• Pika@sh.itjust.works
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    20 hours ago

    honestly, pretty poor security here. I can’t say much cause I don’t have inter-device restrictions either… but I’m also not a bank that handles money.

    There’s no reason a random device should have been able to interface with any of the other devices tbh, I’m guessing the switch wasn’t smart so didn’t support Mac filtering or port disabling cause that should have not been a valid attack vector.

    • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 hours ago

      I just work a pretty standard engineering job at a large company (basically regular office work, not a critical industry like power or pharma), and any MAC that isn’t approved by IT is simply not a allowed to interface with anything whatsoever. It’s insane that a bank has this loose IT security.

      • Pika@sh.itjust.works
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        16 hours ago

        , Agreed. Like, I’m not surprised that it was allowed to interface with the ATM because at that layer, I think the jump would have been from the switch to the ATM(although the ATM should habe not accepted the connection imo). So it would have never gone through any security. But it blows my mind that it was allowed to access a mail server as part of the routing, And even more so that it was allowed to go from that mail server to the outside world to establish a second route into the establishment. Like, how did it never hit any type of security or blocker anywhere in that process?

        • ExcessShiv@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 hours ago

          Even at that layer it should require site specific knowledge to gain access to the network, knowledge like specific IP ranges, netmask and VLAN, that they really shouldn’t have. This bank managed to mess up literally every single step of the IT security chain, it’s almost impressive.