• JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    2 hours ago

    Hack has at least two definitions in a computing context.

    1. A nifty trick or shortcut that is useful. “Check out this hack to increase your productivity.”
    2. Accessing something you shouldn’t. “They hacked into the database.”

    A lot of times they sort of get used in conjunction to describe interesting ways to gain access to secure systems, but using it to describe accessing insecure things you shouldn’t is still a valid usage of the phrase.

    That said I definitely wanna see the company face charges for this, this is insane.

    • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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      1 hour ago

      Yeah, if I leave my house door wide open for a few weeks and I get robbed, it’s still burglary.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        1 hour ago

        Thank you! I feel like I’m taking crazy pills reading people’s reactions to this. And if it was a business instead of your house and it was customer data you weren’t protecting you should still be in trouble too. It’s like people think only one side can be in the wrong in this or that because the data wasn’t secured and in the public that gives them free reign to post it everywhere. I wonder how those people would feel if their addresses were leaked. Afterall, if you’re a homeowner your name is attached to the property and is publicly accessible.

      • Grendel84?@tiny.tilde.website
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        47 minutes ago

        @SpaceCowboy @JackbyDev

        In a legal context there’s also the concept of a “reasonable expectation of privacy”. The computer abuse and fraud act defines hacking as accessing data or systems you are not authorized to access.

        A better analogy is putting your journal in a public library and getting mad when somone reads it.

        I’m not saying what these ass holes did was right, I’m saying that the company weakened their legal position by not protecting the data.

        • iii@mander.xyz
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          34 minutes ago

          A better analogy is putting your journal in a public library and getting mad when someone reads it.

          Good analogy indeed. I’d go one step further and add: it’s like promising others you’ll keep their diary safe, then putting it in a public library, to then get mad when someone reads it.

    • Spice Hoarder@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      No, this was a data leak. The word “hack” has legal implications and shifts the blame away from the company and onto the individual who discovered the leak.