A wonderful story about Glaucus research group is at https://www.latrobe.edu.au/news/articles/2018/opinion/truth,-weaponised-short-sellers. It is a bit old and I believe Glacus Research group is defunct by now. Activist shortsellers that use rhetorical trickery to lower stock prices is a new one for me. Soren Aandahl left Glaucus in 2018 to found another company called Blue Orca Capital. I should do research on Blue Orca Capital to see if they are above board. My skills are weak but I can take a cursory glance. It has piqued my interest just slightly. I did a whois lookup of the Blue Orca Capital website and the domain name was registered in 2018 at right about the time Soren Aandahl left Glaucus Research Group which is not surprising because he was the founder of Blue Orca Capital. Nothing interesting showed up in the whois lookup because of the privacy redaction.
Knowing how to pivot is important in OSINT it seems and to go from a wide scope to a narrower scope. Pivot charts are useful to collect information of results from selectors, each pivot being a resultant node of information. Going from a wide search to a narrower search is like the goldilock's effect, a little too wide and you lose focus but too focused you can lose out on other wider details. All sources state that methdology trumps tools and the focus early on in an OSINT career is to develop your methodology like knowing how to pivot and knowing the intelligence cycle. Being nimble and flexible in your search queries is important to hone your searches using Google as a primary tool to locate information. You just have to Google it. You Google to find tools like websites that facilitate investigations. It seems that Rae Baker, the author of Deep Dive into OSINT, is adept at using Google to serve her needs though she stresses the importance of methodology. Cynthia Hetherington of ...
Comments
Post a Comment