|
|
|
|
|
by c0njecture
743 days ago
|
|
Snowflake internal staff do not have access to read customer data, unless a customer grants it. Customers can use their own KMS to generate table keys. Snowflake has a lot of security features. But still, customers may well misconfigure their own Snowflake accounts and therefore be vulnerable. A well configured Snowflake account: - does not allow any access from the public Internet. Network policies set by the customer should restrict access to corporate networks only.
- does not allow authentication unless with MFA or via corporate IDP / SAML
- has dynamic masking / tokenisation Snowflake seems to have most of the Fortune 500 as customers. If Snowflake itself was somehow penetrated and all controls circumvented, it would certainly be huge and you'd be reading about a lot more than Santander and Ticketmaster. At this point it seems more like the "AWS Hack" that affected CapOne back in the day (that was CapOne's fault, not AWS!). |
|
By default, no. But it is standard operating procedure for sales engineers to request and be given access to customer data so they can build demos.