Comment by unethical_ban 3 years ago Adding a new DNS record for a new, specific purpose is simple and low-impact, technically. 2 comments unethical_ban Reply UncleEntity 3 years ago …which gets promptly forgotten about after it’s initial use case and years later your user database gets sold on the internet.How many “low-impact” things have been compromised over the years, I wonder? unethical_ban 3 years ago Unless you have anyone competent running the DNS config, or have a ticketing workflow of any kind, and I can't figure out what you think a DNS record with a onetime validation token could do if left unmanaged beyond some adversary discovery.
UncleEntity 3 years ago …which gets promptly forgotten about after it’s initial use case and years later your user database gets sold on the internet.How many “low-impact” things have been compromised over the years, I wonder? unethical_ban 3 years ago Unless you have anyone competent running the DNS config, or have a ticketing workflow of any kind, and I can't figure out what you think a DNS record with a onetime validation token could do if left unmanaged beyond some adversary discovery.
unethical_ban 3 years ago Unless you have anyone competent running the DNS config, or have a ticketing workflow of any kind, and I can't figure out what you think a DNS record with a onetime validation token could do if left unmanaged beyond some adversary discovery.
…which gets promptly forgotten about after it’s initial use case and years later your user database gets sold on the internet.
How many “low-impact” things have been compromised over the years, I wonder?
Unless you have anyone competent running the DNS config, or have a ticketing workflow of any kind, and I can't figure out what you think a DNS record with a onetime validation token could do if left unmanaged beyond some adversary discovery.