Does T-Mobile Austria in fact store customers’ passwords in clear text @tmobileat? @PWTooStrong @Telekom_hilfthttps://twitter.com/SeloX_AUT/status/981406875811008513 …
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Bad news for you Käthe, nobody’s security is that good. No, not even yours. It’s not that I say you are 100% getting hacked - what if an employee accesses the database directly?
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@Korni22 Excuse me? Do you have any idea how telecommunication companies work? Do you know anything about our systems? But I'm glad you have the time to share your view with us. ^Käthe -
Well, I do since I worked for
@deutschetelekom, but thanks for asking. 3 years of something that’s called „Ausbildung“ a bit more as contractor. -
@Korni22 So, you never worked for us in Austria though. But thank you very much for sharing your opinion. ^Käthe -
Thanks for stating that you seemingly haven’t understood what we’re trying to tell you.
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@Korni22 Oh, I do get it. I hope you enjoyed my response. ^Käthe -
I hope this person has an up to date CV handy. Dang that escalated quickly
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This is not how IT security works. I understand you lack of technical knowledge, which is ok, and do not trust random people over twitter, which is also ok. But maybe you'll trust a US government agency : the NIST Special Publication 800-63B.
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NIST is known for weakening crypto on purpose. see: dual_ec_drbg
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Well, weak crypto is better then no crypto, I guess.
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Surely Käthe is not at fault, she might not have picked the right words at the right times - so did I. T-Mobile AT should just admit their fault, fix it and openly talk about it.
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Picking the right words is a pre requisite of handling social media accounts! Isn't it. I'm pretty sure their IT team isn't impressed by what's going on.
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If you're storing passwords in plaintext, your security cannot be "amazingly good".
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I bet this took you less than 5min
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Equafax, Tumblr, Yahoo, etc. "had great security." This is such an incredibly asinine response to a genuine concern.
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Yup! Delta, Sears, Atlanta Georgia, literally everyone all the time.
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What does 4% of your revenue look like? €48mn fine under GDPR when all the passwords get leaked, because you've failed to actually secure passwords.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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