In a significant data breach, hacktivist group NullBulge has infiltrated Disney’s internal Slack infrastructure, leaking 1.2TB of sensitive data. This breach, posted on the cybercrime platform Breach Forums on July 12, 2024, exposes many of Disney’s internal communications, compromising messages, files, code, and other proprietary information.

  • kingthrillgore
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    1511 year ago

    So we gonna finally accept that maybe all these cloud services aren’t that secure

    • @5redie8@sh.itjust.works
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      661 year ago

      Internal slack infrastructure

      Taking this part of the description at face value anyway, this sounds like the opposite of the cloud.

      That being said, I still agree with the statement

      • @bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        611 year ago

        I don’t think Slack has a self hosted version, and does not offer IP allow listing. There’s nothing preventing someone to go to https://disney.slack.com/. I think when they say “internal” they mean for internal employees, and not like a thing for fans.

        • @addie@feddit.uk
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          281 year ago

          I think when Disney demands an internally-hosted version of your product, then the sales team tells engineering that they’ll provide one, and mark the price up accordingly. That kind of thing doesn’t appear on the external listing for everyone else.

          • @cmhe@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Why would Disney demand that?

            Why would they choose slack if they want to host, maintain and be responsible for the internal chat themselves?

            They choose slack because they do it for them so that they don’t have to do it themselves. That is the selling point for them.

            Businesses buy cloud services, because they do not want to manage stuff themselves.

            • @towerful@programming.dev
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              1 year ago

              They can still have support contracts and SLA etc from slack.
              It’s just that the servers slack runs on are on-prem and completely controlled by the business buying into the self hosted licence.
              The benefits should be tighter security (say, can only be accessed via VPN), and for many many MAU probably lower costs. Chances are, Disney already has datacenter ops and hardware contracts.

              And why choose slack? For quite a while, it was extremely common for developers (maybe even industry standard?). It had loads of features in the small market of internal chat programs. And it’s easy to build extensions and integrations for.

              I’m not saying that Disney is running on-prem slack, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they were

            • @douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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              51 year ago

              Your logic isn’t making sense.

              The code would end up somewhere for others to use…? What?

              One-off products or beta offerings are often kept private, sometimes indefinitely.

              • @homesnatch@lemm.ee
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                31 year ago

                In this case, Disney is using Slack Cloud-hosted for internal communication, but I can definitely understand people interpreting it differently.

            • @anivia@lemmy.ml
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              41 year ago

              Providing Disney with an internally hostable version of Slack doesn’t require giving them the code. They can just ship them compiled binaries

        • @UtMan1988@lemmy.world
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          191 year ago

          They do. You pay extra for it. You have to have apache or a web server configured for it, and a lot of space. Source: I configured one like 4 years ago.