jamesha
Well-Known Member
It was pretty embarrassing for City that security was so lax that passwords etc. were not changed when staff left. Over the past 20+ years any decent IT company would have been telling customers that they needed proper security for remote access using hardware tokens or latterly authentication apps on smartphones.This has happened on three occasions, they must have gained some advantage on what they saw watching other teams training. If they didn’t why keep doing it?
This was first story on the BBC news on Tuesday night. Understandably it’s a huge story with the implications of promotion to the Premier League, where was the coverage from the media when Liverpool illegally accessed City’s scouting software and the clamour and debate about what sort sanction they should receive?
The club were naive taking hush money off Liverpool and showed a soft touch. Probably why the likes of Uefa and the PL thought they could try take the club down with their bullshit sanctions and charges.
To be honest it was probably a good thing that it was only a scouting database that was illegally accessed and that caused a security review which presumably resulted in access being properly locked down.
I do agree the way it was handled was surprisingly low key - most dipper fans genuinely know nothing about it.