We all know... but pay insufficient attention... to the fRRRightening scenario of a comprehensive cyber attack, which would bring to a complete halt to the power supply, transportation (oil pipelines?), hospitals.... The KOVIDE-19 crisis would be seen as a small disturbance in comparison to a major cyber attack... A CYBER PANDEMIC
Cyber pandemic?? Like the current viral pandemic, but with cyber attacks everywhere instead of viruses?
Just thinking if this lasts a month or more:
*Transportation breakdown -> Forced lockdown. Food shortages and food riots? Electric cars and TESLA would be winners.
Hospital breakdown -> More deaths from new strains. Take vaccine because its the last line of defence, in the absence of hospitals. Immunity-as-a-service, as someone on this site once said.
Power breakdown -> No devices. No work from home -> you get laid off. No money to buy food. No electricity to cook. Cooking gas pipelines might break down too. In cities, there isn't enough firewood to cook food or wild animals to hunt or land to grow crops. It'll be chaos.
Klaus Schwab doing what he does best:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DKRvS-C04o
Cyber pandemic?? Like the current viral pandemic, but with cyber attacks everywhere instead of viruses?
Just thinking if this lasts a month or more:
*Transportation breakdown -> Forced lockdown. Food shortages and food riots? Electric cars and TESLA would be winners.
Hospital breakdown -> More deaths from new strains. Take vaccine because its the last line of defence, in the absence of hospitals. Immunity-as-a-service, as someone on this site once said.
Power breakdown -> No devices. No work from home -> you get laid off. No money to buy food. No electricity to cook. Cooking gas pipelines might break down too. In cities, there isn't enough firewood to cook food or wild animals to hunt or land to grow crops. It'll be chaos.
It's horrible if it were to happen.
And then multiple hacker groups will come out like "we didn't mean to cause havoc!" instead of just the current one.
Almost forgot: Credit to u/solarsavior and u/Tellstruth for pointing this out.