Acesabe

@acesabe@infosec.exchange
96 Followers
191 Following
326 Posts
System/Network Admin/Ops, AWS, Linux, Windows, tech/infosec support and training
Bikes: (MTB) mechanic
Sustainable: recycling/repurposing, permaculture
Webhttps://acesabe.net
LinuxDebian, Ubuntu
BikesMTB, mechanic
LangsEnglish, Spanish
MastodonSince 2017 (originally on mastodon.social
@wood5y
Cave house FTW! 15-20°C cooler in than out quite often (including winter!)
@wood5y
Except we are no longer 40km south of them any more! Been in the interior (NE Granada province) for the last 4 years and it's even hotter!
@EricAlper
I think he's lame, Slayer in suits! Wtf...
@wood5y
An overcast day, that sounds lovely! No, genuinely, hot and sunny is nice and all, but the occasional respite would be very well received!
Google is really working hard to make my next phone an iPhone #android #ios
https://www.laptopmag.com/ai/gemini-phone-access-update
Google Gemini is about to control your messages and calls, even if you say no

Google’s AI assistant is about to get full access to your calls, texts, and WhatsApp — even if you’ve disabled activity tracking.

Laptop Mag
Ultra spicy post claiming to be from UK retailer employee (M&S or Co-op) about their experience with TCS on their security incident. https://www.reddit.com/r/cybersecurity/comments/1ll1l6c/scattered_spider_tcs_blame_avoidance/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb3x&utm_name=mweb3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button
Who's great idea to "fix" this was it?😖 Now one of the planetary gear cogs has vanished, nowhere to be seen!
#fixer #diy
Gotta hand it to archive.org - everybody loves to expose a hypocrite!
#trump #tweets
@Tendar
At that rate, another 80 years and they'll control all of Ukraine!
In reality, there won't be any soldiers left long before then!
Too bad that the school closes for good this summer after decades of operation, but that's a demographics matter rather than anything else.
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Ultra spicy post claiming to be from UK retailer employee (M&S or Co-op) about their experience with TCS on their security incident. https://www.reddit.com/r/cybersecurity/comments/1ll1l6c/scattered_spider_tcs_blame_avoidance/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb3x&utm_name=mweb3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button

Marks and Spencer’s CEO says half of their online ordering is still offline after their ransomware incident, they hope to get open in next 4 weeks.

They are also rebuilding internal systems and hope a majority of that will be done by August.

Lesson: mass contain early. M&S didn’t. Co-op did.

https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/ms-ceo-most-cyberattack-impact-will-be-behind-us-by-august-2025-07-01/

@GossiTheDog this doesn't surprise me, in india TCS is seen as a spring board job. You join to gain experience. Stay for a few months maybe a year or two(if you're really desperate). grit your teeth deal with a horrible boss and then move to a better paying job. They have pretty high turnovers so training new staff is probably super low on the priority.

@GossiTheDog I'd be very curious to know what the breakdown is between TCS dropping the ball and lying about it and M&S/Co-op not actually insisting on adequate procedure.

It's not terribly uncommon for people to only care about time-to-resolution with some lip service to user satisfaction when it comes to helpdesk metrics; and tacitly discourage things that are slow and unpleasant like hassling people for ID, at least until that becomes a visibly terrible idea.

@GossiTheDog fun that this is the same TCS who are working on the DWP Child Maintenance Scheme and run the Teachers Pension Scheme for the DfE.
@RichBartlett @GossiTheDog TCS has not yet taken over TPS ops, another year+ before Capita is gone
@grievousangel @GossiTheDog thanks, feels a bit like frying pan > fire moving from Capita to TCS!
@RichBartlett yes, very likely. Many in DfE would say TPS likely to be an upgrade in this instance but the bar is desperately low.

@GossiTheDog

"M-SThrowaway" might indicate M&S?

Or is that too obvious or deliberate obfuscation? 🙂🤷‍♂️

@GossiTheDog as someone who has been subjected to Tata on multiple occasions going back over a decade?

This isn't nearly spicy enough. I don't even describe them as a 'body shop' because they'd gladly route you to a corpse and try to charge extra for '24x7 coverage.'

When one employer did a basic security audit of their helpdesk services, Tata failed so severely that the contract was pulled for cause before the audit was even completed. They moved it all back in-house.

@GossiTheDog and lo, I found my notes! And, hooboy, hang onto your hats kiddos. Things they failed at (which caused me work):

- resetting passwords without verifying identities
- removing 2FA from accounts (not allowed period; there was a procedure)
- removing or updating 2FA without verifying identities (so a LOT of 2FAs had to be assumed compromised)
- adding users to groups directly instead of directing them to the appropriate request

@GossiTheDog The root problem here isn't that TCS are shockingly bad (they are, just about everyone knows that).

The root problem is that "management decisions" constantly overrule those that raise concerns about their service and tell any remaining internal IT and security staff to "deal with it as best you can."

I'm very much of the view that, yes, the outsourced provider can be the cause of an incident, they can provide a shockingly bad service, they can cost your business millions of pounds. But the decision to continue to use them when you already know this is a real possibility - that's a decision by senior management within the company. That's on you.

@Cyberoutsider @GossiTheDog Totally agree. You can outsource the work but never the accountability.

Here is (yet another) example of risk management failures, the management under cost pressures find affordable solutions, celebrated for cost savings but the implicit risks are not understood nor uncovered during sourcing process.

There are ways to compensate however there is any way a significant risk trade off that needs to be made consciously, rather than implicitly like today.

(Experience from enterprise offshore outsourcing +15 years)

@GossiTheDog ATOS in the past have operated in a similar way (my experience). But if a post mortem investigation finds that the IT contractor was at fault and created an attack vector, as perhaps is being implied here, then I believe that any current business insurance policy might not cover the financial losses. I guess that the affected businesses might need to pursue legal action. What a mess 🤦
@GossiTheDog
This is epically bad for TCS. Good work.

@GossiTheDog Interesting. I don't have the background on this specific attack, but I'm reminded of the Target credit card theft. An HVAC company near me was the point of entry for the attackers; they had high-access keys to Target's intranet because they install and maintain shopping-mall-grade HVAC and can remote-override it for maintenance and schedule reasons (nation-scale chain stores with giant footprints save not-inconsequential money on things like "Don't power up the HVAC to normal capacity on days nobody is here").

They had the keys on the same machine running their webserver.

(Meanwhile, Target actually did get an SEC slap-on-the-wrist for one specific thing: the HVAC intranet piece wasn't firewalled from the financial transactions and cash register source code pieces).

@GossiTheDog @tdp_org

If it is the case then the leaders of businesses like M&S who outsource these services to the lowest cost providers should also be held to account

It’s typical of British business management to know the cost of technology but not the value of it

@GossiTheDog

I do not work for either company. Nevertheless, I can corroborate these comments, but not on a public forum. Not much interested in a private forum either. I'll just say that insider threat analysis and mitigation is VERY important when TCS is something you are forced to use.

@Spartan_1986 @GossiTheDog same same, from both the red team side and the incident response side.
@GossiTheDog I wonder what the liquidated damages cap is in the contract.
@GossiTheDog And who brought them in and kept them? Culpa in eligendo.

@GossiTheDog K. Krithivasan, also known as Krithi, aka the face of quality IT, that you can trust.

Hash tag

These Indian, "IT", call centers probably do double time as scamming operations.

Hilarious twist would be that it was an inside job, faked to look like a compromise.