>What could be more impactful than the social security numbers, personal information, and financial records of every adult in the US?
You could already buy just about any adults SSN for a dollar from various breach aggregators well before the equifax leak, so literally nothing changed in that regard.
Personal information? What? Names, addresses, dates of birth? The above still applies.
Uber holds very detailed location data, travel histories. Far more revealing than what might have come
>Yes, that should tell you that gender has nothing to do with it which you are vehemently trying to make this about.
I'm not sure you can seriously read anything into that, it's essentially random whether or not these things get picked up.
Or why do you think that Susan Mauldin is widely ridiculed but Latha Maripuri is not? Both have very similar resumes, no formal qualifications and presided over massive breaches.
>I don't know that, that's why the company should have been liquidated as compensation, or at the very least it should have been taken to court where she can testify to what she tried to do and what she was blocked from doing. Otherwise, the responsibility lies with her -- that is literally her job description.
This doesn't make any sense. You don't know and the possible actual culprits did not tell you otherwise, so the responsibility lies with her?
>You could already buy just about any adults SSN for a dollar from various breach aggregators well before the equifax leak, so literally nothing changed in that regard.
Not only is this entirely speculative and needs a citation, just because others have experienced breaches doesn't mean you get to publicize private information, that once again, people did not consent to because they're not users or customers of Equifax.
>You don't know and the possible actual culprits did not tell you otherwise, so the responsibility lies with her?
Yes, that is the role of a Chief Information Security Officer. Here is a brief description for your reference:
>The CISO (chief information security officer) is a senior-level executive responsible for developing and implementing an information security program, which includes procedures and policies designed to protect enterprise communications, systems and assets from both internal and external threats.
Unless other information comes out to suggest otherwise, yes, it is very fair to assume the responsibility lies with her.
>Not only is this entirely speculative and needs a citation, just because others have experienced breaches doesn't mean you get to publicize private information, that once again, people did not consent to because they're not users or customers of Equifax.
You could already buy just about any adults SSN for a dollar from various breach aggregators well before the equifax leak, so literally nothing changed in that regard.
Personal information? What? Names, addresses, dates of birth? The above still applies.
Uber holds very detailed location data, travel histories. Far more revealing than what might have come
>Yes, that should tell you that gender has nothing to do with it which you are vehemently trying to make this about.
I'm not sure you can seriously read anything into that, it's essentially random whether or not these things get picked up.
Or why do you think that Susan Mauldin is widely ridiculed but Latha Maripuri is not? Both have very similar resumes, no formal qualifications and presided over massive breaches.
>I don't know that, that's why the company should have been liquidated as compensation, or at the very least it should have been taken to court where she can testify to what she tried to do and what she was blocked from doing. Otherwise, the responsibility lies with her -- that is literally her job description.
This doesn't make any sense. You don't know and the possible actual culprits did not tell you otherwise, so the responsibility lies with her?