Tag Archive for: younger

Hackers are getting younger, Beijing police say


Computer hackers who infringe upon others” legitimate rights or commit crimes are getting younger, Beijing police said on Monday.

The Cybersecurity Department with the Beijing Public Security Bureau revealed the finding in a statement after reviewing 113 hacker-related cases solved by police across the city since last year.

The department said that hacking into computer systems is easier than it used to be, and the age of the suspects is also declining.

In one case last year, for example, a man surnamed Dong was accused of hacking into an online game platform and stealing player’s personal data after spending 300 yuan ($41) to buy hacking software. As a result, the players and the platforms’ operator sustained financial losses.

The department noted that Dong’s alleged attack was successful even though he had no background in computing technology.

Four people who allegedly sold Dong the software and helped him build a personal information database in the attack were all born in 1990s, it added.

It revealed that some of the suspects spent less than 100 yuan to buy Trojan horse programs to control computer servers, and some engaged in hacking are under age 18.

While noting that the suspects mainly hacked into computer systems to steal personal data, including netizens’ identities, mobile phone numbers, home addresses and records of their online purchases, the department said that online game platforms are also major targets.

It pledged to continue to fight against hacking and urged internet users to change their passwords regularly and upgrade security software.

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Making ‘Dinobabies’ Extinct: IBM’s Push for a Younger Work Force


Similarly, the E.E.O.C.’s letter summarizing its investigation of IBM found that older workers made up over 85 percent of the group whom the company viewed as candidates for layoffs, though the agency did not specify what it considered “older.”

The newly unsealed documents suggest that IBM sought to carry out its strategy in a variety of ways, including a policy that no “early professional hire” can be included in a mass layoff in the employee’s first 12 months at the company. “We are not making the progress we need to make demographically, and we are squandering our investment in talent acquisition and training,” an internal email states.

The lawsuit also argues that IBM sought to eliminate older workers by requiring them to move to a different part of the country to keep their jobs, assuming that most would decline to move. One internal email stated that the “typical relo accept rate is 8-10%,” while another said that the company would need to find work for those who accepted, suggesting that there was not a business rationale for asking employees to relocate.

And while IBM employees designated for layoffs were officially allowed to apply for open jobs within the company, other evidence included in the new disclosure suggests that the company discouraged managers from actually hiring them. For example, according to the statement of material facts, managers had to request approval from corporate headquarters if they wanted to move ahead with a hire.

Several of the plaintiffs in a separate lawsuit brought by Ms. Liss-Riordan appeared to have been on the receiving end of these practices. One of them, Edvin Rusis, joined IBM in 2003 and had worked as a “solution manager.” He was informed by the company in March 2018 that he would be laid off within a few months. According to his legal complaint, Mr. Rusis applied for five internal positions after learning of his forthcoming layoff but heard nothing in response to any of his applications.

Mr. Pratt, the spokesman, said that the company’s efforts to shield recent hires from layoffs, as well as its approach to relocating workers, were blind to age, and that many workers designated for layoffs did secure new jobs…

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Over-30s tend to do better at cyber security than younger colleagues – ComputerWeekly.com

Over-30s tend to do better at cyber security than younger colleagues  ComputerWeekly.com
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