So long as social engineering is not counted in the gamut of "hacks", I might 
agree. I don't count anything where a user does something unprescribed, or is 
tricked into doing something as a hack. 

I was listening to The Tech Guy last Sunday and a gal called in to say she was 
in facebook and an alert pooped up telling her there was suspicious activity 
and Facebook wanted her to run something to check her system. She went ahead 
and did it. It reported it found 6 infected files and removed them. 

Most people are thinking, "OH NO! SHE DIDN'T!!!" Turns out, this is a 
legitimate thing that Facebook does! So now the question becomes, how the hell 
can we tell between the bad guys and the good guys??

I would modify your statement to, Ultimately, everything is potentially 
hackable. But the reason there are more attacks against Android is simple. It's 
orders of magnitude easier to exploit. 

Bob S


> On Aug 22, 2017, at 15:55 , Richard Gaskin via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> Ultimately everything is hackable.


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