Author

Topic: Adobe hack attack affected 38 million accounts (Read 780 times)

legendary
Activity: 2198
Merit: 1989
฿uy ฿itcoin
October 30, 2013, 11:46:29 AM
#8
I have an Adobe account,  but it doesn't hold any private information.
Because your IP is not personal information.  Roll Eyes

Who says I'm not using a proxy?
full member
Activity: 139
Merit: 100
I've just seen your message and check our little company's adobe accounts, and we're affected too. Just seeing this.  Cry
legendary
Activity: 2786
Merit: 1031
Now I only trust google for their security. So far they are having the best anti hack system. Am I right?

They have the money to hire the best people in the world, they have an incentive program for people finding vulnerabilities, and they do have the user best interests in first place, well, right next to the customer, of course. Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1000
When you're greedy, have a ton of money but don't want to spend it for security, this is what happens.

This also proves what I've always thought that these DRM based companies also datafarm peoples' personal information as well.
sr. member
Activity: 285
Merit: 250
Now I only trust google for their security. So far they are having the best anti hack system. Am I right?

Google might be their next target Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
Now I only trust google for their security. So far they are having the best anti hack system. Am I right?
legendary
Activity: 1540
Merit: 1000
This is just another reason in a long list to never trust companies that DRM the shit out of their software, if customers could even pay with Bitcoins and just store their files offline like anything else then everything would be much more secure and it would be down to the owner of the computer and not the company to keep that kind of thing safe.

I wouldn't be surprised to see more companies getting attacked like this in the future, we've already seen that the Playstation Network can be hacked too.
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Adobe hack attack affected 38 million accounts

What does everyone think? I feel like there's been so many high profile hacks lately that people have lost interest. The internet wasn't made for sensitive information...
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