I didn’t introduce Crowdstrike as a vulnerability.
The NSA doesn’t provide support to U.S. corporations. That’s outside of its mandate.
When a lab gets compromised, there will be an investigation and the fault will almost certainly be placed with the lab unless the lab could prove negligence on the part of the cybersecurity company or companies that they contracted with.
None of us know what is in the classified portions of the US intelligence budgets. For example, I doubt there was a line item in the budget for bribing a major US security vendor to set as default an algorithm with a NSA trap door in it, but there’s pretty good reason to believe that happened.
I didn’t introduce Crowdstrike as a vulnerability.
The NSA doesn’t provide support to U.S. corporations. That’s outside of its mandate.
When a lab gets compromised, there will be an investigation and the fault will almost certainly be placed with the lab unless the lab could prove negligence on the part of the cybersecurity company or companies that they contracted with.
None of us know what is in the classified portions of the US intelligence budgets. For example, I doubt there was a line item in the budget for bribing a major US security vendor to set as default an algorithm with a NSA trap door in it, but there’s pretty good reason to believe that happened.