I will admit that a level of fatigue has reached me as well. I am not even sure what would be an appropriate remedy at this point. My information has been all over the place given multiple breaches the past few years ( and, I might add, my kid's info too as we visited a hospital for her once ).
Anyway, short of collapsing current data broker system, I am not sure what the answer is. Experian debacle showed us they are too politically entrenched to be touched by regular means.
At this point, I am going through life assuming most of my data is up for grabs. That is not a healthy way to live though.
This has nothing to do with the "data broker system." Reading between the lines it was more of a "shadow IT" issue where employees were using some presumably third-party GIS service for a legitimate business purpose but without a proper authentication & authorization setup.
Did you actually suffer any negative consequences of these breaches?
I see so many comments about how punishments for data breaches should be increased, but not a single story about quantifiable harm that any of those commenters has suffered from them.
If you want to get more stressed about it and consider the impeding dystopian future, I invite you to think about the “harvest now, decrypt later” potential reality that quantum cryptography is going to enable.
At some point, everything that we have ever assumed to be confidential and secure will be exposed and up for grabs.
Change name to a very common one. Much better privacy.
>I am not even sure what would be an appropriate remedy at this point.
It will have to be political and it's got to be fines/damages that are business impacting enough for companies to pause and be like A) Is it worth collecting this data and storing it forever? and B) If I don't treat InfoSec as important business function, it could cost me my business.
It also clear that certification systems do not work and any law/policy around it should not offer any upside for acquiring them.
EDIT: I also realize in United States, this won't happen.