ozzybmx
taking a shit with my boobs out
My local has auto taps and 2 swing out doors as you exit the mens toilet, its sensational for a clean getaway.Best not to think about that doorknobs are likely to be more festy than the toilet itself
My local has auto taps and 2 swing out doors as you exit the mens toilet, its sensational for a clean getaway.Best not to think about that doorknobs are likely to be more festy than the toilet itself
I see your point, but I'll still take the free handwash despite the popularity of the no hands, no splash methodI dont wash after a public restroom slash - I know my penis was clean before I got it out - No idea about those washroom handles and taps etc
Prince Andrew defence.I see your point, but I'll still take the free handwash despite the popularity of the no hands, no splash method
He doesn't sweat apparently but that wasn't sweat to being with.....Errrrrr.............Prince Andrew defence.
I love how in 2019 we would have dismissed this as nothing. Imagine back in 2019 the board of a multinational performing a SWOT analysis, and placing a pandemic or epidemic inside the top 10 threats to the business. Would have been deemed crack pots.Well doesn't this sound like fun:
Immune system evading hybrid virus observed for first time RSV and influenza
Have had pandemic scenarios in Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity planning since forever where I've worked (not everyone does, but many have always had). Having a strategy for dealing with the unexpected is a big part of risk management at large multinationals, no matter how unlikley the scenario. Even if they didnt have "pandemic" specified, many would have had loss of staff, loss of access to building/technology etc. that would have covered the broad scenario of a pandemic. These plans are typically tested annually via various approaches that vary between businesses. There's usually a dedicated resource (or a few) that take care of this in a large organisation. Fun fact, Nuclear war is also a scenario covered in many multinational DR/BC plans. So the dream of debt being wiped if you blow up a city where the data centers for banks reside is a pipe dream. If you survive, you're still in debtImagine back in 2019 the board of a multinational performing a SWOT analysis, and placing a pandemic or epidemic inside the top 10 threats to the business. Would have been deemed crack pots.
It didn't look like Qantas, virgin, and a few of their competitors had much of a plan for a multinational government long term shit down of their industry.Have had pandemic scenarios in Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity planning since forever where I've worked (not everyone does, but many have always had). Having a strategy for dealing with the unexpected is a big part of risk management at large multinationals, no matter how unlikley the scenario. Even if they didnt have "pandemic" specified, many would have had loss of staff, loss of access to building/technology etc. that would have covered the broad scenario of a pandemic. These plans are typically tested annually via various approaches that vary between businesses. There's usually a dedicated resource (or a few) that take care of this in a large organisation. Fun fact, Nuclear war is also a scenario covered in many multinational DR/BC plans. So the dream of debt being wiped if you blow up a city where the data centers for banks reside is a pipe dream. If you survive, you're still in debt
This unnamed Telecom company had major data centres in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.yeah Ive run that as a joke in a draft document before.
in reality though your only solution for an outage of your two data centers as a telco is more data centers. Though for a telco, cant really see a reason to have them on different continents. In finance, they're all over the place, no one is not paying, ever But in all seriousness, it covers peoples funds too. Imagine losing all your money because a bank held all its data in one city that got hit by a meteor. WOuld be good for some, devestating for others.
They're still operating aren't they?It didn't look like Qantas, virgin, and a few of their competitors had much of a plan for a multinational government long term shit down of their industry.
Ha. Architecture fail. Test of your plan clearly identified the failure point though lol. Test success!This unnamed Telecom company had major data centres in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.
The issue was several critical systems were duplicated but only in the 2 Sydney data centres.
For years we had wanted to move one lot of these critical systems to Melbourne but it needed a dual path high speed data link Sydney to Melbourne and we did not own one and it was going to cost a SLoM to lease.
Not all of them.They're still operating aren't they?
And as we and the cheque signers would all be dead, who cares ?Ha. Architecture fail. Test of your plan clearly identified the failure point though lol. Test success!
Though to be fair somone senior would have had to have signed off on allowing that risk to persist. Often companies will accept these risks if the likliehood of them materialising is exceptionally low. If there is no history of it having occurred then why spend money fixing a hypothetical failure. If it HAD happened before, fuck, rolling the dice really. Would come down to how fast can it be resolved and what's the difference in cost between solving the failure after it materialises vs the cost of preventing it.
I'm less worried about DR and more worried about hacks these days. Saw a good one yesterday:And as we and the cheque signers would all be dead, who cares ?
We got a lot of verbal feedback from our 1 line (non) plan but nothing formal.
Apparently it was discussed at the ELT but never made it to the board.
Hacks are considered a disaster in DR/BC plans. There are three type; Natural disaster, Physical disaster and technology based. Each of those will have various subsets - ie technology will have cybsec > hack as a subset.I'm less worried about DR and more worried about hacks these days. Saw a good one yesterday:
View attachment 393805
In a different way though, you can't cover that sort of disater with a backup of the same vulnerable system in a different state, being prepared for hack recovery and remediation is getting more important than covering for physical failures or geographically contained disasters. If the primary objective is data theft rather than DoS it's a completely different set of people to engage for recovery.hacks are a Disaster. Need to recover from them and continue operating.
Yes, but you said " I'm less worried about DR and more worried about hacks these days". Just pointing out that Disaster recovery covers Hacks. How it manages it is still relevant despite the remediation being different. If hacks weren't part of DR, the damage they'd be likely to cause would be worse.In a different way though, you can't cover that sort of disater with a backup of the same vulnerable system in a different state, being prepared for hack recovery and remediation is getting more important than covering for physical failures or geographically contained disasters. If the primary objective is data theft rather than DoS it's a completely different set of people to engage for recovery.
100% incorrect. It just shifts the responsibility to another party and geography and potentially creates additional risks (depending on where the data is stored). Additionally data stored overseas creates additional compliance obligations for Australian companies that choose services that do so (EG possibly needing to comply with GDRP as well as APP). There's pros and cons to running your own infrastructure or outsourcing. Running your own gives you complete visibility of your environments, risks and controls....IF you have the resources to manage it. When you outsource it, you're effectively trusting someone else have the appropriate resources to manage it. Even though there is some trust placed in these big brands like AWS, the same challenges in managing this exist for them as they do for smaller outfits. Seperately, if you outsource you have to commit resources to validating that the outsourced vendor is doing what they said they are doing, but with more filters and roadblock in place. its kind of musical chairs with resources, really.As services move to the cloud the geographic disater is almost completely mitigated
Yep. I personally think that this will lead to some pretty intrusive measures for the general public. Whether this is intentional (i.e. part of some grand conspiracy) or coincidental, leads to a very fun topic for discussionbut hacking is just getting worse and more prevalent.