• Blizzard@lemmy.zip
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    4 months ago

    My current company has a script that runs and deletes files that haven’t been modified for two years. It doesn’t take into account any other factors, just modification date. It doesn’t aks for confirmation and doesn’t even inform the end user about.

      • Blizzard@lemmy.zip
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        4 months ago

        Thought about it but I use modification date for sorting to have the stuff I’ve recently worked on on top. I instead keep the files where the script isn’t looking. The downside is they are not backed up so I might potentially lose them but if I don’t do that, then I’ll lose them for sure…

        • Perhyte@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          You don’t actually have to set all the modification dates to now, you can pick any other timestamp you want. So to preserve the order of the files, you could just have the script sort the list of files by date, then update the modification date of the oldest file to some fixed time ago, the second-oldest to a bit later, and so on.

          You could even exclude recently-edited files because the real modification dates are probably more relevant for those. For example, if you only process files older than 3 months, and update those starting from "6 months old"1, that just leaves remembering to run that script at least once a year or so. Just pick a date and put a recurring reminder in your calendar.

          1: I picked 6 months there to leave some slack, in case you procrastinate your next run or it’s otherwise delayed because you’re out sick or on vacation or something.

          • barsquid@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Change the date on all the files by scaling to fit the oldest file. Scale to 1 year as a safe maximum age. So if the oldest file is 1.5 years old, scale all files to be t/1.5 duration prior to now.

        • LazaroFilm@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Have a script that makes a copy of all files that are 1.9 years old into a separate folder.

        • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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          4 months ago

          Create a series of folders labeled with dates. Every day copy the useful stuff to the new folder. Every night change modified dates on all files to current date.

    • brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      What industry are you in. This could be compliance for different reasons. Retention is a very specific thing that should be documented in policies.

      I know financial institutions that specifically do not want data just hanging around. This limits liability and exposure if there is a breach, and makes any litigation much easier if the data doesn’t exist by policy.

      Should they be more choosy on what gets deleted, yea probably. But I understand why it’s there.

    • ramble81@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      That sounds like a lawyers dream… “can’t provide it if it doesn’t exist” … now granted, if they got a subpoena they’d have to save it going forward, but before then, if their not bound by something that forces data retention, the less random data laying around the better.

    • Kalkaline @leminal.space
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      4 months ago

      That’s the worst foresight I think I’ve ever heard of, you might as well make that 3 months if you’re just going to trash thousands of labor hours on those files.

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Put all your files in a single zip file. No compression. Since Windows handles zip files like folders, you can work like normal. And the zip file will always have a recent time stamp.

  • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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    4 months ago

    Startup in a rented house in a residential neighborhood

    “Router” was an old PC running Linux with a few network cards, with no case, with a household fan pointed at it to keep it cool

    Loose ethernet cables and little hubs everywhere

    Every PC was its own thing and some people were turbo nerds. I had my Linux machine with its vertical monitor; there were many Windows machines, a couple Macs, servers and 2 scrounged Sun workstations also running Linux

    No DHCP, pick your own IP and tell the IT guy, which was me, and we’ll set you up. I had a little list in my notebook.

    It was great days my friends

    We went out of business; no one was shocked

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        4 months ago

        It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. I turned in a time card once that had over 24 hours of work on it in a row. The boss was dating a stripper, and she would sometimes bring stripper friends to our parties and hangouts. We had ninja weapons in the office. The heat was shitty, so in the winter we had to use space heaters, but that would overload the house’s power which would cause a breaker to blow which obviously caused significant issues, so a lot of people would wear coats at their desks in the winter, but that obviously doesn’t do much for your typing fingers which was an issue. I frequently would sleep in the office on the couch (a couple of people were living in bedrooms in the upstairs of the house).

        Like I say, it’s not surprising that we went out of business. It was definitely pretty fuckin memorable though. Those are just some of the stories or right-away memorable pieces off the top of my head.

    • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Loose ethernet cables and little hubs everywhere

      actual hubs; not switches?!!!

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      I like that about my IT dept here too. You pick your own IP and he just patches you in,

    • DudeDudenson@lemmings.world
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      4 months ago

      I was gonna ask why they didn’t use DHCP and then I remembered half the stuff in my home network doesn’t either.

