Categories
economics internet

Cybercrime as an Environmental Risk

An interesting article about the prevalence of cybercrime and the costs of defending against it: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/article-cybersecurity-cybercrime-hack-canada/. It is interesting that the move to remote work has created business opportunities for hackers, security consultants, and the cloud providers that host virtual private network access. Corporations and governments are almost guaranteed to lose money to crime, to security measures, or both. Should the costs of managing cyber risks be passed on to consumers/taxpayers? Or are they more like maritime shipping hazards that should be handled primarily by insurers? If so, digital services could only be delivered economically by the largest multinationals, much as in the maritime shipping industry.

To complicate the picture further, there are high environmental costs to maintaining all the processing power that supoorts AI-driven hacking and real-time security monitoring. But so are the costs of pushing the office workforce to commute more regularly. Should customers be asked to pay for carbon offsets for security measures, or should taxpayers and drivers be asked to pay for road maintenance, tolled roads, energy efficient vehicles, and so forth?

Categories
Technical

VPN AT Home

Here is a link for a test that checks your up and down speed through a VPN: Skytap Speedtest. I recently switched to National Capital FreeNet as a service provider and wanted to see what level my upload speed was throttled at (its’s fairly low!). I would argue that the government should start thinking of broadband access as a capital asset. Working from home has created a new customer base for private owners of internet infrastructure without requiring them to lower costs and invest in new capacity.

Categories
Workplace Culture

Causes of Burnout

Here is an interesting article from the Harvard Business Review on the organizational causes of employee burnout: Beyond Burned Out