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by Sparkyte
1057 days ago
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You still have to do your diligence. You established what is supposed be a secure system yet that system failed due to provider security. AWS is far more staffed than any other company why wouldn't you shift left to AWS? Why would you hire a fleet of security engineers to do what AWS already established? You are breaking convention, reinventing the wheel and complicating an already simple system. This isn't fallacy it is reducing a businesses cognitive load. |
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My point exactly.
> You established what is supposed be a secure system yet that system failed due to provider security.
This makes no sense. By your own recommendation, "provider security" is an AWS offering.
> AWS is far more staffed than any other company why wouldn't you shift left to AWS? Why would you hire a fleet of security engineers to do what AWS already established?
What does Amazon's staffing have to do with best practices when securing a server deployed on their platform? Who said anything about "a fleet of security engineers"? How does any of that relate to securing that which one constructs, and ultimately is responsible for, when using said hosting services?
> You are breaking convention, reinventing the wheel and complicating an already simple system.
Are you saying that your original statement of "You also shift fault to AWS rather than your company and team" is somehow an accepted convention?
And what wheel did I "reinvent"?
Finally, was my identification of the common practice which is moving sshd off of port 22 the complication to which you refer?