Suborn in a sentence as a verb

And then the monopolist comes and wants to suborn the power monopoly of the government to sustain its profits.

Maybe you can get suborn a filter somewhere that runs as root, or poison the environment variables of a legitimate script.

I don't know if what your threat model is here, but if you believe the NSA can suborn any CA trusted by your user's browser, then the question of which CA you use is moot.

It's also possible for a state to suborn a registrar to publish a fraudulent record so that the state can get a DV cert issued by the CA of its choosing.

He defended his then answer as the “least untruthful answer” he could give, maybe that’s a term of art in intelligence when you intentionally suborn oversight.

In my opinion it's not that the government has a 'heavy hand' but that Amazon pumps enough money into the system to suborn any regulation that'll eventually occur.

Even more effectively, law enforcement could establish or suborn real traders -- which, you know, they do anyway in drug enforcement, so no reason why they wouldn't just because cyptomarket.

>- laws against big companies behaving badly well, actually big companies do in fact use their influence to suborn those laws to get away with bad behavior and create barriers to competition.

For example, with the January Rails vulnerabilities, dropping an IMG tag with a well-constructed URL on a site on the public internet was likely enough to suborn a developer's browser into connecting to and rooting a Rails box that was firewalled from external traffic.

I'm now wondering what sort of mayhem one could cause with vendor access to every Oracle db the US .gov uses, presumably you could forge orders, reorganize parts of the executive and identify and suborn most of the people who would be in a position to stop you...If he builds a monorail, I guess it'll be obvious.

DS9 is "not Roddenberry", too, what with its most universally acclaimed episode being about Sisko deliberately subverting his own principles and those of the Federation to suborn all manner of criminality, not excluding several murders, in order to deceive a neutral party into entering the war as a Federation ally.

Ask them to move on?Suppose you buy closed source code from Australia .... you can't trust it in any way, even if you trust the company any one of their employees may have been asked to suborn the code you've paid good money for ... any smart purchaser is simply going to put Aussie software on the "do not purchase" list .....So how do I find out which software on Android Play is written in Oz?

Suborn definitions

verb

incite to commit a crime or an evil deed; "He suborned his butler to cover up the murder of his wife"

verb

procure (false testimony or perjury)

verb

induce to commit perjury or give false testimony; "The President tried to suborn false witnesses"