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by telesilla
3034 days ago
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Most of the questions should not be answered, in my opinion - if the document got into the hands of a bad-actor it could be abused. I'll recommend they liberally use the N/A option and try and have a discussion with the customer security team. |
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Three things:
1.) Security through obscurity never works.
2.) Based on the examples you posted, they aren't asking for anything special. In fact, they both seem like about the base level of security I would expect an enterprise ready company to provide. If you want to liberally enter n/a to cover up that you aren't big enough/don't have enough people/haven't implemented what they ask, that is dishonest.
3.) If questions like this cause you so much trouble, you need to seriously ask yourself whether working for a startup is for you. Due diligence processes (either initiated by an investor who wants to fund you, or a body that wants to acquire you) should be expected to go much deeper.