> Conversely, if everything was easily hackable then we probably wouldn't use
> computers, at all.

Being hacked is a risk everybody is ready to accept, some knowingly, some 
unknowingly.
There may be people here, who have never done business with any of these 
entities
listed here, but they are certainly a minority:

https://informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/worlds-biggest-data-breaches-hacks/

Some of these companies were probably run by incompetent monkeys, but most 
definitely
not all of them. Some other companies may not show up here, because they 
managed to
brush the issue under the rug, or because they haven't even learned about an 
ongoing
incident yet.

On the other side I am reasonably sure, that I personally haven't gotten hacked 
yet,
but that has more to do with me being quite uninteresting than with hax0r mad 
skillz.

Now this whole debate boils down to "how much effort is someone willing to 
invest
into hacking Cord's computers?", and that's something I can't answer. Cord at 
least
claims there is someone out there to get him. Let's see, how this whole story 
unfolds.

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