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by perl4ever
2383 days ago
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It's simultaneously true that people believe or at least repeat any story that triggers their prejudices and that people discount anything that violates them, particularly when they haven't seen it firsthand. So just because those impulses are opposed, doesn't mean that one is more right than the other in general. |
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In the security world we develop a risk matrix. This compares the likelihood of a threat compared to the consequences of that in order to determine how concerned you should be. Someone breaking into your car to steal things based on tracking the Bluetooth signal seems a lot less likely than someone breaking into your car because they can see your backpack laying on the back seat, but the consequences are exactly the same. So since thieves seeing your bag and deciding to break into your car is more likely, the natural course of action is to stop leaving your bags in a place that's visible to thieves. If someone then tears open your trunk to steal your bag, then you can worry about Bluetooth.
This article provides absolutely zero proof that Bluetooth was involved in this break-in, so why should anyone rush to the conclusion that Bluetooth was responsible for it? It's not an impulse or a prejudice, one is objectively more right than the other.
Blaming Bluetooth is begging the question when the backpack was visible through the window.