> There's a huge gap between Fortune 500 executives, government officials, etc. and regular people in terms of the resources available to them to prevent state-sponsored attackers. It doesn't take much these days to go from a nobody to being on somebody's radar.
It's also a question of whether you want that. Anyone can take anti-phishing training, it just takes a lot of time. Want to download a mod for a game? You better have a separate gaming machine with no important data on it and, to be sure, in a separate network. Want to buy a phone? Better drive to a random store, ordering is to dangerous.
Sure, it's easy to get on the radar, but avoiding a state-sponsored hack is also a lot of effort. Fortune 500 executives need to put that effort in and they do have the money to make it happen, but for most people, the problem is not the cost.
It's also a question of whether you want that. Anyone can take anti-phishing training, it just takes a lot of time. Want to download a mod for a game? You better have a separate gaming machine with no important data on it and, to be sure, in a separate network. Want to buy a phone? Better drive to a random store, ordering is to dangerous.
Sure, it's easy to get on the radar, but avoiding a state-sponsored hack is also a lot of effort. Fortune 500 executives need to put that effort in and they do have the money to make it happen, but for most people, the problem is not the cost.