[citation][nom]neiroatopelcc[/nom]Maybe I'm just careless, but I'm not overly worried about such a thing. The window of opportunity is rather small, and nobody in their right mind would store seriously sensitive data in such a place anyway.[/citation]
I agree, but it's a worrying state of affairs that organisations are asking people to embrace "The Cloud" and move their lives online when they're clearly incapable of actually keeping data secure and private.
If you're going to store millions of people's private details and bank account data, you'd better at least be sure that it can't fall into the wrong hands - not to mention in plain text format, via a simple SQL injection attack - the most *preventable* form of attack in existence.
Sony had a case of lax security, Dropbox have just been plain clumsy with their code. Either way, it's an absolute disgrace.