frankly the impression the speaker gives is of someone who feels aggrieved by an OpenBSD dev or more likely some story he heard about Theo or some similar event affronted this boy's sensibilities and his first instinct was to lash out as most children do and say "but you're wrong!". it's like a child's version of tall poppy syndrome where the kid sees someone else getting praise or attention and they resent it so they start throwing their toys around
his demeanor and metacommunication are telling specially when viewed in the context of his statements on https://isopenbsdsecu.re/about/ Because the OpenBSD community is notorious for not being nice and welcoming: They’re proud of not having a code of conduct, and were mocking FreeBSD for adopting one. Theo is known to routinely call people names and being harsh, calling people assholes, inaccurate jerk not having a code of conduct has clearly offended this boy which is slightly droll. i for one definitely consider it a positive that OpenBSD doesn't have a coc. people who want to regulate adult behavior are usually very insecure and incompetent so seek to obtain power by way of decree because they lack the ability to influence the world in any other capacity and his presentation can hardly be considered quantitative research but an arbitrary cherrypick of statements in some weird appeal to authority flex that misses the mark i can't help but smile at the audacity the kid has to think he's even capable of considering things that actual systems developers with more years experience than he's even been alive haven't cogitated and debated among each other for exponentially more hours on just one of the mitigations he thinks he's cleverly dissected than he spent on the entirety of his collective "research". it was a good laugh but he really should invest his time into building something rather than trying to tear something down that has contributed immeasurable value to the community with just one of their many innovations At moment, I want my privacy to be protected. https://mytemp.email/