(And that’s saying quite a bit. Nobody wants to be the target of a federal criminal investigation.)
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The vast majority of academic hacking cases are of the form “smart kid with poor judgement gets caught doing something stupid, admits it when confronted, faces proportionate consequences”. This was not one of those cases.
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In particular, if you were successfully hacked, it means someone outsmarted you. What makes you think they won’t also outsmart your forensics? You almost certainly need outside help.
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And that was even a much simpler case, in that there was basically agreement as to the underlying facts.
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Well, if she’s guilty the IT department should hire her.
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Perhaps that’s true, but your sweeping conclusion is not supported by the facts of this case. I fail to see any way this has anything to do with the finances of the school. They seem to have simply been in over their heads.
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And yet have long been prime targets of several flavors of bad actors. What prevents them from being more proactive about developing this capability? Resources? Personnel? All of the above, I suppose?
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Some schools do have the capability inhouse. You just have to plan for it, train/develop/hire for it.
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