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Yes, yes, great information there. But, does it scale?
No. You're all to heavy as it is.
If the list were 25 long we could make bingo cards for this.

I'm trying to come up with a way to use that Venn diagram. Getting everyone to agree we need to be in that overlap between "what we know" and "what we don't know" would be priceless.

I just realized the company I work for has a whole set of PR shit that talks about the "security gap".

Take a guess at what that gap consists of.

I would have to guess it's an overlap between "what we don't know" and "what we think we know", which is a bit easier to justify than the diagram in the article.

I also feel like this whole new field of "gap analysis" arose from what this article is poking fun at.

"There are known knowns. These are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we don't know we don't know." - Donald Rumsfeld
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Or ask somebody to draw three lines on a whiteboard that are mutually perpendicular ([1])

[1] The Expert (Short Comedy Sketch), www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKorP55Aqvg

so, and X, Y, and a Z axis.

Done.

They'll think I'm the smartest person in the room because I say "I wish I was dead."

Wow.

at least half of these occur daily regardless of where i work...