> by all metrics, immigrants are a net positive to society. What about wage suppression?
I would like to read this article but am unwilling to provide even a fake e-mail address to do so
I wonder how many of their telecom devices like routers, switches, etc. have bombs implanted in their power supplies
His wealthy parents, probably
Does it also monitor the contents of your copy/paste buffer? It would scoop up a ton of privileged data if so.
[flagged]
When I managed a large fleet of EC2 instances running CentOS I had Ansible running locally on each machine via a cron job. I only used remote SSH to orchestrate deployments (stop service, upgrade, test, put back in…
How much leverage though?
Oh, the irony!
Because people who don't bother to read the article assume it's a new breach, as we can see in the comments here ("another breach"). I'm not saying that it makes it better or worse.
This is not a new breach, it is a disclosure of additional findings from the last breach.
That's rich coming from IBM
This is karma for their passive-aggressive blog post about Okta's security incident one week earlier
Isn't Equifax part of a de facto monopoly? Okta doesn't have that luxury. Security is also not Equifax's core competency, but it is supposed to be Okta's. I would be happy for you to be right, but I think this happening…
Okta outsources their support staff to save millions of dollars while losing billions of dollars in market cap each time their support staff gets hacked.
Locking down what, exactly?
Okta employee here. I can assure you that there are no clear-text credentials in our source code.
> by all metrics, immigrants are a net positive to society. What about wage suppression?
I would like to read this article but am unwilling to provide even a fake e-mail address to do so
I wonder how many of their telecom devices like routers, switches, etc. have bombs implanted in their power supplies
I wonder how many of their telecom devices like routers, switches, etc. have bombs implanted in their power supplies
His wealthy parents, probably
Does it also monitor the contents of your copy/paste buffer? It would scoop up a ton of privileged data if so.
[flagged]
When I managed a large fleet of EC2 instances running CentOS I had Ansible running locally on each machine via a cron job. I only used remote SSH to orchestrate deployments (stop service, upgrade, test, put back in…
How much leverage though?
Oh, the irony!
Because people who don't bother to read the article assume it's a new breach, as we can see in the comments here ("another breach"). I'm not saying that it makes it better or worse.
This is not a new breach, it is a disclosure of additional findings from the last breach.
This is not a new breach, it is a disclosure of additional findings from the last breach.
That's rich coming from IBM
This is karma for their passive-aggressive blog post about Okta's security incident one week earlier
Isn't Equifax part of a de facto monopoly? Okta doesn't have that luxury. Security is also not Equifax's core competency, but it is supposed to be Okta's. I would be happy for you to be right, but I think this happening…
Okta outsources their support staff to save millions of dollars while losing billions of dollars in market cap each time their support staff gets hacked.
Locking down what, exactly?
Okta employee here. I can assure you that there are no clear-text credentials in our source code.