• Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I spent a decade working in insolvency.

    When we were going into a business that had failed the question was “Are the idiots, criminals or both?”

    One highlight:

    A boat sales / marine business goes bust. When we arrive with the paper work and seize the place there are about a dozen new boats on the lot worth several million. We change the locks on the gates.

    Arrive the next day, the gates have been busted open and several million in boats are now missing. We look up the addresses of the owners (one of them lives on acreage) and drive to their property…from the road we can see the boats stashed there. Really smart guys.

    So we call the police. Someone inside notices use there and decides to flee with one of the boats, it is huge but they think they can get away.

    We then have the slowest car chase in history as we calmly follow this guy towing a boat on a trailer down the road while talking to the cops to meet us.

    • grabyourmotherskeys@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Love this. Lol.

      I used to maintain a system that was used to track loss prevention. Basically security company that followed delivery trucks. It was wild to read database records about these guys openly selling their stolen goods (building supplies) while testing my code changes.

      The database was sanitized of identifying info if anyone cares.

  • BustlingChungus@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    A milder story than some here:

    Someone had accidentally sent an email to the whole company of 44,000 or so employees. Cue a bunch of emails -replying all- asking why they were receiving the email… followed by another wave of emails asking people to stop replying all.

    Was a great popcorn moment, and made me laugh every time a new email came in.

  • GreyShuck@feddit.uk
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    11 months ago

    An isolated shingle spit nature reserve. We’d lost mains power in a storm some while back and were running on a generator. Fuel deliveries were hard to arrange. We’d finally got one. We were pretty much running on fumes and another storm was coming in. We really needed this delivery.

    To collect the fuel, I had to take the Unimog along a dump track and across 5 miles of loose shingle - including one low causeway stretch through a lagoon that was prone to wash out during storms. We’d rebuilt it a LOT over the years. On the way up, there was plenty of water around there, but it was still solid.

    I get up to the top ok and get the tank full - 2000L of red diesel - but the wind is pretty strong by the time I have. Half way back, I drop down off the seawall and reach the causeway section. The water is just about topping over. If I don’t go immediately, I won’t get through at all and we will be out of fuel for days - maybe weeks. So I put my foot down and get through that section only to find that 200 meters on, another section already has washed out. Oh shit.

    I back up a little but sure enough the first section has also washed through now. I now have the vehicle and a full load of fuel marooned on a short section of causeway that is slowly washing out. Oh double shit. Probably more than double. Calling it in on the radio, everyone else agrees and starts preparing for a pollution incident.

    In the end I find the firmest spot that I can in that short stretch and leave the Moggie there. Picking my route and my moment carefully I can get off that ‘island’ on foot - no hope with the truck - BUT due to the layout of the lagoons only to the seaward ridge, where the waves are now crashing over into the lagoon with alarming force. I then spend one of the longest half-hours I can remember freezing cold and drenched, scrambling yard by yard along the back side of that ridge and flattening myself and hoping each time a big wave hits.

    The firm bit of causeway survived and there was no washed away Unimog or pollution in the end - and I didn’t drown either - but much more by luck than judgement.

    These days I am in a position where I am responsible for writing risk assessments and methods statements for procedures like this. It was another world back then.

  • Vinegar@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    I worked at a sandwich shop and had given my two weeks notice a few days earlier. My manager came to me and asked me to clean up the bathroom…alright. I could smell it before I even opened the door.

    I told my manager I’d clean it if he’d still give me the employee discount after I was gone. “Done”. That’s when I knew it was really bad.

    When I opened the door I discovered someone had ass-blasted the bathroom. I’m not talking about blowing up the toilet, they did that too, but they had dropped their drawers and point-blank diarhea shotgunned the pipes under the sink.

    My manager didn’t honor the employee discount after I was gone, either.

    • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      My manager didn’t honor the employee discount after I was gone, either.

      They never do. I had a manager try that shit on me when I was working food service, and I turned it around on him and made him get one of his toadies to clean it up after talking a bunch about “not being trained for biohazard cleanup” and “OSHA regs” which got him to back down, and I told all my coworkers the same so they’d tell him to fuck off too.

      Still wish I could have been there when the feds showed up and escorted him out of the building.

  • Hubi@feddit.de
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    11 months ago

    I used to work at a car dealership. One day I had to use a bay in a different building because my usual workplace was occupied. The other building had a lift that I hadn’t used before.

