kyp275 said:
I don't think that was what he was trying to say. It's not that you shouldn't empathize and console those who were wronged, but rather that it shouldn't be the ONLY thing allowed, where all you can do is console them and not tell them that leaving their valuables on the kitchen table wasn't the greatest idea.
If I put my things on my kitchen table, in my house, I would expect my valuables to be safe. Because it's my house. I keep my doors locked. I keep my windows locked. I don't have an alarm, but then, I'm in a safe neighbourhood, and you wouldn't expect to.
The point I'm making is, sure someone could come in and take my wedding ring off my table. They could also take my TV and computer and all my other valuables. People regularly break into banks, Target, hack into other accounts and steal information from them. Should I never use a credit card? Should I not leave my money in banks? Wasn't there a huge DDoS thing on the Escapist while I didn't have internet just a couple of weeks ago? Does that mean I shouldn't use the internet at all?
Everything comes with inherent risks. Using Amazon, Dominoes, they may not have been broken into yet, but they could be. That doesn't stop people giving vital information. Passwords get stolen every day, and yet we continue using them. We don't blame people for shopping at Target when you find out that people broke in and stole information. After all, we assume some stuff are just secure.
And we would assume our phones are just as secure, or our computers are secure. Or that we can trust our husbands/boyfriends/girlfriends/wives to be as secure with our private pictures like that. When they can't be, or when people break into our clouds, computers, hack our phones, or just put up stuff they find, it's a shock of a breach of trust. A trust that we had in our electronics, or someone we had faith in.
Sure we can say "they shouldn't have done it," in a self righteous way, but how many of us haven't ever done something stupid? I mean, not to quote the bible here (because I'm not one of those people,) but it's kind of apt, he who is without sin cast the first stone and all that. We've all done things we're not proud of that might have come back to bite us in the ass, and while we can judge them, the kind and human response would be to empathise with them and say "we've all been there in one way or another, I'm sorry you're in this situation."