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Comment Meh (Score 1) 112

The car dealership I work for bought a car yard that the former owners had bankrupted. Got inside to look around the day we got keys. All the desks/furniture had been removed by the liquidators, but there were boxes of paperwork laying around that had customer info, bank details and financial info in them. There was also a huge box of unissued license plates.

Comment Suprised she could move that much without concern (Score 5, Interesting) 189

We're in the process of tracking the same type of emails within our company.

It started two weeks ago when our CFO received an email purportedly from our CEO asking him to transfer money. The CFO was suspicious the second he read it, as the email was well written, had proper grammar and had more than two sentences unlike actual emails from our CEO (I wish I was joking about this, but I'm not)

We're still trying to see where these emails are coming from.

Even if he fell for it and tried to send the money, we have a two factor banking system where someone else with authority has to verify the transfer, authorise it and send it. We handle limits well below 40 million.

I'm suprised one person can transfer 40 million euros without raising any eyebrows beforehand.

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It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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