    Anyways, I drove the car onto the lift, got out and placed the arms of the lift under the jacking points like I had done a thousand times before. I raised the lift a little and checked if the placement was still correct. It looked good, so I raised the car to a medium height. When I looked again, I realized that this lift had a central platform that was also raised and was set about 20 centimeters higher than the four arms that usually lift the car.

    This 90.000 Euro SUV was basically balancing on a 180x50cm piece of metal right in the center. I managed to lower it down safely but my pulse goes up just thinking about that day.

  • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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    11 months ago

    Sharing my story for posterity.

    I used to work at a medical center for old folks with varying disabilities. It was a great job all things considered, just didn’t pay very well and the scheduling was a mess.

    Anyway, one day I’m cleaning tables on the dining room when I hear on my walkie talkie that one of the new people need help with a guy in the bathroom. Usually “they need help” means “something has gone awry, please unfuck the situation” and, since I was the supervisor on shift, my job frequently involved untucking a situation.

    I arrive outside the bathroom door and the new employee tells me that she walked into a situation that she wasn’t prepared for. I figured it was some poop, or the guy fell asleep on the toilet or something.

    I walk in and the walls were all painted with poop. The sink was painted with poop. The floor was painted with poop. The paper towel dispenser had poop all over the front of it.

    The poor guy had gone to the bathroom, got confused and tried to remember what toilet paper was. He saw me and knew I was there to help, but he was nonverbal. His way of saying thank you was to gently take his hand and rest it under your chin.

    He did so, but his hand was also still covered on poop.

    I’m used to poop. It’s a normal job hazard in that line of work. But something about having to clean myself and every surface in the room from caked poop while somebody else gave the poor guy a shower…that kind of story sticks with you. To this day I can’t look at finger paints without feeling a little queasy.

    • RandomStickman@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      Your story makes up for the non-work related stories in this thread. It’s both work related and shitty lol. I’m sorry you had to go through that.

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      Normally I’m very much anti “lets use robots to replace jobs”, but this is one case where I think it would be a win for everybody. The robot won’t care, and the elderly person won’t feel their dignity lost, and all is taken care of behind closed doors.

      My grandma started losing control of herself towards the end, and my mother did overtime in taking care of her and cleaning her. This sounds sweet, but it was a bad situation for everyone. My mother essentially started treating her own mother like a baby, often in front of us, and my grandmother (a proud and strong woman my entire life) essentially lost her sense of dignity and independence. I still remember her as the strong and proud woman she was, and I do my best to forget her last year.

      We need robot caretakers.

      • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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        11 months ago

        The only problem is that robots don’t have the kind of sense of connection and humanity that human caretakers often have, on top of the general complexity of the task. I was always frustrated when family would visit and treat their aunt/cousin/etc like a baby when like, no, they’re 80 years old and were raised on a farm. It’s really just a matter of needing appropriately trained caretaking staff who are also paid enough, which sadly the industry lacks both of those things

  • cynar@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I work in live sports TV.

    Champions League Final (European Football). Kind of a big deal. Doing a money shot camera behind the goals. 4 minutes in, one of the cameras goes dead. I try all the fixes I can remotely, while all the while the director wants the camera back up and getting quite heated about it. The only thing left to try is to replug the remote head. That part is, unfortunately, 10m past the ad boards, on the grass.

    I waited for play to be down the other end (and gave the security guy a heads up what I was about to do!). Jumped the ad boards, and replugged everything. At that moment, there’s a roar from the crowd, as there is a break down the wing. I am VERY much NOT supposed to be on the grass! My brain tries to freeze, luckily, 100 million years of instincts kick in to save my arse. Next thing I know, I’m finishing a sort of head first leap/ airborne commando roll, over the ad boards to tuck in behind them.

    The camera restarted just before a shot on goal. The operator captured it perfectly. Much to the directors relief/delight. I also, somehow managed to avoid being on any of the camera shots. I’m still not quite sure how.

  • June@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Two nights ago I had a random meeting with the CEO, who I have a really good relationship with, added to my calendar. Thought nothing of it.

    I entered the zoom call and said ‘so am I getting fired?’

    The answer was yes.

    Awkward silence ensued for a minute until they started telling me about the severance package.

    Side note: I can try to negotiate that severance a bit right?

