Vulnerable in a sentence as an adjective

All the time I spent on the phone with the scammer was time they couldn't spend targeting vulnerable individuals.

But for me this made me realize how vulnerable non-citizens are when it comes to US immigration and border patrol.

In a rush to applaud cleverness, Twitter seems to have lept to the conclusion that "clever attack" means "vulnerable target".

So, here's the most important thing you need to understand:If you have a vulnerable application anywhere, on any port it will be found and compromised.

In particular, is China, a rising superpower, vulnerable to these forces?

Older developers are also less vulnerable to faddish thinking, choosing tools that they can ship with over the latest faddish language or technique.

The patent bar is in an uproar that issued patents might not be deemed presumptively valid when challenged but might be much more vulnerable to challenge going forward, and so too are the trolls.

A lot of people here so far are mentioning online backup services, but those would be just as vulnerable to this kind of attack, since they're accessible online and use an email account for password resets.

"Remember that time akamai ran vulnerable code in production for 13 years and the bug got patched two days after they open-sourced it" should be able to drive open source contributions at all kinds of companies.

In most cases, even when success ensues, the startup will get squeezed on things like pricing and they will continually face the risk of termination of the arrangement, leaving them vulnerable if the company's survival is tied to that deal.

In the meantime, people who have good reason not to post under their own names -- vulnerable people, whistleblowers, others -- are now fully on display to those sociopaths who are only too happy to press the attack with or without anonymity.

But, as in the case of at-will rules, these laws did not disturb the large measure of freedom of contract that formerly prevailed except for the specific situations where a policy judgment was made that the workers were most vulnerable and in need of protection.

Of course, your value to the company may be such that a board will prefer to defend you and allow you to continue to vest but the point is that, through this set of events, you are vulnerable to the whims of whatever investors happen to control the board.

Vulnerable definitions

adjective

susceptible to attack; "a vulnerable bridge"

adjective

susceptible to criticism or persuasion or temptation; "vulnerable to bribery"; "an argument vulnerable to refutation"

adjective

capable of being wounded or hurt; "vulnerable parts of the body"