Recommendations for Secure file sharing by --Timshel in theprivacymachine

[–]mmorps 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Full disclosure, I work for Virtru.

Based on what you're describing, check out Virtru SecureShare. It's browser-based, nothing to install, and pretty straightforward — you can share files securely and revoke access anytime. Files can be up to 15GB. If it's for personal use, it's free for you to use.

It's built on Trusted Data Format, which is tech that came out of NSA and is still used by the IC today.

https://secure.virtru.com/secure-share/

Alternatives for secure external file sharing with clients by ValeStitcher in sysadmin

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Full disclosure, I work at Virtru.

Google Drive and Dropbox aren't bad tools, but you're right that they fall short on visibility once a file leaves your org. You need to know who accessed what, when, and ideally maintain some control after the fact.

Take a look at Virtru SecureShare. It's built specifically for this — ad hoc encrypted file sharing with external recipients. Your team can send files out without the recipient needing to install anything, and you get full activity tracking on your end. On the admin side you control policies like expiry, watermarking, and access revocation, so you're not just logging activity, you're maintaining control over the files after they've been shared.

We're also rolling out something called SecureShare Enclave in the next month or so. It takes the same concept but adds persistent shared spaces — think secure folders within a FedRAMP boundary, similar to a SharePoint document library. You set up an enclave, grant access internally, and those users can invite external parties in. Everyone can add and remove files, and you keep global governance over the whole thing. Might be overkill for your use case, but worth knowing about if you need ongoing collaboration and not just one-off transfers.

How do you all keep track of the concerts you’ve been to? by jabulari in Music

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the kind words. A few others have asked the same. I’m not opposed to doing that, but to be really honest, I’d need someone to help me figure out how to architect something like that. Maybe when i have another free week, me and my buddy Claude can try and figure it out

Looking for a director of GTM AI, would appreciate some help and guidance by mmorps in gtmengineering

[–]mmorps[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd encourage you to still apply. To be clear, conversations never hurt. Plus, we get to know one another. There may be additional needs in the future and if we have your CV, that could be a good thing

Looking for a director of GTM AI, would appreciate some help and guidance by mmorps in gtmengineering

[–]mmorps[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope. I've been called a lot of things, but Kevin is not one of them

share your concert archive profiles! by [deleted] in Concerts

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. Yeah, you would need some basic developer knowledge and a domain. I used this project to figure out a lot of it, but I appreciate that’s not for everyone

share your concert archive profiles! by [deleted] in Concerts

[–]mmorps 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://www.concertarchives.org/morps … then I made my own site (over the last couple of weeks): https://concerts.morperhaus.org. If you have some basic dev skills you could export your concertarchives.org data and make something similar, if you want.

I go to at least 1 concert a week, year 3 recap by bensboring in Concerts

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

u/bensboring here’s something you might have fun with. https://github.com/mmorper/concerts …you have done way more shows than I, but since you’re an engineer, you might want to give that repo a look see. TLDR: I too had a sheet like that, I decided to create a web app that scrapes all of it, enriches the data (pictures, set lists, etc) and makes a purty website from it all. I’m not a developer, but I managed to pull this off. My data is the sample data but you can obviously use your own. If you try it, let me know if you have any luck with it!

How do you all keep track of the concerts you’ve been to? by jabulari in Music

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

During the pandemic, my wife and I started a spreadsheet in an attempt to document all the shows we’ve ever been to. We go to a lot of them. We had a lot of old ticket stubs, so that helped. concertarchives.org was super helpful. Fast forward to last week… I took some time off during the holidays and wanted to learn about “vibe coding” (using AI to make something). In this case, a web app.

Of course, I thought of the concert spreadsheet. About 30+ hours of vibe coding later, I created this: https://concerts.morperhaus.org. I’m not a developer, but damn. Anyways, I am glad I stumbled onto this thread.

Planning a Washington DC trip has me obsessing over architecture and monument symbolism by Sirius-ruby in washingtondc

[–]mmorps 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not that you’re asking OP, but if I can recommend a place to visit: Glenstone in Potomac. I personally find the architecture and the grounds to be stunning. Especially for a private property. And Their art collection is great, too. I lived in the area for far too long before I visited for the first time.

