Appears that our author was present whilst either he gave a talk with no questions or a tame interviewer asked Werner soft questions with no follow-ups. Absolutely no pushback or challenge to anything he's reported as saying. Nothing along the lines of 'I keep reading AWS customers describing the quality of support and support staff declining over the last year or so. This seems to correlate closely with AWS push to full time RTO. How do you respond to this data?'
> a few days ago, i had the surreal experience of joining a private fireside chat with werner vogels, the cto of amazon, during startup summit 2025 in florianópolis. it's one thing to follow his talks online – it's another to be in the same room, listening to him unpack two decades of lessons from building some of the most critical infrastructure on the internet.
It seems he does indeed tell us that he was a listener in a small-audience conversation that Vogels had.
Wearing American football style helmets does not reduce the risk of concussion which is primarily the result of sudden acceleration or deceleration causing the brain to move around inside the skull https://ideas.ted.com/football-helmets-dont-protect-against-... This is why they have 'soft' helmets in Rugby. American football likes the macho look of its helmets and body armour but for concussion it's essentially safety theatre.
Scheuer allegedly went into action quickly following his termination, and by early July was said to have used his work credentials, which still functioned after his termination, to access the menu creation system Disney contracted another company to create and change all the fonts in the system to wingdings symbols.
Okay. So while jail is probably appropriate given the potential threat of harm if nobody had reviewed the menus prior to their publication with the allergens stripped...
The tech community should not let Disney off the hook for failing to scrub the access credentials of a terminated employee. Because the law can punish one actor, but if the attack vector is still open, the public isn't safe from future more subtle incidents of menu manipulation (or other similar attacks by other disgruntled employees).
Is there any information on what Disney did after this incident to prevent another Scheuer in the future? The root of the attack is that the sFTP system was accessible via "credentials [that] were non-individualized, not specific to a particular user, and available for use by multiple employees with administrative access."
(I'm also a little unclear on whether this was all owned by Disney proper or they were farming this out to a third-party service provider company and that company screwed up. With so many entertainment venues in such a small area, Orlando is positively shot through with high-volume, hyper-focused service provider companies that do stuff like this).
Article appears to blame developers for not attracting VCs to crypto. Right... Because every other industry would blame the developers for not attracting VC's to their industry, right? Right? And of course VC's are where it's at...