@E_Barcohana This is exactly why there is no faith in California elections. Regardless of early turnout, this will always be the result. There's really no point in voting.
@E_Barcohana@spencerpratt I voted for him and I really hope he wins, but honestly I'm not confident because LA will still choose Democrats and complain.
Everyone is trying to claim me for their tribe. There’s no R next to my name, there’s no D next to my name. I’m not part of a political party, because I hate politicians. I’m just Spencer, husband to Heidi, father to Ryker and Gunner, and I’m a pissed off Angeleno who loves my city and is fed up with what corrupt politicians have done to her.
I can assert with a high degree of confidence ShinyHunters did not exfiltrate highly sensitive information.
Based on information I've received the primary information stolen from the schools is student names and email addresses. Furthermore, this has been confirmed by various media outlets.
This in of itself isn't bad.
The primary issue with this however is that it would expose children in K-12 online (first and last name). Adults having their full legal name and email address online is something you could (probably) find on LinkedIn or a university directory. Adults will be ignored if data is leaked. K-12 will be a nightmare. Hence, educational institutions must put together a strategy to handle a K-12 potential data leak.
Presumably parents will be outraged and this will inevitably result in a lawsuit against the schools or Canvas.
The much larger issue however is the catastrophic damage ShinyHunters has done to Canvas both operational and reputational.
Exfiltrating data from a compromised host is as simple as initializing a file transfer. The question then: why is Canvas still "in maintenance mode"? The only logical conclusion is ShinyHunters did SOMETHING to prevent Canvas from working as intended.
This places Canvas is a terrible, terrible, terrible position. Their service has resulted in minors having their names (potentially) leaked and educational institutions can't use the platform they pay for. Furthermore, this makes major educational institutions look like a bunch of morons.
Students are paying top dollar for an education and suddenly ... poof ... a good chunk of their work or study material has vaporized because it was stored in a 3rd party platform outside the control of the educational institution.
Basically, the data breach itself isn't bad except the K-12 part. The operational impact is devastating and the fallout will be a nightmare. Canvas employees are probably scrambling, their cybersecurity team is probably having panic attacks, and executive leadership is probably drunk right now screaming at the wall.
I am calling on @RepSwalwell to resign from office. Idk in what parallel universe we are living in that elected members of congress begin to chose politics and party BS over basic human dignity. I have called for Republican members to do the same when they are caught doing corrupt and morally bankrupt crap. Dem leadership needs to do the same.
@RepSwalwell There's nothing that's "adult" about you. Don't pretend you understand poor people. Stick to sleeping with spies and leave common sense to actual adults.
@RepSwalwell Its because he doesn't care about Californians just like you. Nothing but a power grab and a way to avoid accountability. Luckily you aren't and will never be a real leader.
@E_Barcohana Bianco has way too many red flags. Regardless of how people feel between Hilton and Bianco. The vote is already split and thats a bad thing.
I visited Gavin Newsom's Winery, PlumpJack. Amazing high quality product, the most beautiful and refreshing place I have been, and Rick was so informative and personable.
Did you know that PlumpJack Group received $3M from the Payment Protection Program during COVID?
One PlumpJack entity, "Villa Encinal Partners LP" recieved $918,000 despite only having 14 employees.
(Most 14 employee businesses received $128k in loans and many were denied help)
Why did these businesses co-owned by multi billionaire Gordon Getty (net worth $7.95B) get so much $$ in relief?
ProPublica’s PPP tracker shows that https://t.co/9Z5A6lJilN LLC received a loan of $138,000 and it has been forgiven in the amount of $141,000 including occurred interest.
Grok says it’s “ reasonable to infer that forgiveness was likely sought and granted for the qualifying portions effectively turning much of the $3 million into non-repayable aid.”
Essentially a $3M govt funded payout. That is so messed up 🤯🤯🤯