There is such a concept in spiritual practice - a person is protected in this world only by his dullness. As soon as he begins spiritual advancement, all sorts of attacks by dark forces begin on him.
However, practically the same thing happens in our material world. As long as a person is a middle peasant with his average wealth of material wealth and an average position in society (like everyone else), he is not interesting to anyone. Thus, he is protected from bandits, crooks in life and from hackers in the virtual space. But once a person becomes rich or a famous person …
For example, at the International Congress of Hackers, which took place the other day in Germany, the famous hacker Starbug (Jan Chrissler) showed that in the modern society of highly developed digital technologies, when money, documents, and so on (almost everything) migrated to virtual reality, nothing can be protected from hacking and theft has become almost impossible. Biometrics used today as a way to protect data is easily vulnerable and is practically no longer relevant.
Will fingerprint protection?
Take fingerprints as an example to access many secret data. Jan Krissler immediately showed the fingerprints of German Defense Minister Ursula von der Leyen, which he obtained using only two photographs of the woman and the VeriFinger software, and the hacker took one photo of the high-ranking official from a press release, and the second took himself, standing a few meters away. from the minister. It turns out that in our time any extraordinary person should constantly wear gloves?..
Ian Chrisler talked about some of the other vulnerabilities in our biometric data protection method. For example, the password of a money card can be found using only the front camera, tracking with its help the movement of a person's eyeballs when he enters the password. Modern cameras even allow you to see the reflection of a smartphone in the eyes of its owner.
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Jan Krissler recalled that back in 2013, when during the release of the iPhone 5S, supposedly reliably protected from hacking with a password in the form of a fingerprint of the owner of this gadget, he easily removed this very fingerprint using graphene spray and glue. And the device mistook the fingerprint for a real fingerprint, unlocking it. But after all, three years have passed since then, and hacking skills are not standing still …
And so in everything, for example, I remember how professionals once demonstrated in Moscow the opening in a few minutes of any, even the most reliable, locks on the doors of very rich people. And all the ingenuities of modern security devices, including super alarms, were powerless before them. At the same time, the hacking experts did not saw, cut or distort anything, using only their invented tools for opening constipation, like the magic "Sim-sim, open up". Therefore, a simple door made of chipboard of some layman living from paycheck to paycheck is much more reliably protected from thieves and robbers. It's like that elusive Jack that no one can catch just for the simple reason that no one needs him …