> Security will never be a "largely solved problem", when there are humans involved (and probably even when humans are not involved).
It absolutely will. I didn't say completely solved, I said largely solved.
> There is no technical solution to people uploading high res photos with location metadata to social network de jour.
Bad example honestly, since most social media sites strip out exif data by default these days. Not sure there are any that don't.
> Or the CEO who wants access to all his email on his shiny new gadget. Or the three letter agency who think ubiquitous surveillance is a great way to do their job. Or the politician who can be easily convinced the backdoors that can only be used by "the good guys" exist. Or the team who does all their internal chat including production secrets in a 3rd party chat app, only to have them popped and their prod credentials leaked on some TOR site. Or the sweatshop IT outsourcing firm that browbeats underpaid devs into meeting pointless Jira ticket closure targets. Or the "move fast and break things" startup culture that's desperately cutting corners to be first-to-market.
Yes yes, humans can be selfish and take risks and be bribed and negligent and blah blah blah.
The context of the comment was in neuralink implants getting hacked the way an out of date smart tv might. As when it comes to the actual tech, security will be a solved problem, because most of the problems we see today are due to everything being built on top of insecure foundations on top of insecure foundations.
It absolutely will. I didn't say completely solved, I said largely solved.
> There is no technical solution to people uploading high res photos with location metadata to social network de jour.
Bad example honestly, since most social media sites strip out exif data by default these days. Not sure there are any that don't.
> Or the CEO who wants access to all his email on his shiny new gadget. Or the three letter agency who think ubiquitous surveillance is a great way to do their job. Or the politician who can be easily convinced the backdoors that can only be used by "the good guys" exist. Or the team who does all their internal chat including production secrets in a 3rd party chat app, only to have them popped and their prod credentials leaked on some TOR site. Or the sweatshop IT outsourcing firm that browbeats underpaid devs into meeting pointless Jira ticket closure targets. Or the "move fast and break things" startup culture that's desperately cutting corners to be first-to-market.
Yes yes, humans can be selfish and take risks and be bribed and negligent and blah blah blah.
The context of the comment was in neuralink implants getting hacked the way an out of date smart tv might. As when it comes to the actual tech, security will be a solved problem, because most of the problems we see today are due to everything being built on top of insecure foundations on top of insecure foundations.