Darunion
Supreme [H]ardness
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2010
- Messages
- 4,875
I promise that I know more about Elasticsearch and PCI compliance than you. I actually have it open in another window, and know the fines for violating the compliance. Your reply just expands the ignorance. You state when you decide to keep a bunch of information you should 100% take ownership of it. This is the head slapper. The company Elasticsearch did not "keep" the data. Another company, potentially Data & Leads, used Elasticsearch's product to store the data and the fool who put the data into the system then exposed that system on public facing servers. How you can attempt to blame the developer of the software for the incompetence of its users is mind boggling to me. In your example of running a database which gets compromised, in your logic the developer of the database should be held accountable and not you for not enabling security. Do you not see the idiocy of this?
I promise you I know more about this than you ever will. See how that works?
Though I do see how this does need investigated, but my point is that the theif cannot be the only one to blame otherwise you let people and companies handle sensitive data either storing or accessing without liability.