Most Americans have very little choice but to provide their personal information to credit bureaus. Hackers have found a way into that data supply chain, and are advertising access in group chats used by violent criminals who rob, assault, and shoot targets.
Without legislation forcing it, why would they bother? They already have enough separation from the crimes to avoid legal repercussions, and they get to sell data with the “this will be used for profitable criminal activity” premium baked into the original sale price.
It’s like expecting Nestle to take any
steroidsaction (weird auto-correct) to prevent child slavery. Why are they going to stir the pot and screw up the nice thing they have going?Slight tangent, but autocorrect seems to have gotten terrible the last year or so. My theory: as more and more people are using it, the initial dataset is being diluted by more and more bad typers. Instead of improving the dataset, it’s pulling it in so many different directions that it doesn’t know which way is up anymore
I’m torn, but I think I’d take steroids to prevent child slavery.
But you know Nestle wouldn’t. To them child slavery is like steroids on steroids.
Do we have c/ABrandNewSentence