So I got a notice from Ticketmaster that my identity was accessed by an intruder and my name, contact info and /encrypted/ payment info was compromised. These notices are more and more common. Why aren’t companies accountable for damages when they fail to protect all the myriad data they collect on people without consent? I never asked them to store these things…

  • xmunk
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    5 months ago

    You have the option to sue or join a class action lawsuit - there is currently a class action lawsuit. If that interests you (and it should) be careful not to agree to anything with Ticketmaster.

    The chances of you personally recovering much compensation unless you can show real personal damages and pursue Ticketmaster in an individual lawsuit.

    • madcaesar@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Class action lawsuits never work because they plea deal into some shitty number that does no damage.

      • xmunk
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        5 months ago

        Class action lawsuits are very rarely lucrative for the harmed party but they often result in sizeable penalties for companies. They’re essentially just punitive.

  • ArcaneGadget@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    We take the protection of your personal information very seriously

    Fuck, I loathe this corporate bullshit phrase. Obviously you didn’t take it serious enough, now did you? For some reason this phrase really grinds my gears. Fair enough that you had a data breach and so on, but don’t brush off the issue like this…

    • kambusha
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      5 months ago

      We take the protection of your personal information very seriously (now that we were caught out).

    • Prison Mike@links.hackliberty.org
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      5 months ago

      It’s the fucking robotic phrasing that doesn’t mean anything. It’s like when you read an article about some crazy bad thing a company did and the company is asked to make a statement, it’s always “we follow all applicable laws” or some version of “we didn’t do it.”

  • otp
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    5 months ago

    Your Ticketmaster questions have been sufficiently answered, I think.

    What did you want to know about beaches in general?

    • cmeu@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 months ago

      Same question - why aren’t businesses responsible for maintaining enough security, with damages due for those whose information they misplace.

      Was it a stupid question?

      • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        You asked about beaches, so are you interested in how they form geologically, which ones are good for surfing, or just looking for a sunbathing destination?

        The person you replied to was joking based on your typo.

        • cmeu@lemmy.worldOP
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          5 months ago

          I had no idea I even did that. I read it several times and in my head it was britches the whole time

      • otp
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        5 months ago

        As the other commenter mentioned, it was a joke based on the typo in the title, haha

  • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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    5 months ago

    I’ve come to the conclusion that all these breach notices and the free stuff they offer for X months is a huge scam to get you sign up up for something. Either that, or every company has woefully underpaid/incompetent IT people. I’m waiting for the next news story to break on another company that somehow got passwords or identity info hacked that was stored in plain text…something I learned how to not do back in the 90s with basic HTML and PHP.

    In short - I don’t believe them. They all are using the same form letters, it’s a scheme that they’re all in on.

    • ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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      5 months ago

      Either that, or every company has woefully underpaid/incompetent IT people

      It’s this one. Cox Communications, one of the largest telecommunications companies in the US with $11 billion in revenue, recently patched a bug on their self-serve portal that allowed anyone to access any customer’s profile. The bug was that server requests weren’t being authenticated. If you entered the right info into the URL bar you’d be given a page with anyone’s customer info. No login needed.

    • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      You can not believe them all you want. It doesn’t magically make everyone competent.

      Businesses value MONEY first, not security, not happy customers, not competent staff. MONEY.

      Which is cheaper? Get a product working enough to sell. Get a product properly developed, secured, and audited.

      Pick one. Hint: corporations choose MONEY. Every time.

      Your data is not safe, because rich pieces of shit like MONEY more than they like YOU.

  • TheKMAP@lemmynsfw.com
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    5 months ago

    That’s some slimy ass wording.

    Snowflake’s position is that the customers fucked up and didn’t secure their shit correctly.

    Then TicketMaster says the unauthorized access happened on something “hosted by a third party” as if it’s Snowflake’s fault LMAO