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Best Posts in Thread: PEGASUS - the future?

  1. eskirvin

    eskirvin DI Forum Adept Blood Donor Veteran Navy

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    The military has their ways of dealing with this, as I've seen first hand. No one else will care until the cost of protecting the network is less than the cost lost by not protecting it. Tesla wants to build cars in China. Elon might as well make Tesla engineering documents open source. The whole world sold itself to China for cheaper rubber dogshit and will pay the price for the foreseeable future.
     
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  2. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    How would it become unusable? You could still use it to communicate, there would just be someone listening to our boring conversations. I believe a lot of people think they are far more interesting and important than they actually are.
     
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  3. Rye83

    Rye83 with pastrami Admin Secured Account Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Army

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    The vast majority of people already give that information away voluntarily. If you use a credit card, PayPal, Google wallet, apple pay or shop online they are 100% collecting that data and, in many cases, selling that information to undisclosed third parties. Bank accounts are insured and fraud protection laws are already in place.
     
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  4. Notmyrealname

    Notmyrealname DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    It seems the internet might soon, if it has not already, become unusable as a means of mass communication. It has gone from friend to foe. It no longer matters if we accept terms and conditions (nobody reads them anyway) because spyware is not asking any permissions! Too many organisations want information on people - governments are terrified its citizens will do things and it won't know (hence the move to cashless societies to record all financial transactions) and criminals (some would class many governments as criminals anyway) want to get access to our information and our cash. Even more worrying, most of our infrastructure and services are now tied into the internet and have become extremely vulnerable.
     
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  5. john boy

    john boy DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster

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    So my question would be.......Do we have a choice?
    I try not to accept terms conditions with every article online, I would be interested in reading.
    Short of replacing all your information and wiping clean your PC, Laptop, Notebook, Smart TV and mobile Phone, what choices do you have?
    I thought WhatsApp was safe, it would appear that it is not. It seems everybody wants your information and storage space!
     
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  6. Notmyrealname

    Notmyrealname DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster Showcase Reviewer

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    That's why I wrote in the title "the future?".

    If you read the article you will have read "The ability to remotely access that phone was once considered something only a few states could do. But high-end espionage and surveillance powers are now in the hands of many other countries and even individuals and small groups."

    Also, "Even the tools to disrupt a business online are now easily accessible. In the past, ransomware - in which hackers demand a payment to unlock access to your system - was the province of criminal networks. It is now sold as as a service on the dark web. An individual can simply agree a deal to give them a cut of the profits and they will hand over the tools and even offer support and advice, including helplines in the case of problems. Other techniques - like location tracking and developing profiles of people's activity and behaviour - which once required specialised access and authority are now available freely."

    So we dismiss these potentials at our peril.
     
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  7. Dutchie

    Dutchie DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer Veteran Army

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    I would think that it is pretty safe to presume that (for now at least) unassuming individuals who are neither rich nor influential will not be on any government's (MI6 and similar) target list for infection with this sophisticated spyware.
    It's not something I would think is available to your average hacker group or crime syndicate.
    So unless you plan on putting Diageo out of business with mass production of your copycat liquor you should not loose any sleep over this Pegasus thing I think :biggrin:
     
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