Vain Jangling
I will worry about being hacked—after I am hacked.
Recently, it has been brought to concern (again, not new) about foreign governments wishing to attack America with the use of hackers. Specifically, cyber-hackers who “hack” into the computer systems (including mobile devices) of persons, companies, governments, infrastructure, etc. that will cause the individual or society financial, informational, political, structural, etc. difficulties short or long-term.
The issue is:
> Many see this as a company, government, “other person” issue.
> Many do not consider the poor security and vast info shared (freely) online.
Why would someone care about my data? In short: Because it connects to more data. Phishing attempts make their way through the pool of emails, websites, social media, and ads. We see or experience fake accounts impersonating those we know (or ourselves), giving little thought as to how they took/use the information they have obtained or by clicking the new “friend request” without question (continuing the phishing expedition down the stream to the next persons on the hook).
It is mere vain jangling to believe we (or specifically our data) is non important or that securing our information and devices with proper pins and passwords are too much hassle. We can be part of the problem by ignoring the (numerous, continuous) warnings or part of the solution by diligently doing what it takes to help prevent hacks (of any kind).
Don’t get hacked off when you are hacked, if you aren’t taking it serious today.
