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Meta fined $102 million for storing passwords in plain text
(www.engadget.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Considering how old Facebook is, you'd think they would have their shit together when it comes to password security...
Facebook is huge and has very diverse teams/departments. It's absolutely possible the guys who know what security is, and the guys who build app xyz are in different departments, countries, continents.
The capitalists want us to believe otherwise, but large corporations are just as convoluted and inefficient as a planned economy.
Have you ever worked for government IT? Most of it is ages behind private sector.
I work in the private sector and our most essential systems run on Windows Server 2012. Because the installed applications can't be migrated to anything else. After a reboot, there's 21 scripts that need to be run in a specific order (with admin rights) to get the app running again. The frontend is an http webpage that's open to the world.
The supplier of the software is a huge global corporation, market leader in their field.
I'm not saying there isn't crap in the private sector, but in my experience government really sucks managing IT.
No. Large organizations suck at managing IT, simply because it's not crucial for them to keep it managed and they usually have enough institutional insulation to mitigate the impacts. Whether that insulation is money or disregard of the public doesn't matter all that much.
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