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ADarwinAward t1_jaan6tm wrote

In case anyone was wondering

> The incident did NOT involve the database involving the Witness Security Program, commonly known as the witness protection program, a source told NBC News.

Emphasis mine

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Mississimia t1_jaaqqow wrote

The government refuses to allocate enough money for cybersecurity. They refuse to hire cybersecurity professionals who smoke weed. There are a bunch of old men in charge who don't like things that aren't in their wheelhouse. And other countries are like, actively waging cyberwarfare against the US.

This could end badly.

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InternetPeon t1_jaarum8 wrote

Uh oh - are we talking about dickpics?

−15

dillrepair t1_jaawa60 wrote

Fuck i should have read further instead of just posting above … I deleted it… but yeah…. This. The entire reason for attempting to get info in the first place probably revolves directly around this kind of information…. Who knows maybe not. But Anyway yeah that was my first reaction too.

I’d like to know What are the potential other reasons to bother if they weren’t seeking exactly that kind of sensitive information. I’m sure there’s lots but specifically what would be someone’s other most important priorities

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Accurate_Zombie_121 t1_jab2241 wrote

The same government that lost all the emails and texts related to January 6th after Congress wanted them? Every single one? Doesn't surprise me in the least.

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kstinfo t1_jabf0l7 wrote

The "good" guys know all about us. The "bad" guys know all about us. The only people who don't know shit is us.

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Crizbibble t1_jabq9ec wrote

The new IT crowd especially the folks going to these software boot camps don’t know how to build networks, maintain proper information security or do much of anything outside of building front ends and web services. They are also unwilling to learn it because they don’t think it’s important. Not sure why that is happening or what schools are teaching.

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mq2thez t1_jabtria wrote

There are a lot of jobs for product, and a lot fewer jobs for infra. You can bootstrap your way into Frontend a lot faster, and in theory, you only need one “expert” to enable/review for a larger group and sorta keep things on the rails.

People follow the reward structure. If you’re trying to get into programming, boot camps and Frontend are a fast and relatively efficient way to do so.

I’ve been a “Frontend” dev for more than a decade (I remember being excited about a new library called jQuery and how many problems it solved). It’s been great watching the industry shift toward taking UI/UX more seriously, but it’s been horrifying watching software quality tank in the name of slamming out badly-A/B tested features faster and faster.

Maybe one day I’ll find another job where the focus is on the craft, but at the moment the money is coming in elsewhere.

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krumpet_ t1_jabwcb1 wrote

Do you think this is related to the ban of tiktok on government devices... w

−7

waldowv t1_jacsyj0 wrote

Infrastructure is fun as hell and I love doing it. But delivery pressure is extremely high and testing is hard so there are usually zero tests and on top of it you have to install a LifeRuiner app on your phone.

If looking down on application devs keeps you answering that pager at 2am to add yet another bandaid on top of your other bandaids, then by all means keep it up.

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Zealousideal-Eye-677 t1_jad9hz9 wrote

Do they not control the witness protection program or is that just a wrong info?

1

jonathanrdt t1_jadfhxy wrote

My kids have computer class in jr high. Last week they were handed a printout of an html page to display a table.

They typed the text from the page into their chromebooks. The teacher gave no context, didn’t explain what html is or what it’s for, didn’t even tell them what it stood for.

Even when we do try to teach them modern things, we do it so poorly and with such unqualified instruction that the time is effectively wasted.

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