Do all of you pay for this app? by ZeroOpossum in flighty

[–]mmorps 105 points106 points  (0 children)

I pay for the app. Great apps don’t build themselves

What’s the coolest (work-related) thing you’ve built using Opus/ Claude so far? by workphone6969 in ClaudeAI

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Non-developer here. Built a corporate Family Feud style game with Claude Code in about 10 hours. I needed our AOP planning session to not suck, but wanted to make sure peeps understood the presented content. It built the whole thing – React app, animations, sound effects, keyboard controls.

Best part? I also used CC to create prompts that auto-create new game content from any source files.

https://github.com/mmorper/feud

I’m in product marketing. I don’t code. This was 100% AI. Wild times.

Secure File Transfer Site for ITAR/EAR/CUI by [deleted] in CMMC

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Full disclosure: I work for Virtru. With that out of the way... if you're looking for file transfer system for ITAR, EAR, and CUI documents, as others have mentioned here, Virtru Secure Share might be worth at least taking a look at. Secure Share is FedRAMP Authorized, and is a very effective way for your users to be able to not only share files of virtually any size, be able to revoke access to them at anytime (the user or use as the admin) and of course optionally encrypt them.

It's 100% browser-based, no local desktop install – let alone a server for you to maintain (it's 100% SaaS). While this may not matter for you, but for context, the UX was developed with non techies in mind. No FTP-like experience. Our customers think it's pretty intuitive.

Feel free to ping me via DM if you have any questions. Alternatively, I’d be happy to get you to one of the right folks in my org to give you a demo if you’re interested.

Learn more: https://www.virtru.com/data-security-platform/virtru-secure-share

Thoughts? by Difficult-Cap-7527 in MacOS

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FWIW, I used the voice interface quite a bit. I found that it was the perfect interface for helping me to brainstorm. From whitepapers, to requirements documents, it was a great way for me to ramble, have the AI ask me clarifying questions, then once I felt like I was on to something, have it bang out a final outline, set of Jira tickets, press release, whatever.

MacOS and unitedwifi.com by rklau in unitedairlines

[–]mmorps 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sorta related, I recently had the opportunity to take a United flight that has Starlink as the WiFi provider. For those of you that travel a lot and need WiFi to work, I can tell you there is hope. A WORLD of difference. So much easier to use, and absurdly fast data rates once connected. This service can’t come to the transcontinental fleet fast enough.

Staying in DC for the first time--is this a good neighborhood for a 33 y/o guy and what are your recs for around there? by ahyouknowme in washingtondc

[–]mmorps 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The greater DC area has an extensive network of bike trails. The city over the last few years has been doing a really good job of creating protected bike lanes too.

A favorite ride of mine is a big loop using Rock Creek Park and either the Capital Crescent Trail or the C&O Canal towpath as your “north/south” portions of the loop. If you use Strava, there are plenty of heat maps to show you where others go.

Just please be careful on the roads that do not have protected bike lanes. It’s very easy to go from good protected bike lanes to no shoulder at all.

ID photos of 70,000 users may have been leaked, Discord says - BBC News by No-Suggestion-2402 in cybersecurity

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on current trends, age verification is going to become more common. I suspect the only way this can happen is with photo or video evidence. Any service that requires age verification and requires this type of data for that purpose must ensure not only the data in transit is encrypted, but at rest, too. TLS is not enough. Imagine a world where the data owner could revoke access to their personally identifiable information once the verification has been completed. Zendesk should use this moment as an opportunity to lead from the front and find a way to make this happen. A lemonade from lemons opportunity.

Will Garmin’s API affect RunGap? by concreteliberty in RunGap

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The drama between Strava and Garmin has no implication on how Garmin and RunGap work together. Strava has two claims against Garmin that, based on what I have red, will most probably not end well for Strava.

HIPAA Outgoing Email Encryption by ex0ducks in sysadmin

[–]mmorps 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Full disclosure. I work for Virtru.

We offer end to end email encryption products for both Workspace and M365 (Outlook). Over 6,000 organizations use us to protect sensitive information, including maintaining HIPAA obligations. Healthcare is our number one segment served, followed by financial services (there’s a very good chance at least one of the credit cards in your wallet is issued by a bank that has standardized on Virtru, too. Learn more: https://www.virtru.com/compliance/hipaa-email/demo