Being Honest About Security Breaches

posted by Roy Schestowitz on Oct 08, 2023



THE Web (or web) we weaved in nearly 37 years combined (adding the age of this site to its sister site's) is a very large web of nearly 300,000 page, which all reside on the same server now, served in static form without a visitor-accessible (as opposed to user-accessible) back end. Throughout these years there were no known security incidents and now we're extra secure because scripts are not reachable by visitors of the sites or their respective Gemini capsules.


The half dozen [1-6] or so stories below focus on security incidents (via DataBreaches), which are not only very very very costly [2] but involve elaborate cover-ups [1], implicating governments [3] and impacting companies profoundly [4]. They try to blame other nations [5] (not the holes) or downplay the issues [6] (blaming human error) though the net effect is the same.


During my (almost) 12 years at Sirius I witnessed several security breaches. As noted at the time in some videos and articles, those affected were not being notified. Even staff of Sirius was barely made aware at times. Sometimes clients were given a hint, but as far as I can tell, those further down the chain were left in the dark.


A culture of lousy managers in charge (liars without technical skills) is part of the problem. They only care how they're seen, not about people's safety or any sense of integrity.


Related/contextual items from the news:



  • OrthoAlaska notifies 176,203 patients of breach. When was th ..

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