Yes, the risk is much higher than the cost. From the article:
> The company's internal review of the incident continued. Upon discovering a vulnerability in the Apache Struts web application framework as the initial attack vector, Equifax patched the affected web application before bringing it back online.
That bullet point lies between the "July 30th" and "August 2nd" bullet points. Based on that timeline, the vulnerability took days to patch.
I agree, there are many competitors to React for targeting the DOM, but there is much less competition for targeting Native. I hope to see more JSX-to-Native engines pop up soon to solve that problem.
This is correct. I once had a series of customer service reps deny me access to my account to the point where they told me my account was irretrievable. Irretrievable? I called back the next day and the new rep told me those other people were totally incorrect, and he resolved my issue in 15 minutes.
With high turnover rate and minimal training, most service reps are reading from a script and attempting to appease you into hanging up the phone anyway.
I see, and I agree that the accountability of cyclists (and slightly less so for motorists) in NYC is almost zero. I also agree that electric powered bicycles should be held to a higher standard than normal bikes, particularly in that their use is entirely illegal so it should be much easier to spot and ticket them. I mostly posted these facts because most non-NYCers don't even realize that these uses of a bike are actually against the law.
EDIT: I just read your edit,
> I find electric bikes even more destabilizing and most objectionable, because they are faster and quieter, and I think because they are favored by a statistical sample that skews toward more selfish/self-interested.
This is a good summary of my thoughts about electrical bicycles as well.
> most electric bikes I see are ridden dangerously to pedestrians; by NYC deliverymen (doubt I've ever seen a woman on one), swiftly and silently sneaking up to run you down on sidewalks or the wrong way on one way streets.
Both of those uses of a bicycle - operation on a sidewalk and riding against traffic on a one-way street - are a violation of NYC traffic law [1]. The operator is the one causing danger, not the bicycle.
> The company's internal review of the incident continued. Upon discovering a vulnerability in the Apache Struts web application framework as the initial attack vector, Equifax patched the affected web application before bringing it back online.
That bullet point lies between the "July 30th" and "August 2nd" bullet points. Based on that timeline, the vulnerability took days to patch.