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ID Theft Expert: Are You Addicted to Information Insecurity?

 

Identity Theft Speaker Robert Siciliano www.IDTheftSecurity.com Article here; Are You Addicted to Information Insecurity?

Ben Rothke writes a great article that ties in addiction and information Insecurity, thats IN-security. Face it, you may be an addict. You might have an addiction to something like sugar, nicotine, alcohol, sex, gambling, addicted emotionally to another person , or even carbohydrates. Try not eating a baked flour based food for a few days and you’ll go through withdrawals. Ben states, and we all know that addictive activities produce beta-endorphins in the brain, which gives the person a feeling of being high. In this piece it seems that high is being connected to being lazy and taking the easy road. I think he makes the correlation.

At times we do take “pleasure” in in-action. We get a moment of “high” a sense of “relief”, and that is the beta-endorphins in the brain giving you a high five for in-action. But like any addiction it will eventually hurt you in one way or another.

We have been addicted to in-action in regards to IT security. And we are fat and lazy and losing to the criminal hackers.

I often encounter people who just cant seem to get anything done. They are all addicted to in-action. And I see it in their personality’s in other areas of their lives. Organizations have to be responsible to not promote a culture of in-action addicts.
They must address security purely and organically with no additives or chemicals. They must systematically address each aspect of insecurity and execute strategic processes to avoid getting hit.

Consider criminal hackers disciplined, lean mean fighting machines that have no addictions (appease me) and thats what we are up against.

Here is another example of a long list of data breaches Video Here

 

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Comments: (1)

Stephen Wilson
Stephen Wilson - Lockstep Consulting - Sydney 05 February, 2009, 20:37Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

There are a few grains of truth here; e.g. that people tend to be lazy and that contributes to insecurity.  But that simple truism has nothing at all to do with "addiction". 

I am troubled by the implicit wild west psychlogy, the siren call for individuals to take the fight up to the hackers.  Sure, it's a good idea to buy a shredder and lock your mailbox.  But the really big issues in e-security today are the responsibility of banks and governments: the intrinsic value of stolen IDs, the consequential profit motive for mass ID theft by organised crime, the ID black market, the multi-billion dollar epidemic of Card Not Present fraud, not to mention the coming wave of medical identity theft and the like. 

It does no good to exagerate the psychology of insecurity.  In fact it may detract from the much more important issue: the rights of the public to proper, reliable identity security infrastructure.

Cheers,

Stephen Wilson, Lockstep.

 

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