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Re: Breaking Windows

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Jun 7th, 2013
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  1. <i>"I worked in Nunavut twice."</i>
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  3. Which is what? A short walk away from the North Pole? It's hard enough to imagine that a place made out of mostly islands could have any sort of stable electricity supply, let alone computers.
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  5. What you claim, as far as I can see, is effectively the same as being the king of a nation of one person: the reason you got the job at all was not because you were qualified to do it but because <b>literally</b> no one else wanted to even consider it or was there to take care of it.
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  7. It's a shaky credential you are claiming here, I am afraid.
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  9. <i>"Between the two stints a wave of malware was wreaking havoc so my employer disconnected from the Internet."</i>
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  11. Which should be expected from organisations that have no proper security policies, no regular auditing, no knowledge of any such things as Zone Alarm or Comodo Firewall (which have been around free-of-charge since the 90s/early-00s) and hire handymen for positions that are meant for trained personnel with <b>relevant</b> qualifications (and at least mentally capable of handling checkboxes in the adapter dialogue box).
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  13. <i>"That’s huge."</i>
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  15. I don't mind an occasional story or two about someone's adventure in the land of the Inuit (although I do find the subtle abuse of an indigenous population a little too offensive for my taste), but this is not what Quibbly is asking from you here. The question being asked here is, in his/her own words:
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  17. <b>Which one was your “favourite” huge vulnerability?</b>
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  19. In other words, you are requested to point out a specific <b>vulnerability</b> that is considered your "favourite", not regurgitate email about some employee accidentally spreading "ILOVEYOU" over a school computer network because he/she was desperate enough to believe there was a living human being (let alone a secret admirer) sharing the same frozen rock in the Artic Ocean he/she was standing on.
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