In today’s layoffs at coinbase everyone who got laidoff received email on personal id as their access was removed to protect customers.. makes me wonder if coinbase has any basic standards around access management? If they had proper access control they wouldn’t have to worry about customer data compromises by disgruntled employees and would not have to revoke access of everyone instead of revoking of those who have access to sensitive data..how mismanaged is this company? @coinbase
That’s normal. When laying off employees in person, they grab your laptop first thing in the morning no matter who you are.
Airbnb and many orgs lets you keep laptop also they give employees notice first and then remove their access
Any info how they ensure your laptop doesn't have Airbnb company data left over? I can't imagine any company having the ability to remotely remove only the company data and leave user data intact. Does Apple or Windows even support converting a domain account into a local one?
This approach is cleaner if you're doing something at scale. Fewer things can go wrong if you just bulk disconnect and give only the limited access needed going forward. Edit: I work in cybersecurity and have had to do things like this before. I've also had to defend the process in front of auditors.
Tech Industry
Yesterday
2586
Tech companies to avoid as a white guy?
Tech Industry
2d
27499
How did this happen? (Meta Stock)
Tech Industry
Yesterday
784
Middle age women moving to Bay Area????!!!!!!
Tech Industry
Yesterday
2094
1 vs 5 Million - no lifestyle change
Tech Industry
Yesterday
1811
Lack of diversity in engineering division at X
Not an expert but this seems like a standard practice- when you are terminated, your access to company systems is revoked..
It’s usually done after communication and not before