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The Informatica blog - Authored by Claudiu Popa
  • LinkedINSecurity Password Breach could be good for businessLinkedIn is "unable to confirm <this week's> breach" involving millions of user passwords but agrees that passwords belonging to "some" of their members may have been compromised. While this kind of evasiveness will not earn the publicly traded firm any sympathy, what LinkedIn fails to realize is that this breach is the ideal situation for them and comes at the right time, allowing them to gain publicity at a time when their competitors' stock is battered by regular shareholder expectations, giving them the opportunity to improve their aging code and security controls while other high profile breaches take their turn in the media spotlight.

Are privacy and security matters of life and death?Security assessments are always interesting. I know, I do them all the time. You can never guess what you'll find when you're investigating a breach a...
Do cyberbullying victims like Amanda Todd deserve the treatment of people like Kody Maxson?More shocking than the fact that yet another teenager has opted to take her own life as a direct result of (cyber)bullying is the public response to t...
Why not lie to protect your identity?I’m always impressed at the low-tech nature of today’s most brazen hacking attacks and abuses of identity. It’s inevitable that so...
surveillance devices potentially used by the CBSAThe Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) has installed equipment designed to record video and audio in Canadian airports (and possibly other ports o...
LinkedINSecurity Password Breach could be good for businessLinkedIn is "unable to confirm <this week's> breach" involving millions of user passwords but agrees that passwords belonging to "some" of their...
Security and Privacy Blog: Statue of Alan Turing with Enigma MachineWhat? You didn't know? Well now you do. Alan Turing had/was/exhibited one of the greatest minds in computer science. To him we owe not just artificial...