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The access made sense. The exception was justified. The shortcut saved time. Each decision worked on its own. And somehow, together, they added up to failure.
This episode tackles the uncomfortable truth that most security failures aren't caused by ignorance or carelessness. They're caused by systems quietly accumulating risk while everyone is doing their best. It walks through the patterns that create this drift: temporary decisions that never expire, blurred ownership where risk becomes nobody's problem, trust that's too broad because convenience won repeatedly, and complexity without clarity where tools exist but don't drive action. The episode explains why none of this feels like failure while it's happening and why the sentence "we didn't realize it worked that way" is the fingerprint of systemic breakdown. The starter kit covers making ownership explicit, treating access like inventory, reducing silent permissions, designing for human reality, and favoring fewer tools with clearer purpose.
Whether you're a leader trying to understand why incidents keep happening despite good intentions or a practitioner watching risk accumulate in real time, Plaintext with Rich names the patterns.
Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!!
YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube
Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple
Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify
Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog
Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord
Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin
Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene
By Rich GreeneThe access made sense. The exception was justified. The shortcut saved time. Each decision worked on its own. And somehow, together, they added up to failure.
This episode tackles the uncomfortable truth that most security failures aren't caused by ignorance or carelessness. They're caused by systems quietly accumulating risk while everyone is doing their best. It walks through the patterns that create this drift: temporary decisions that never expire, blurred ownership where risk becomes nobody's problem, trust that's too broad because convenience won repeatedly, and complexity without clarity where tools exist but don't drive action. The episode explains why none of this feels like failure while it's happening and why the sentence "we didn't realize it worked that way" is the fingerprint of systemic breakdown. The starter kit covers making ownership explicit, treating access like inventory, reducing silent permissions, designing for human reality, and favoring fewer tools with clearer purpose.
Whether you're a leader trying to understand why incidents keep happening despite good intentions or a practitioner watching risk accumulate in real time, Plaintext with Rich names the patterns.
Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!!
YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube
Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple
Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify
Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog
Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord
Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin
Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene