You're right. It's totally a stupid thing to say. I'm sure I have nothing to base that on.AussieReaper wrote:
"Terrabytes of data is not irrelevant" ? What a stupid comment to make. That hackers could break into a system and download such a large amount of data whether it is critical or not is still an unwarranted loss of data and for terrabytes to be taken is a very clear indication that the data was taken over a long period of time and not a simple breach.FEOS wrote:
"Terabytes of data" is irrelevant. Which data was taken? Can that data be used to glean classified information about the F-35? Possibly, but simply saying "terabytes of data were exfiltrated" and then act like that in and of itself is some measure of effectiveness is simply wrong. If they exfiltrated terabytes of LockMart corporate administrivia, it doesn't amount to jackshit.
Such a hack went undetected for so long, it is incredibly embarrassing that so much data was taken without authorisation.
Oh...except that it's my fucking job to understand the operational impact of these types of things. That my office did the post-mortem on the events to determine the possible operational impact of these very events.
Probably have no idea what I'm talking about.
Too many people use "terabytes" of data as some sort of a metric. But when you're determining if the breach has operational or security impacts, you have to look at the nature of the data taken...the amount is truly irrelevant. If all they're getting is admin crap like supply lists or open-source performance data, it's irrelevant. If there was classified data or sensitive data that when compiled gives insight into classified information, that's a different story.
From a network security perspective, it's significant. From an operational perspective...not so much.
And you're making an assumption that it went on without people knowing. Believe it or not, there are people who understand more about this stuff than you do.
You're right. Then the network is fairly unusable for the purpose it was put into use. You can completely, 100% secure a network by not connecting it...but that sort of defeats the purpose, does it not? You must balance risk with benefit.Diesel_dyk wrote:
After milliseconds upon milliseconds on the internet I came up with the solution. Unplug!?
It wasn't. Unclassified data is stored on unclassified systems which are normally connected to the internet. Classified data is stored on classified networks/systems...which aren't connected to the internet.Diesel_dyk wrote:
Now, why in world is sensitive data like this being stored on a network with access to the outside.... that's just stupid.
The WSJ is being hyperbolic, to say the least.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular