Adrian Sol
Daily Stormer
September 7, 2017
Wow, this internet thing seems like it’s not too safe.
Maybe putting all of our most intimate information online was a bad idea after all.
It was a nice experiment, but it’s time to just shut everything down and go back to pen and paper.
Equifax said personal details of up to 143 million U.S. consumers were potentially accessed by hackers between mid-May and July. Its shares fell 6% following the disclosure.
For those not in the know, Equifax is a company in the business of evaluating people’s credits. In other words, they collect personal information about people; whether they pay their bills, what they buy, what they own, what jobs they do, how much money they make, and so on, in order to sell this information to other businesses and inform their decisions.
They may not have as much information about people as Google or Amazon, but it’s close.
But then again, Google isn’t getting hacked left and right, is it?
That day may come soon though, given that they’re replacing all their White male staffers with women and third-world primitives.
The company said criminals had accessed details including names and social security numbers. Credit card numbers for about 209,000 people, and certain documents for another 182,000 were also accessed.
Yeah, I’m sure they didn’t totally downplay how many accounts were compromised to save face. In reality, if their tech teams couldn’t stop this breach from happening, it’s unclear if they could even ascertain with full certainty the severity of the hack.
You’d think these financial companies took their security more seriously.
The company has set up a website to help people figure out if they are among those whose information was compromised. Equifax discovered the hack on July 29, and has hired a cybersecurity firm to investigate.
The company said there was no evidence of a breach into its core consumer or commercial credit reporting databases.
The breach could be one of the biggest in the United States. Last December, Yahoo Inc said more than 1 billion user accounts was compromised in August 2013, while in 2014 e-commerce company EBay Inc had urged 145 million users to change their passwords following a cyber attack.
Don’t worry goyim, your info is still secure with us, we promise.
So, let me get this straight.
This hack happened between “mid may” and “late July,” and Equifax is trying to claim that the criminals only got access to less than 1% of their accounts?
That’s more than a month! Without being detected in any way!
If I had to bet, I’d say the hacks got their hands on damn near everything. They probably had plenty of time to cover their tracks, too. Of course, if they admitted this, the company would probably be finished, so they’re going around saying “oh, they had access to our systems for a month, but they only got a few people’s data, don’t worry.”
We’ve been saying over and over again that the West’s over-reliance on fragile networked infrastructure makes us completely vulnerable to foreign attacks. If a few people can pull-off something like this purely for profit, imagine what state actors could do in a war situation.
Instead of doing whatever they can to secure our privacy and interests, America’s cyber-security agencies develop their own hacks and spyware to snoop on us. These tools are then inevitably leaked, and fall into the hands of our enemies, leaving everyone vulnerable.
It’s time we put some responsible people in charge, instead of these nutcases.