      Still have half of the IP range available for DHCP tho

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        4 months ago

        I think I eventually did install a DHCP server with a high-up reserved range for it to allocate IP addresses out of. The main body of machines were still statically configured, though, because we needed them on static IPs and I couldn’t really get dhcpd to get it right consistently after a not too long amount of trying.

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Coffee shop open WiFi on the same network as the main retail central point of sale system server for several stores.

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      4 months ago

      Transport layer security should mean this shouldn’t matter. A good POS shouldn’t rely on a secure network, the security should already be built in cyptographically at the network session layer. Anything else would still have the same risk vector, just a lower chance of happening.

      In fact many POS systems happily just take a 4g/5g sim card because it doesn’t matter what network they’re on.

      • Shard@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Non IT guy here.

        Not all attackers might want access to the POS system. Some might just want to mess around

        Couldn’t someone mess with the WiFi or network itself? I’m just figuring someone who doesn’t secure the WiFi is someone who’s going to leave admin passwords on the default and they’d be able to mess with the network settings just enough to bring the system to a halt.

        • biscuitswalrus@aussie.zone
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          4 months ago

          A software shouldn’t use passwords for tls, just like before you use submit your bank password your network connection to the site has been validated and encrypted by the public key your client is using to talk to the bank server, and the bank private key to decrypt it.

          The rest of the hygiene is still up for grabs for sure, IT security is built on layers. Even if one is broken it shouldn’t lead to a failure overall. If it does, go add more layers.

          To answer about something like a WiFi pineapple: those man in the middle attacks are thwarted by TLS. The moment an invalid certificate is offered, since the man in the middle should and can not know the private key (something that isn’t used as whimsically as a password, and is validated by a trusted root authority).

          If an attacker has a private key, your systems already have failed. You should immediately revoke it. You publish your revokation. Invalidating it. But even that would be egregious. You’ve already let someone into the vault, they already have the crown jewels. The POS system doesn’t even need to be accessed.

          So no matter what, the WiFi is irrelevant in a setup.

          Being suspicious because of it though, I could understand. It’s not a smoking gun, but you’d maybe look deeper out if suspicion.

          Note I’m not security operations, I’m solutions and systems administrations. A Sec Ops would probably agree more with you than I do.

          I consider things from a Swiss cheese model, and rely on 4+ layers of protection against most understood threat vendors. A failure of any one is minor non-compliance in my mind, a deep priority 3. Into the queue, but there’s no rush. And given a public WiFi is basically the same as a compromised WiFi, or a 5g carrier network, a POS solution should be built with strengths to handle that by default. And then security layered on top (mfa, conditional access policies, PKI/TLS, Mdm, endpoint health policies, TPM and validation++++)

        • eclipse@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Never trust the network in any circumstance. If you start from that basis then life becomes easier.

          Google has a good approach to this: https://cloud.google.com/beyondcorp

          EDIT:

          I’d like to add a tangential rant about companies still using shit like IP AllowLists and VPNs. They’re just implementing eggshell security.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I have posted about this before. I’m pretty sure I win.

    I’m not going to name names. I worked for a company, three of their clients include the United States Air Force, the United States army, and the United States Navy. They also have a few thousand other clients, private sector, public, and otherwise. Other nation states services as well.

    I worked for this company quite recently, which should make what I’m about to tell you all the more alarming. I worked for them in 2021.

    Their databases were ProgressABL. I linked it because if you’re younger than me, there’s a slim chance in hell you’ve ever heard of it. I hadn’t. And I’m nearing 40.

    Their front end was a bunch of copy/pasted JavaScript, horribly obfuscated with no documentation and no comments. Doing way more than is required.

    They forced clients to run windows 7, an old version of IE, all clients linked together, to us, in the most hilariously insecure 1990s-ass way imaginable, through tomcat instances running on iis on all their clients machines.

    They used a wildcard SSL for all of their clients to transact all information.

    That SSL was stored on our local FTP server. We had ports forwarded to the internet at large.

    The password for that ftp server was 100% on lists. It was rotated, but all of the were simple as fuck.