      • rothaine@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        How do you negotiate severance? Don’t you have zero leverage in that situation?

        • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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          11 months ago

          Some severance packages will have a non disparagement clause in it, or they’ll say you can’t recruit people to xyz competitor for a number of years. You can then say “yes I can do that, but if and only if you give me 20% extra of my estimated salary”

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      Urgh yeah I had one of those. A “small quick meeting” that makes you think they just want an informal update. Nope, its the getting fired talk. Still, turned out to be a blessing.

      • June@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Mine sucks because it’s the best job I’ve ever had. Planned on staying as long as they’d keep me (just under 5 years it turns out) and had no plans at all to even poke around at other roles.

        The silver lining is I’ll prob get a nice pay increase since I’ve been pretty underpaid at this place as it’s an NPO.

  • Shadow@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    Alt tabbed once too many times, clicked drop database, clicked yes. Realized what I’d done and panicked.

    Deleted the user db for the east coast auth server for the game America’s Army: Operations. Thankfully it was the secondary so we just redid replication.

    • Helix 🧬@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      That was a nice game. It still has a small community but I wish they had open sourced it. Probably not possible because of licenses…

    • quackers@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      11 months ago

      Man I did that once as a kid before i knew how to back stuff up properly. Months of work just gone. Now im hyperparanoid about backups and restoration procedures for everything.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      If you think you fucked up, remember that EVE Online once failed to remove $instdir\boot.ini (the nice-to-have gamefile) and instead deleted c:\boot.ini (the very critical Windows file).

  • Zipitydew@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Older gentleman walked into the lobby of our office. None of us knew who he was or had seen him before. He looked confused and lost. Someone went over to ask if they could help him. He tried to but didn’t respond. Then fell over. Hit his head on a table on the way down. Was dead before the pandemics arrived.

    We were all in shock. Poor guy was starting into a stroke when he walked in. Maybe even walked into our office to try getting help. But it was already too late.

    • foosel@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      before the pandemics arrived

      I know this was a typo and you meant to write paramedics, but all I could think first thing I read this was “what a lucky bastard”

  • Seven@startrek.website
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    11 months ago

    My first salaried job was also my first proper IT job and I was a “junior technician” … the only other member of IT staff was my supervisor who had been a secretary that got a 1 week sysadmin course and knew very little.

    The server room was a complete rat’s nest and I resolved to sort it out. It was all going very well until I tripped over the loose SCSI 3 cable between the AIX server and it’s raid array. While it was in use.

    It took me 2 days to restore everything from tape. My supervisor was completely useless.

    A few months later I was “made redundant”, leaving behind me everything working perfectly and a super tidy server room. I got calls from the company asking for help for the following 6 months, which I politely declined.

    • Hazzia@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 months ago

      Man fuck those guys. Not a sysadmin myself, but from what I hear the position is criminally underappreciated. Why is it so hard for people to understand that if things aren’t breaking, it means people are doing their job correctly?

      • Seven@startrek.website
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        11 months ago

        Yeah, I got laid off twice more before switching careers. Both times they wanted me to come back and fix stuff after letting me go.

        It goes hand in hand with the “if someone works hard, they should be given more work as a reward” line of thinking.

    • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      11 months ago

      It’s always fun when a job calls you up after you’ve been fired to ask how to do the things they didn’t know you were doing

      • Seven@startrek.website
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        11 months ago

        Yep, I remember in one job I was at for 8 years a manager 2 levels up complemented me for sorting out the networking for a re-arrange of our own office … I was gobsmacked because I’d been managing a whole network and server upgrade for a client that involved well over 1000 users at the time yet an hour of fiddling with wires under desks was the only thing that got his attention.

      • Emily (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        11 months ago

        One job I was fired from and rehired within the day, after they quickly realised that I was their only Android developer and they couldn’t build an app with just hopes and wishes. They fired me again later, which they quickly regretted since I was the only one with the signing key (meaning they couldn’t update the app).

  • bookcrawler@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Not my oh shit moment but certainly someone’s. Working in a call centre they sent out an example of a fraud email that was being sent out with our logo. It asked for all your personal information and credit card information.

    Several individuals replied with all their details filled in. 3 of them replied all (entire call centre) with their details filled in.

    • Hazzia@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 months ago

      Ya know, I do try to give people the benefit of the doubt when it comes to scams, but damn do stories like yours make it hard.

    • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      11 months ago

      oh my god. This…unfortunately tracks for call centers. The world capitol of “we expect you to understand this thing with zero training”

  • Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Worked at a hotel. Our phone system required you to dial 9 to reach an outside line on every phone except one: the fax machine, which was set up to dial that 9 automatically when you started dialing.

    It would take a second to start making dialing sounds while it dialed that 9 in silence. Our AGM would dial the 1 before the area code, not hear any immediate sounds, and then press the 1 again. Then dial the rest of the number.

    So as far as the switchboard I used to direct calls was concerned, someone just dialed 911. So it made the “holy fuck someone’s dying” alarm, our local 911 dispatcher got to hear a fax machine screeching its handshake tones, and I got to go into “oh shit a guest is having a stroke” mode, only to find out that no, my manager didn’t read the sign posted over the fax machine because of this behavior. Again.

    And then we would get a call from 911 asking what the emergency was and have to explain that it was dialed by mistake.

    Of course, this was almost always during a rush.

    Great thing about fax machines. They can be set up in such a way that if they don’t get a fax handshake, they wait a few minutes and try dialing the number again.

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I’ve always found the dial 9 to get out thing a mistake waiting to happen, why not pound hash twice as the tone? How did manufacturers settle on 9 as the sane default

    • Dio9sys@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      11 months ago

      I used to work in a call center, and it’s astounding the number of calls that I got that were actually people trying to send faxes.

  • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    I have a small PC I use for exposing a private PC to the wider web via nginx proxy. It had two accounts on it: mine, and one I called “remote” with some basic password I set up to forward the proxy connection.

    One day, this machine started making 100% CPU noises, for several hours. Wtf? I check the processes and a Tor node had been setup and was transmitting gigabytes to some Russian IP.

    My brain goes into panic mode, I kill the process, wipe the remote user, and eventually pull the Ethernet plug.

    I wish I hadn’t wiped the user directory as I wanted to know what was being sent and where. Nonetheless the logs showed that several Russian IPs had been attempting an SSH brute force for literally months and one finally guessed “remote” and weak password I set for it.

    I have decades of experience on Unix system, and I cringe having made such a rookie mistake.

    Lesson learned: change the default SSH port to a transient port, have one dedicated SSH user with a non-standard username, and use auth-key entry only.

    I still wonder what was being sent over that Tor node, and why it required all the CPU cores. My best guess is crypto mining, or it was used for a DDOS attack net somewhere.

    • corship@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      Obfuscation is not security, changing the port doesn’t increase your security

      • boatswain@infosec.pub
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        11 months ago

        I see this claim all the time, and it bugs me every time. Obfuscation is a perfectly reasonable part of a defense in depth solution. That’s why you configure your error messages on production systems to give very generic error messages instead of the dev-centric messages with stack traces on lower environments, for example.

        The problem comes when obscurity is your only defense. It’s not a full remediation on its own, but it has a part in defense in depth.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          11 months ago

          Changing the port isn’t really much obfuscation though. It doesn’t take long to scan all ports for the entire IPv4 range (see masscan)

          • lud@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            It helps against stupid automated attacks though.

            If someone has changed the port it’s likely that they have set up a great password or disabled password auth all together.

            It’s worth it for just having cleaner logs and fewer attempts.

            • dan@upvote.au
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              11 months ago

              It’s worth it for just having cleaner logs

              Those logs are useful to know which IPs to permanently block :)

      • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        I hear you, but I disagree:

        It buys you enough time to check the journals and see that a group of IPs have attempted various ports giving you enough time to block the IP altogether.

        It also buys you disinterest from the malicious host, since probably there’s a hard limit on how many ports they will test, and they will flag your machine as “too much work” and try another.

        Again, I agree with you that obfuscation is not security, but it sure does help.

        • corship@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          From what I understand you obfuscate the port in order to limit the amount of incoming attacks. But then fail2ban would be a much more effective tool.

          The disinterested aspect you described is the actual problem. Because it’s based on the assumption your port won’t be found, but it definitely will, and as soon as that happens you’ll end up in a database such as shodan and the entire effect is GONE.

  • ultranaut@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    A bunch of angry cops showed up looking for their murder suspect. It was a guy I worked with that apparently was also involved in the heroin industry. He ended up in prison but not for murder.