I’m more worried about the clowns with all of our data. Most of these hackers rely on the clowns in cybersecurity to do their worst damage. Does anyone still think it is a good idea to give all of our information to the states so they can give it to the Trump administration? Wouldn’t something have gotten done if there clients were all millionaires?
It’s still amazing that the so-called ‘conservatives’ who are terrified of Big Government want to turn the country over to ‘patriotic’ multinational corporations.
Because taxes (meaning income taxes only — the so-called ‘conservatives’ are totally comfortable with other taxes).
Would you believe that while I was employed, my employers made me use my social security number as my employee identification number? I had to sign in with that SS number on a multi page public hard copy. There it was on the sign in podium where any and every person in the building who needed to sign in could see it and everyone else’s. That was policy for 30 years in every place I worked. The stolen identity paranoia didn’t crop up until about 10 years before my retirement.
Interestingly, the Equifax fiasco seems to fall into that uninteresting category of “but regulations just drag down investment in a free market economy.” Our personal information, particularly personal information not freely given, should be highly regulated, whether collected by government or a private business. A look at a risk assessment matrix show why: “Severity—Catastrophic: Risks with extreme negative consequences that could cause the entire project to fail or severely impact daily operations of the organization. These are the highest-priority risks to address.” Tens of millions could be financially wiped out or spend all their time dealing with ID theft.*“Likelihood—Definite: Risks that are almost certain to manifest. Address these risks first.” Criminal hackers exist.**https://www.smartsheet.com/all-risk-assessment-matrix-templates-you-need
Masterskrain Premium Member over 6 years ago
Funny, that ugly clown with the orange fright wig kinda reminds me of someone else…
Librarylady over 6 years ago
I’m thinking clowns need a pr agency to change their profile
Mr. Blawt over 6 years ago
I’m more worried about the clowns with all of our data. Most of these hackers rely on the clowns in cybersecurity to do their worst damage. Does anyone still think it is a good idea to give all of our information to the states so they can give it to the Trump administration? Wouldn’t something have gotten done if there clients were all millionaires?
braindead Premium Member over 6 years ago
It’s still amazing that the so-called ‘conservatives’ who are terrified of Big Government want to turn the country over to ‘patriotic’ multinational corporations.
Because taxes (meaning income taxes only — the so-called ‘conservatives’ are totally comfortable with other taxes).
Sadandconfused9 over 6 years ago
Would you believe that while I was employed, my employers made me use my social security number as my employee identification number? I had to sign in with that SS number on a multi page public hard copy. There it was on the sign in podium where any and every person in the building who needed to sign in could see it and everyone else’s. That was policy for 30 years in every place I worked. The stolen identity paranoia didn’t crop up until about 10 years before my retirement.
Duane Ott over 6 years ago
Interestingly, the Equifax fiasco seems to fall into that uninteresting category of “but regulations just drag down investment in a free market economy.” Our personal information, particularly personal information not freely given, should be highly regulated, whether collected by government or a private business. A look at a risk assessment matrix show why: “Severity—Catastrophic: Risks with extreme negative consequences that could cause the entire project to fail or severely impact daily operations of the organization. These are the highest-priority risks to address.” Tens of millions could be financially wiped out or spend all their time dealing with ID theft.*“Likelihood—Definite: Risks that are almost certain to manifest. Address these risks first.” Criminal hackers exist.**https://www.smartsheet.com/all-risk-assessment-matrix-templates-you-need