Anything out there is vulnerable to attack given enough time and resources.
“Anything out there is vulnerable to attack given enough time and resources.”
— Kevin Mitnick · Time
The World Motivation
Anything out there is vulnerable to attack given enough time and resources.
“Anything out there is vulnerable to attack given enough time and resources.”
— Kevin Mitnick · Time
Explore more quotes by Kevin Mitnick on topics like Time, wisdom, and life lessons.
“Anything out there is vulnerable to attack given enough time and resources.”
“Are hackers a threat? The degree of threat presented by any conduct, whether legal or illegal, depends on the actions and intent of the individual and the harm they cause.”
“The perfect PIN is not four digits and not associated with your life, like an old telephone number. It's something easy for you to remember and hard for other people to guess.”
“I could pose as a Yahoo rep claiming that there's been some sort of fault, and somebody else is getting your e-mail, and we're going to have to remove your account and reinstall it. So what we'll do is reset the current password that you have - and by the way, what is it?”
“The first programming assignment I had in high school was to find the first 100 Fibonacci numbers. Instead, I thought it would be cooler to write a program to get the teacher's password and all the other students' passwords. And the teacher gave me an A and told the class how smart I was.”
“There is no necessity to live by the clock.”
“It was in the nature of those who had long dreamt of Pacific empire to stress the optimism with which George Berkeley opened his quatrain. Few pondered the line with which he closed it:”
“You even forget what time it is, when you are doing what you love.”
“If you are working with no vision to be own your own boss, you are no different from people who are unemployed”
“Even if we naively try to explain the immeasurable spaces, energies, and galaxies of the Universe with the so-called dark matter and dark energy, it is hard to comprehend, regardless of all possible physical laws and laws of compression or contraction that such waste energies can fit into a tiny “spot.” If energy is indestructible, this beginning will prove the opposite based on its smallness. If something can disappear into nothing, it must be “destructible,” regardless of our conceptions.”
“The world is so big, Rachel," Borne had said to me. "It just keeps going and going.”