Full Report
but since it made me eat crow, i figured i would share it.. Although i read a fair bit, i stopped really reading fiction many many moons ago. Its something i often feel ill try to get back into when im a little older with more time (like playing golf), but right now it somehow always feels like fiction pieces give off less real information than their non-fiction counterparts.. To this end, i got through about 0.5 of one of the harry potter books, before deciding that it wasnt for me (but still stood in the queue at midnight for the final book because Deels has always been nuts about it..)
Analysis Summary
# Main Topic
The provided text is **not a threat intelligence report**. It is a personal reflection by an author (Haroon Meer) on their decision to read fiction (specifically Harry Potter) after having previously avoided it, triggered by reading J.K. Rowling's commencement speech at Harvard.
Due to the lack of any technical security information, actors, TTPs, IoCs, or mitigations, the following sections will reflect this finding based strictly on the provided context, treating the non-security reflection as the entire scope of the input material.
## Key Points
- The author previously avoided fiction, feeling it contained less "real information" than non-fiction.
- The author only read about 0.5 of a Harry Potter book.
- The primary catalyst for sharing this realization was reading J.K. Rowling's commencement speech at Harvard, which earned the author's new respect.
- The author expresses a tentative desire to revisit *The Philosopher's Stone*.
## Threat Actors
- None mentioned.
## TTPs
- None mentioned.
## Affected Systems
- No systems or platforms related to cybersecurity or technology infrastructure are mentioned as being affected.
## Mitigations
- No security mitigations are mentioned.
## Conclusion
The context provided is entirely anecdotal and non-technical, concerning the author's personal reading preferences influenced by a third-party public speech. **There is no actionable threat intelligence to summarize.**