• In 2017, I jumped ship to a new job as they were transitioning to cloud server everything. The genius CTO (who was the owners wife) pushed for it, quoting they can save a lot of money.

    Then she fired half the IT staff.

    Two years later and a few major security hacks/ransomware events, they had to hire even more IT folks to unfuck their cloud setup.

    • @Naz@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      I had something like this happen at a corp I once worked at. The CTO said they were going to outsource their entire datacenter and support staff to India.

      I literally laughed in his face and obviously, got fired (always have 6-8 months of salary as an emergency fund, ahem-).

      I won’t name the company but when half the Internet went down and a few major services? Yeah, it was that asshat driving and running between the datacenters realizing people in Bangladesh can’t do shit for you physically.

      It’s like that graph: “Say we want to fuck around at a level 8, we follow this axis, and we’re going to find out at around a level 7 or 8”

      • @dudinax@programming.dev
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        232 months ago

        I visited a company that outsourced its IT to India. We were delayed 24 hours because the guy who could whitelist our computer on their network was asleep. It was the middle of the night where he lived.

      • Ephera
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        242 months ago

        Not a difficult task to not secure a cloud setup. And if it’s publicly reachable, you will quickly find yourself involuntarily participating in an automated vulnerability scan.

        • LostXOR
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          112 months ago

          It’s great, just give your cloud servers public IPs and you get tons of completely free vulnerability scans! This life hack has saved me tens of thousands of dollars in pentesting.

      • JJROKCZ
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        152 months ago

        Not really, it’s really amazing how fast things to go shit if you just stop patching or don’t follow best practices