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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • The medical industry has very bad security practices in general from what I hear. You can basically expect that your medical history is accessible to lots of companies that should have nothing to do with it, not just Microsoft. Pretty much all of your health data is probably in the hands of at the very least Google and Amazon and the sad reality is that people don’t care about security and privacy until it’s too late. The number one server provider for anything healthcare related is AWS and the legal requirements they have to follow for data protection, HIPAA, are the sort of requirements that only a politician would think are actually beneficial to keeping data secure.

    EDIT: to be clear, I hate it, and I think you made the right choice, but sadly expecting privacy of our medical information is gonna keep being a battle, until the medical industry starts taking it more seriously





  • Those tests are worth more than four years of college?

    Yes a test to figure out if you can perform your job is significantly more valuable than a collage degree, this doesn’t mean that college has no value, mind you, it just means that knowing how to do the job and knowing that you fit in with the company culture is vastly more important.

    Go get a bunch of I.T. certifications. Get your CompTIA A+, Network+, Security+ Get a Microsoft MCP or MCSA

    Those certifications are useless, they look good on your resume because managers love showcasing their staff’s “certifications”, as many companies that don’t understand IT put value on the certifications more than anything else, but they don’t actually provide you any value in of themselves. Sure it might be interesting how many network switches you can daisy chain according to the standards, but it has no real value most of the time, if that’s information you need in your job it’s something you can just look up, HOWEVER, asking you random questions that pertain to the job during the interview IS a good way to understand if you’re a good candidate, and, often, the actual response doesn’t matter as much as your reasoning for getting to that response.

    When an interviewer at google asks you how many pennys it would take to make a structure as tall as the empire state building, it doesn’t matter what the answer is, truly, even if you got the exact number of pennys, just saying the number would mean you don’t pass the interview, your answer would be worth less than an answer that gets it wrong by 75% but is well reasoned, what they care about is how you come up to the conclusion that you come up with, the solution is useless.





  • That’s not the issue. You can attempt as many passwords as you want in actually secure password managers as well. KeepassXC for instance IS secure, you can still brute force the password, but because of the hashing algorithm they use it’s extremely hard. With PKZIP if you know some of the words in the file, you can easily guess the password in just a few hours because the encryption algorithm it uses isn’t secure