←back to thread

1208 points jamesberthoty | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.276s | source
Show context
madeofpalk ◴[] No.45260948[source]
My main takeaway from all of these is to stop using tokens, and rely on mechanisms like OIDC to reduce the blast radius of a compromise.

How many tokens do you have lying around in your home directory in plain text, able to be read by anything on your computer running as your user?

replies(1): >>45261000 #
diggan ◴[] No.45261000[source]
> How many tokens do you have lying around in your home directory in plain text, able to be read by anything on your computer running as your user?

Zero? How many developers have plain-text tokens lying around on disk? Avoiding that been hammered into me from every developer more senior than me since I got involved with professional software development.

replies(5): >>45261018 #>>45261050 #>>45261136 #>>45261146 #>>45261317 #
pjc50 ◴[] No.45261146[source]
Isn't this quite hard to achieve on local systems, where you don't have a CI vault automation to help?
replies(4): >>45261330 #>>45261623 #>>45262118 #>>45269012 #
1. diggan ◴[] No.45261330[source]
I don't think so? I don't even know what a "CI vault automation" is, I store my credentials and secrets in 1Password, and use the CLI to get the secrets for the moments they're needed, I do all my development locally and things seem fine.