| ▲ | Areena_28 7 hours ago | |
The "unhackable" label has always been a liability, not a feature. In my experience, the moment a vendor publicly declares something unbreakable, they've handed researchers the most compelling motivation possible. It's less a security posture and more a recruitment poster. Hardware you own should be yours to understand. | ||
| ▲ | AnssiH 4 hours ago | parent [-] | |
I don't think the vendor ever said "unhackable" in this case, though. At least not publicly. | ||