There is the general principle. Connecting things to the internet reduces security. You'll get hacked. You should protect your financial information, employee private data, customer private data, and work product.
It's especially important when the work product includes hazardous information. We had enough to cause large-scale disaster. Maybe I'd best leave it at that.
Even the smaller stuff is a problem. Imagine full data dumps from places like the Federal Reserve, Google (particularly Gmail and Project Zero), or Verisign.
Things can build over the years. At first it doesn't seem like a big deal to be on the internet. It's convenient. You don't have to buy two computers for everybody. Eventually, if you notice it or not, you may have a large amount of dangerous data.
It's especially important when the work product includes hazardous information. We had enough to cause large-scale disaster. Maybe I'd best leave it at that.
Even the smaller stuff is a problem. Imagine full data dumps from places like the Federal Reserve, Google (particularly Gmail and Project Zero), or Verisign.
Things can build over the years. At first it doesn't seem like a big deal to be on the internet. It's convenient. You don't have to buy two computers for everybody. Eventually, if you notice it or not, you may have a large amount of dangerous data.