12-26-2019, 10:55 AM
@Honey
Dropbox was always and is still owned by Dropbox Inc. Microsoft owns and operates a direct competitor called OneDrive. One company being responsible for the mishap(s) of another company... I doubt that.
Don't take it as a surprise but many companies ignore security holes for a long time. It's almost always too late because they only fix it after getting high pressure from all the news articles and etc. once the security hole has been published there. Too late.
Acting surprise about such stuff not being fixed nowadays? Like you're on the Internet and using a computer for the first time?
Dropbox was always and is still owned by Dropbox Inc. Microsoft owns and operates a direct competitor called OneDrive. One company being responsible for the mishap(s) of another company... I doubt that.
Don't take it as a surprise but many companies ignore security holes for a long time. It's almost always too late because they only fix it after getting high pressure from all the news articles and etc. once the security hole has been published there. Too late.
Acting surprise about such stuff not being fixed nowadays? Like you're on the Internet and using a computer for the first time?