Comment by d4mi3n
3 hours ago
Other response address how you could go about this, but I'd just like to note that you touch on the core problem of security as a domain: At the end of the day, it's a problem of figuring out who to trust, how much to trust them, and when those assessments need to change.
To use your example: Any cybersecurity firm or practitioner worth their salt should be *very* explicit about the scope of their assessment.
- That scope should exhaustively detail what was and wasn't tested.
- There should be proof of the work product, and an intelligible summary of why, how, and when an assessment was done.
- They should give you what you need to have confidence in *your understanding of* you security posture as well as evidence that you *have* a security posture you can prove with facts and data.
Anybody who tells you not to worry and take their word for something should be viewed with extreme skepticism. It is a completely unacceptable frame of mind when you're legally and ethically responsible for things you're stewarding for other people.
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