So having a password isn't enough in this situation?
No, what the actual password is is quite important too.
I'm not sure what retarded computer illiterate thing you're referring to.
A number of things. Very poor passwords and putting these sort of files in distributed "cloud" storage with backups are things that apply to them as much as they would to anyone else. Additionally, I would argue that they should have realised that these sort of pictures may be desirable/sought after due to their celebrity status and encrypt the files.
You're berating their computer skills so much that they may as well have put these nudes on a private Facebook album only friends can see and got upset when someone who wasn't their friend found them.
Yes, that's exactly right. From the perspective of someone who has an understanding of how this shit works, the two actions are only slightly different. The fact that they
seem very different is one of the reasons we need basic computer literacy education right here and right now.
REGARDLESS of this argument we still come back to the point that even if they were a bit safer someone still can hack it eventually because they're models and actresses. Not to imply that they're stupid but they probably don't spend time reading programming books.
Well, yes and no. Perfect security doesn't exist, the only computer that cannot be hacked is a computer that's been unplugged, and so on, and so fort...
but:
Suppose they encrypted the files. This really isn't difficult, with the tools available it's just a tiny bit more involved than making a ZIP archive. Suppose they used a good encryption algorithm for the purpose and a sufficiently long key (most tools will do that for you - no knowledge required). Suppose they were very careful no to let the key to those files leak (this is the hardest part - it doesn't require that much computer knowledge, but it requires you to learn certain behaviours). In this hypothetical scenario, even if the files were stolen, they would be completely useless to the hackers. Their chances of decrypting them would be slim, too (it would literally take decades if not hundreds of years, depending on your budget).
Of course, that method is not perfect. It can be circumvented if someone simply gets their hands on your key. It would, however, make this sort of leak
very, very, very unlikely.
I have to say, I am a litter better than average on the computer literacy front and I have no idea what could be done to protect my smartphone better than a password. You may judge me as retarded, but that is not the case. It seems like you do not have a good perspective on what the average user of computer's and technology knows.
No, no, that's precisely what I'm saying.
The average user of computers doesn't know enough to support their elementary needs. We need to start educating people. We've allowed a level of ignorance that we wouldn't allow with anything else.