coip
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- May 21, 2013
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a) If you broadcast data over open, unencrypted Wifi you should have no expectation of security. That is like using a megaphone in Times Square and then getting angry that people heard you.
b) That it was an accident rather than a planned occurrence is denoted by the triviality of the fine - clearly the AGs knew they didn't have much of a hope of winning and so settled for the ridiculous amount of $7m.
c) Canada and Europe found that that data was not used, was not even looked at. How much data do you think it is possible to capture driving through a street? Not like they stood outside houses for hours on end recording stuff.
d) Explain how Google made "personal profit" out of fragments of millions of unrelated Wifi packets. Hardly like they need to steal your online banking password and get to the few thousand in the current account...
a) That is the stupidest thing I've ever heard and I know of no modern judicial system with such a stupid tenet. No, that would be like someone standing in Times Square holding a $100 bill that consequently gets stolen but you think it's okay because he shouldn't have held it in front of other people. Is it stupid to have unsecured WiFi networks? Yep. Is it stupid to wave a $100 bill around Times Square? Yep. Is it okay to steal either of them? No. Stealing is stealing. Don't be obtuse
b) An accident!? Nobody accidentally harvests a plethora of sensitive data from civilians. Don't be na?ve.
c) It doesn't matter if they used the stolen data or not. Kevin Mitnick stole a **** ton of data, never used the data even once. Just collected it. He spent years in prison. How much data is possible to capture driving around? A boat load of data. Ask Max Butler how much data he got from driving around in cars stealing data from unencrypted WiFi networks. Oh wait, you can't; he's in prison. Just like Google should be.
d) No one knows what they did with the data or how they profited from it. It doesn't matter either way. What they did was criminal and hypocritical. Why you are trying to defend such egregiously unethical behavior by a corporation that repeatedly preaches a Do-No-Evil mantra is beyond comprehension.