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by DrRobinson
1274 days ago
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> Definitely not "close to useless". It lowers the risk a minimum amount (which makes it not useless, but close to it.) Your resources are limited, so you want to prioritize actions that have good cost:benefit ratio. Re-encrypting disks is a significant effort (cost), effort that could be spent on something with better benefit. Should you spend a day encrypting a database or should you spend it on looking over publicly exposed S3 buckets? Ideally both, but resources are limited. Doing one action always means you're putting off something else. |
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Did you see other comments in this thread, for example someone bought a drive online and turned out it still had some backblaze data?
Compliance often has a bunch of useless checkboxing, but in that case it really mattered.
I heard a rumor that some companies had their backups "in the other tower". People won't be making that mistake again.
In some places they have a policy against two key people being on the same plane. It's ridiculous, until it isn't.
Obviously there are priorities. But you can't say "I need to add features, not unit tests, because the company will go under without these features implemented very soon, and therefore unit tests are close to useless".