Kaseya customers ransomware attack
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@pete-s said in Kaseya customers ransomware attack:
@obsolesce said in Kaseya customers ransomware attack:
Ransomware is a legacy tech concern, not a modern one.
What do you mean by modern? Are you talking about running kubernetes in the cloud or something else that would not be subject to ransomware?
That would be. Even a totally stateless system (what purpose would that ultimately serve) theoretically will still be impacted, if only a little. But there's no such thing as a totally stateless system. Even the most stateless server still has to pull its install image, Docker image, whatever from some kind of stateful system. Ransom that system and you have a big impact even to a system that doesn't seem to store any data at all.
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@scottalanmiller said in Kaseya customers ransomware attack:
Well, EVERYTHING is subject to it, lol.
Obviously. I'm saying for all intents and purposes.
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@pete-s said in Kaseya customers ransomware attack:
@obsolesce said in Kaseya customers ransomware attack:
Ransomware is a legacy tech concern, not a modern one.
What do you mean by modern? Are you talking about running kubernetes in the cloud or something else that would not be subject to ransomware?
I'm not talking about any specific product, e.g. K8s... Even with that, you could still implement poor data storage using legacy practices and technologies.
Think about it.
What important company data is being ransomware'd.... where is this data? How is the data presented? How did ransomware effect it? What technologies were used to provide and/or host the data?