@resist1984
Why so?
@jubes have a look at the #Amazon pull-down here: https://codeberg.org/swiso/website/issues/141
@resist1984 I'm not excusing Amazon's misbehaviours but from a technical perspective I don't think it's foolish, it was either poor design or ignorance. The article posted indicates the leak was from an open S3 buckets which is the end users issue not Amazon's.
@resist1984 Fair point, but insider threat is a risk which affects all businesses. You can also use standard Public Key Infrastructure to secure data so you don't need to trust Amazon if you're going to use them for storage. In addition, from what I understand the Capital One breach wasn't due to untrustworthy insiders, it was due to a misconfigured Web Application Firewall (ModSecurity) which in turn allowed for Server Side Request Forgery.
@jubes Is Capone, Amazon-Swiggy-Juspay, & Liberapay only using AWS for storage? AWS is also a hosting service, so I thought AWS was where these financial services ran their web server. The Capital One attack was executed by a contractor who worked for Amazon. Perhaps their insider access gave awareness of the malconfig.
@jubes #Liberapay uses #CloudFlare (a recipe for disaster in itself), so we're blocked from checking the hosting provider, but Liberapay bluntly states that #AMZN is their hosting provider. It's a given that a service must trust their own insiders, but making a tech giant an insider kills trust particularly given a history of breaches.
@resist1984 I agree that it's useful to be able to know which hosting services a service provider uses to be able to have all the facts and make an informed decision about whether you want to use said service. That said cloudflare does offer some useful protective services thus i'd be interested in knowing how you approach this in the light of hackers etc? I'd also be interested in understanding which economic models you prescibe to which would result in something that isn't a tech giant?
@jubes When someone reported #Cloudflare-proxied child porn to CF, instead of taking corrective action CF doxxed the person who reported it to the admins running the site that hosted the porn, who then publically smeared the whistle blower to solicit attack on that person. This proves that CF cannot be trusted with sensitive information.
@jubes CF has taken over 10% of the web, which makes them a highly desirable target. And when attacked such as when #cloudbleed happened, the impact is unacceptably devestating. All users on the affected sites had to change their passwords.
@jubes the business case for #Liberapay (as a non-profit) is not to maximise profits. An ethics-lacking profit-driven business may use CloudFlare if their bottom line justifies it, but that's not the economic model that #Liberapay users are expecting.
@jubes Non-profit or not, if an org opts to use #CloudFlare amid its huge list of ethical issues (https://codeberg.org/swiso/website/issues/141), ethical users have a duty to condemn it. Users don't have a duty to the bottom line.