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by wpietri
1917 days ago
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The US government has a high success rate in the cases it takes on, but it doesn't take on many cases. I think this works out pretty well for high-stakes things like securities. Most public-company CFOs are very careful because they want to have a long career that in no way involves even a risk of going to jail. But if the crime is smaller or has less obvious impact, I wouldn't hold my breath. And a giant barrier to regulatory enforcement in tech is that the average state of practice is so very low. I'd bet that Equifax's practices were no worse than average; we just hear about it because it was such a large breach. From a regulatory perspective it's hard to hold them accountable for doing what everybody else is doing. |
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You just made my point. Compliance regulation always turns into "hard to hold them accountable for common practice." I don't think it works well in finance (see: S&L Crisis, .com crash, housing crisis, pandemic crash), we just refuse to punish the people who were guilty. When the US decides to investigate and prosecute they do well, when they try to enact compliance, it fails.
The solution in the Equifax case was to send the CEO, CTO, CFO and CISO to jail for 10 years. The next week "average practices" would have been a lot less lax.