Since contracts are public, if there is a vulnerability in a contract they are the insurance counterparty for, isn't it in their interest to do everything to prevent that vulnerability from being exploited? Imo, seems like a more certain way of avoiding to reimburse losses.
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Replying to @DepiancePodcast @fubuloubu and
Let's assume it is covered yes, though it seems to me like if it's not covered then they are back to wearing the security auditor hat and putting their reputation at risk for not resolving it.
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Replying to @PhABCD @fubuloubu and
Security vendors don’t resolve bugs, we advise on risk. It’s the owners perogative to take risks. If a bug is found after they deploy, that’s on the owner, not on me. I would hope our advice helped address that near inevitably, too, so handling it was quick with little impact.
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Your doctor can’t control your legs and make you run. It’s not their fault if you don’t listen to every academic study they know could help you. This fantasy that a security vendor is somehow responsible for a client getting hacked is completely wrong.
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Replying to @dguido @fubuloubu and
I've never implied that security auditors are responsible for bugs in the code they audit, but it seems clear to me that an auditor that continually fails to report and disclose vulnerabilities that later get exploited will have a hard time finding new clients.
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Replying to @PhABCD @fubuloubu and
Maybe, or maybe you only booked 15 minute checkups when you needed a 2hr physical, or you’ve got a rare disease only a special test could find, or new research came out with risk factors no one understood before, or you didn’t like my advice and ignored it, etc.
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Even if there was a clear and continuing pattern of malpractice where a doctor should have known better, where does an insurance product (really, a prediction market) add any extra value here? If these failures are visible, isn’t that enough?
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Replying to @dguido @fubuloubu and
As a patient, I want to have the most thorough analysis of my health and not go bankrupt if something bad happens. As an insurer, I want all the info on my patients to evaluate the risks and properly price the coverage. In both cases, the doctor has the most knowledge on patients
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As a patient, if you want to avoid dying early then you should take less risk. Insurers can take your medical records into account to offer you a policy, just like Nexus Mutual can read any public or request any private reports from us, with owner permission, of course.
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That’s all fine, but you’ll never see a doctor directly participating in an insurance policy about you (again, really a prediction market). They won’t slip Aetna $100 to bet on “dead in 5 years.” It perverts the relationship with your doctor. They need to stay out of it.
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