    I mean, “Spring2021”. Literally. And behind that? The key to deobfuscate all traffic for all of our clients!!

    The worst part was that we offered clients websites, and that’s what I worked on. I had to email people to have them move photos to specific directories to get them to stop failing to load, because I didn’t have clearance to the servers where we stored our clients photos.

    We had legit secure servers. We used them for photos. We left the keys to the fucking city in the prize room of a maze a 12 year old could solve.

    Holy shit.

    • Kogasa@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      I worked with Progress via an ERP that had been untouched and unsupported for almost 20 years. Damn easy to break stuff, more footguns than SQL somehow

    • 5redie8@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      They used a wildcard SSL for all of their clients to transact all information.

      glances at my home server setup nervously

      • foggy@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Lol you can totally do it in a home server application. It’s even okay if I’m a e-commerce store to use wildcard for example.com and shop.example.com. not a best practice, but not idiotic.

        Not idiotic unless you also have a hq.example.com that forwards a port into your internal network…

        …where ftp://hq.example.com takes you to an insecure password shield, and behind it is the SSL certificate, just chillin for anyone to snag and use as a key to deobfuscate all that SSL traffic, going across your network, your shop, your whole domain.

  • Xaphanos@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    My current job.

    Many SQL servers use scripts that run as domain administrator. With the password hard coded in.

    Several of the various servers are very old. W2K, 2003, 2008. SQL server, too.

    Several of the users run reports via rdp to the SQL server - logging in as domain admin.

    Codebase is a mashup of various dev tools: .net, asp, Java, etc.

    Fax server software vendor has been out of business for a decade. Server hardware is 20 years old. Telecom for fax is a channelized PRI carrying POTS - and multiport modem cards.

    About a 3rd of the ethernet runs in the office have failed.

    Office pcs are static IP. Boss says that’s more secure.

    We process money to/from the Fed.

  • philpo@feddit.org
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    4 months ago

    Saw a mid size clinic where the server was also the personal desktop of the boss - who also used the domain admin user as his main user account. His reasoning was that he needed to see “everything” his employees did and that none must come “above him” IT wise.

    And before I forget it:The machine was in his office where he still was seeing patients and where often patients were left unattended - without him locking the machine.

  • calamityjanitor@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    My partner worked for a local council. They reset your password every 90 days which prevented you from logging in via the VPN remotely. To fix it you’d call IT and they’ll demand you tell them your current password and new password so they can change it themselves on your behalf.

    Even worse, requesting a work iphone meant filling out an IT support ticket. So that IT could set up your phone for you, the ticket demanded your work domain username and password, along with your personal apple account username and password.

    • nicerdicer@feddit.org
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      4 months ago

      along with your personal apple account username and password.

      I would never ever share my personal Apple account with work related things. I prefer to have my private stuff seperated from work related things.

      I once worked for a small company that had such a setup: All devices were Apple, and everything was connected with the company owners private Apple accounts. That means that I was able to see personal calendars and to an extend some email-related things - Things that reveald more about a person than you wanted to know.

  • NABDad@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    It’s it too soon to say, “letting Crowdstrike push updates to all your windows workstations and servers”

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 months ago

    We make users change their passwords every 90d. And log them out of their devices once a week. I don’t think this adds any security at all. It just reduces productivity (IMO).

    • Godort@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Not only does password rotation not add to security, it actually reduces it.

      Assuming a perfect world where users are using long randomly generated strong passwords it’s a good idea and can increase security. However, humans are involved and it just means users change their passwords from “Charlie1” to “Charlie2” and it makes their passwords even easier to guess. Especially if you know how often the passwords change and roughly when someone was hired.

      Ideally, your users just use a password manager and don’t know any of their credentials except for the one to access that password manager.

      If they need to manually type them in, password length should be prioritized over almost any other condition. A full sentence makes a great unique password with tons of entropy that is easy to remember and hard to guess.

      • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        SSO with passwordless is the ideal world.

        yubikey or similar phishing resistant mfa with biometric is the goal but smartphone number matching is a pretty good

  • flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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    4 months ago

    Source control relying on 2 folders: dev/test and production. Git was prohibited due to the possibility of seeing the history of who did what. Which made sense in a twisted way since a previous boss used to single out people who made mistakes and harras them

    • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Just share a git user, come on. Have everyone check in under the same name “development” or whatever, but no version control whatsoever?

  • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Wells Fargo. I worked for them for a few years and I have never banked with them after witnessing the travesty of inefficiency and incompetence, literally in my face.

  • wintermute@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 months ago

    I was hired to implement a CRM for an insurance company to replace their current system.

    Of course no documentation or functional requirements where provided, so part of the task was to reverse engineer the current CRM.

    After a couple of hours trying to find some type of backend code on the server, I discovered the bizarre truth: every bit of business logic was implemented in Stored Procedures and Triggers on a MSSQL database. There were no frontend code either on the server, users have some ActiveX controls installed locally that accessed the DB.

    • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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      every bit of business logic was implemented in Stored Procedures and Triggers on a MSSQL database.

      Provided the SP’s are managed in a CVS and pushed to the DB via migrations (similar to Entity Framework), this is simply laborious to the devs. Provided the business rules are simple to express in SQL, this can actually be more performant than doing it in code (although it rarely ever is that simple).

      There were no frontend code either on the server, users have some ActiveX controls installed locally that accessed the DB.

      This is the actual WTF for me.

      • wintermute@discuss.tchncs.de
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        There was no version control at all. The company that provided the software was really shady, and the implementation was so bad that the (only) developer was there full time fixing the code and data directly in production when the users had any issue (which was several times a day).

  • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    I had a boss at an animation company (so not exactly a hub of IT experts, but still) who I witnessed do the following:

    • Boot up the computer on her desk, which was a Mac

    • Once it had booted, she then launched Windows inside a VM inside the Mac

    • Once booted into that, she then loaded Outlook inside the Windows VM and that was how she checked her email.

    As far as I could ascertain, at some point she’d had a Windows PC with Outlook that was all set up how she liked it. The whole office then at some point switched over to Macs for whatever reason and some lunatic had come up with this as a solution so she wouldn’t have to learn a new email thing.

    When I tried to gently enquire as to why she didn’t just install Outlook for Mac I was told I was being unhelpful so I just left it alone lol. But I still think about it sometimes.

    • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      I’m not certain that it’s still the case but several years ago Outlook for Mac was incapable of handling certain aspects of calendars in public folders shared groups and there was some difficulty with delegation send as.

      At the time the best answer I had was for the Mac users to use Outlook as much as possible and then log into webmail when they needed to send us. It’s been a few years so I can’t help but think it’s been fixed by now. Or the very least equally broken on PC.

  • superkret@feddit.org
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    4 months ago

    A company making signage and signal lights for road construction, with 15 employees. Their former IT guy had switched all of their PC’s to Linux for ideological reasons and to save money.
    Then they found out that they had a long term contract for an accounting software that housed all their customer and billing data, only ran on Windows and required a server-client model.

    So they hauled in the boss’s private laptop which ran Windows 7, and installed both the server role, database and client software on it. When his employees needed to access the accounting software, the boss had to stop what he was doing and grant them full access to his laptop via teamviewer. When the boss’s laptop was off or he was on vacation, there was no way to access any price info, customer contact info, or financial data (This was during Covid when everyone was working from home).

    The laptop was set up to back up (using Windows 7’s integrated backup tool) to an external drive which wasn’t attached and no one remembered ever existing.

    The Linux server (which was actually a gaming PC) was running and attached to an MCU when my company surveyed their infrastructure, but no one (including the former IT guy) knew the correct root password, and we never found out what it was even doing.

      • superkret@feddit.org
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        4 months ago

        I had another customer who wrote down all passwords to everything in an unprotected Excel sheet and uploaded it to OneDrive, with the comany’s single, shared Microsoft login being [email protected] . The password was companyname in lower case letters with no 2FA.

        And another one who had their server in a shared office that was inside the owner’s privately owned apartment building. During the Christmas holidays, the owner turned off the heating for the office to save money, which crashed the server when temperatures dropped below freezing inside the room.

        Small business IT is wild. It’s one of the main reasons I quit my job at that small MSP and switched to a larger company’s internal IT.