Introducing GovHacks: We Don’t Write the Law. We Debug It.

Staff
January 16, 2026

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I’m looking for paid, remote-friendly work in IT, systems, automation, and analysis.

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I’m a former NASA, Microsoft, and IBM vendor who now finds himself between engagements. This isn’t a pivot away from REVOLT—it’s an honest statement of capacity.

My background is technical. I don’t do vibes. I do systems.

I specialize in diagnosing why things don’t work, then fixing, simplifying, or rebuilding them so they stop breaking. If your operation runs on tribal knowledge or duct tape, I’m useful.

Contract, project-based, or short-term work is fine.
Unpaid, equity-only, or vague ideas aren’t.
If you need competence and results, reach out.

TL;DR

GovHacks is an adversarial stress-testing service for municipal policies. Much like a penetration test for software, GovHacks identifies constitutional vulnerabilities and liability “edge cases” in city ordinances before they result in lawsuits or civil rights complaints. We don’t litigate or lobby; we debug policy to prevent expensive legal failures.

Cities routinely hire outside professionals to stress-test critical systems.

You don’t ask developers to pentest their own code.

You don’t ask internal staff to run red-team exercises on their own controls.

And when the Secret Service needed to stop counterfeiters, they hired the best one they could find.

That premise—made famous in Catch Me If You Can—is not about glorifying bad actors.

It’s about realism.

If you want to know where a system fails, you don’t ask people who designed it.

You ask people who know how it breaks.

That is the role GovHacks fills.

What GovHacks Does

GovHacks provides adversarial policy stress-testing for municipalities and public agencies.

We examine policies the way a future plaintiff, journalist, or advocacy group will—except we do it before the demand letter, the records request, or the §1983 complaint.

Our work focuses on:

  • First Amendment exposure

  • Unbridled discretion and selective enforcement risk

  • Comparator vulnerability

  • Post-hoc justification patterns

  • Fee-shifting liability under federal civil rights statutes

We do not litigate.

We do not lobby.

We do not draft your ordinances.

We test them.

Think of it as debugging code that has been running for years—but has never been fuzz-tested against edge cases.

Why “Edge Case” Matters

Most municipal policies function smoothly under normal conditions.

They fail when:

  • An unexpected applicant appears

  • A disfavored speaker follows the rules literally

  • A journalist or AI-assisted reviewer reads the policy as written

  • Or a court examines how discretion is actually exercised

Those are edge cases.

And edge cases are where liability lives.

GovHacks specializes in those edges—because that’s where systems reveal what they really are.

How We Work

Our process is intentionally unglamorous:

  1. Policy-as-written review

  2. Application-as-practiced analysis

  3. Adversarial scenario testing

  4. Documentation of fault lines

  5. Plain-language risk memo for decision-makers

No theatrics.

No public confrontation.

No lawsuits.

Just clarity.

Who This Is For

GovHacks is for cities that would rather:

  • Fix a vulnerability quietly than defend it loudly

  • Pay for a review instead of fee-shifting

  • Close or harden a forum instead of gambling on tradition

It is not for cities looking for validation.

It is for cities that want to know the truth before someone else finds it.

The Bottom Line

You don’t hire testers because you expect failure.

You hire them because failure is expensive when discovered by someone else.

GovHacks exists to surface those failures early.

We don’t write the law.

We debug it.

If you want to talk—confidentially—about stress-testing a policy before it becomes someone else’s case study, you know where to find us.

FAQs

What is “adversarial policy stress-testing”?

It is a “Red Team” approach to public policy. We analyze ordinances through the lens of a potential litigant or advocacy group to find legal vulnerabilities before they are exploited in court.

Does GovHacks provide legal representation?

No. GovHacks does not litigate, lobby, or draft legislation. We act as independent testers to provide a risk memo, allowing city attorneys and officials to make informed decisions.

Why is it called “debugging” the law?

Municipal codes often contain “bugs”—vague language or unbridled discretion—that function fine in everyday use but fail during “edge cases” (like a controversial applicant). We find these bugs so they can be patched quietly.

Who is this service for?

It is designed for city managers, municipal attorneys, and department heads who prefer to identify and fix constitutional vulnerabilities privately rather than defending them in a public, high-stakes lawsuit.


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