About
Connecting the dots...
Every person has a canon event—something that seals one's path, beliefs, and purpose in life. Mine was a theft. Everyone may think that the worst part of a theft is the fact that they broke your car window while you're still inside and took your cellphone. But the worst part is the aftermath, where you discover that somehow they were able to access your phone, and your bank doesn't have adequate security—leaving you with a huge debt after granting the thieves a loan in your name. After three months, I got my money back because it was proven that the delinquents used AI for social engineering, tricking bank workers into providing my personal data.
This experience was an epiphany. First, many people and companies build things that "just work", which might be a good start, but in today's world that's not enough—software must be high quality and secure by design. Second, as technology advances, people and companies can fall behind, leaving them helpless or preventing them from achieving their goals. It's our responsibility, as developers and as people, to guide others through education and better software.
Everything I've built started as a way to solve a personal problem, help people around me, and learn something new. That's how projects like two apps for my rugby club came to life—one for members and another for players—along with some personal finance web apps.
Where I'm standing
That theft showed me what happens when security is an afterthought. Now I'm on the other side, focused on cybersecurity and building efficient AI agents—making sure technology protects people instead of being used against them. I'm currently studying Computer Engineering at Buenos Aires Institute of Technology (ITBA), playing rugby, and raising a Border Collie who has strong opinions about my screen time.
Currently
- Learning cyber security
- Learning about agents
- Studying Computer Engineering at ITBA
- Playing rugby
- Raising a Border Collie