We’ve been monitoring this internally, as customers of an Okta-like service.
I’ve also been closely monitoring the responses from our CTO and VP of Security when someone from our DevOps team posted a link to the Verge article in slack this morning.
Which brings me to this inquiry: How are your orgs responding to this? We have a dependency on an Okta-like provider and my first thought when reading this news was “you know, wonder if we should give our shit a sanity check”, and someone beat me to this, proposed it in slack but the idea was turned down by our SecOps team.
I moved over to Azure AD this morning (we only have a few devs and were already using Azure DevOps so this was doable). I requested that Okta cancel our account and let them know the reason was the potential data breach and their CEO's response on Twitter. Okta's response was that we signed an MSA agreement and that cancelling isn't an option, nor termination of fees.
Auth0 is run as an isolated subsidiary in its own infrastructure, with the old CEO still overseeing operations.
Due to the massive difference in Okta & Auth0's implementations I don't see that changing anytime soon.
Sounds about right. Here there will be a staff security training symposium that runs everyone through a training course bought in from the lowest bidder that is tangentially related to the issue followed by a self-congratulatory management meeting and that will be the whole issue resolved to satisfaction.
And yet Okta is the ultimate in box-ticking technology. They are bought to tick the boxes. So what happens now that the box tickers are not ticking the boxes?
Usually a mass exodus to a similar service with the same guarantees resulting in months of capacity problems as they try and scale out from customer influx.
I’ve also been closely monitoring the responses from our CTO and VP of Security when someone from our DevOps team posted a link to the Verge article in slack this morning.
Which brings me to this inquiry: How are your orgs responding to this? We have a dependency on an Okta-like provider and my first thought when reading this news was “you know, wonder if we should give our shit a sanity check”, and someone beat me to this, proposed it in slack but the idea was turned down by our SecOps team.