The entire point is it was happening in the past though. You think they would have been preventing it before 2015, when the article claims the man notified them?
I dunno, man. I’ve been doing cybersecurity for two decades and there are an awful lot of really stupid / ignorant / blissfully unaware people in IT across the private sector - particularly at big and older companies. It wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest to learn that something like this goes unnoticed. Unless you suspect a problem, if the system isn’t subject to regular audit, it could go on for years without anyone bothering to check.
Well, without providing an in-depth breakdown of your thought process, you’re just a rando on the internet, along with all the rest of us. After all, I can say I’m the owner of Twitter if I really want.
Nobody should ever believe anyone’s claims on here automatically. That would be a very unwise habit to get into, for anyone.
I hope you’re right though, that would be good. It certainly makes more sense to me that this would be caught earlier, and the DoD simply wouldn’t bother telling anyone it was dealt with.
I still remember the biggest flaw in Hayes 9600 and how to fix it, or how to set up two soundcards so that their IRQs aren’t in conflict, in DOS environment if it helps strengthening my credentials. 😎
(Unless one of those cards is Gravis’ clone called Primax, these were often impossible to pair with good old Soundblaster).
The entire point is it was happening in the past though. You think they would have been preventing it before 2015, when the article claims the man notified them?
Definitely.
I am in the IT for decades, not days.
I dunno, man. I’ve been doing cybersecurity for two decades and there are an awful lot of really stupid / ignorant / blissfully unaware people in IT across the private sector - particularly at big and older companies. It wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest to learn that something like this goes unnoticed. Unless you suspect a problem, if the system isn’t subject to regular audit, it could go on for years without anyone bothering to check.
In private sector - yes. To this day people often mistake Internet browser for search engines.
Point being, government is often worse than the private sector.
from the teachings of Sun Tsy: if you’re weak, pretend to be strong. If you’re strong pretend to be weak.
Well, without providing an in-depth breakdown of your thought process, you’re just a rando on the internet, along with all the rest of us. After all, I can say I’m the owner of Twitter if I really want.
Nobody should ever believe anyone’s claims on here automatically. That would be a very unwise habit to get into, for anyone.
I hope you’re right though, that would be good. It certainly makes more sense to me that this would be caught earlier, and the DoD simply wouldn’t bother telling anyone it was dealt with.
I still remember the biggest flaw in Hayes 9600 and how to fix it, or how to set up two soundcards so that their IRQs aren’t in conflict, in DOS environment if it helps strengthening my credentials. 😎
(Unless one of those cards is Gravis’ clone called Primax, these were often impossible to pair with good old Soundblaster).
Appeal to authority is a logical fallacy. State your case not your credentials.
I didn’t quote anyone famous or important.
Please do not use words and expressions you’ve heard from someone but neither fully understand, nor seem particularly interested in researching.