ago - it really is a beautiful city. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
Glass Tower — by Adam Caudill - Exposera
Glass Tower
exposera.com
October 8, 2025 at 7:13 PM
I've been going through some of my photos from a trip to Toronto a couple years ago - it really is a beautiful city. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
I've been taking some time off to build something new; a new service to share and present photos and stories. I think it's turning into something nice. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
The Water Mirror — by Adam Caudill - Exposera
The Water Mirror
exposera.com
October 6, 2025 at 7:36 PM
I've been taking some time off to build something new; a new service to share and present photos and stories. I think it's turning into something nice. exposera.com/u/adamcaudil...
"Great! Now we're down to 89 TypeScript errors from the original 82..." - Thanks Copilot , you've been super helpful with this refactor.
August 18, 2025 at 1:27 PM
"Great! Now we're down to 89 TypeScript errors from the original 82..." - Thanks Copilot , you've been super helpful with this refactor.
The more I build on DigitalOcean, the more I'm glad I went with them over other/larger players. Everything just works. Their control panel is clean and intuitive, everything is easy to find because it's exactly where it should be. The performance is really good. I'm just so happy with that decision.
July 26, 2025 at 9:26 PM
The more I build on DigitalOcean, the more I'm glad I went with them over other/larger players. Everything just works. Their control panel is clean and intuitive, everything is easy to find because it's exactly where it should be. The performance is really good. I'm just so happy with that decision.
There's something special about that moment in building a new product when you push the first real easter egg to production. Now comes the important question: will anyone find it before I forget about adding it.
July 22, 2025 at 3:28 AM
There's something special about that moment in building a new product when you push the first real easter egg to production. Now comes the important question: will anyone find it before I forget about adding it.
Reposted by Adam Caudill
We just kicked off the soft-launch of Cheksuite — our SaaS web vulnerability scanner. We're onboarding early users now. API scanning and powerful AI features coming soon. Read more: blog.numorian.com/introducing-...
Introducing Cheksuite: Soft-Launching Our Next Generation SaaS Web Vulnerability Scanner
Today marks an exciting milestone for Numorian. After months of meticulous development, research, and refinement, we are pleased to announce the soft-launch of Cheksuite, our advanced SaaS-based web…
blog.numorian.com
June 26, 2025 at 4:57 PM
We just kicked off the soft-launch of Cheksuite — our SaaS web vulnerability scanner. We're onboarding early users now. API scanning and powerful AI features coming soon. Read more: blog.numorian.com/introducing-...
From my blog archive: Parasitic & Symbiotic Business Models - On the impact of business models, and how they impact the relationship between users of a product and the company that makes it. adamcaudill.com/2021/08/22/p...
Parasitic & Symbiotic Business Models
Does your business model thrive as your customer thrives, or does it drain the life from your customers? After a recent1 conversation on the impact of improved privacy tools (i.e., the eventual…
adamcaudill.com
June 20, 2025 at 9:02 PM
From my blog archive: Parasitic & Symbiotic Business Models - On the impact of business models, and how they impact the relationship between users of a product and the company that makes it. adamcaudill.com/2021/08/22/p...
From my blog archive: Win by Building for Failure - Why going down the happy path when designing and building systems is often the wrong path. adamcaudill.com/2021/08/22/w...
Win by Building for Failure
Systems fail; it doesn’t matter what the system is. Something will fail sooner or later. When you design a system, are you focused on the happy path, or are you building with the possibility of…
adamcaudill.com
June 20, 2025 at 1:48 PM
From my blog archive: Win by Building for Failure - Why going down the happy path when designing and building systems is often the wrong path. adamcaudill.com/2021/08/22/w...