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by weitendorf
286 days ago
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I don’t think that argument really works in situations like this because hacking Burger King requires a pretty high level of intent + ability and isn’t something that just naturally happens. Like you have to sit down and say “Today I want to try to hack Burger King” and then spend several hours doing just that. To me it seems like quite a stretch for “don’t hack me” to get framed as “Burger King is leveraging their corporate power to tell me what to do against my will”. And to be clear I actually do think that it would be better for Burger King to invite and reward responsible disclosure, in the same way that you’d want your bank to have a hotline for people to report problems like doors that won’t lock. But if the bank didn’t have that hotline it wouldn’t excuse breaking in. |
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