Shipping security features is fun and rewarding, and eventually I’m going to have to start saying no to projects. But today is not that day.
As I’ve previously talked about, I’ve been in Security Engineering now for a bit over 3 years. It’s been great because I have a wide range of impact at the startup I’m at, from appsec to cloudsec, corpsec to devops, I’ve been everywhere. But the past couple weeks I got to do something that I’m pretty excited by.
A customer reached out to us with a problem. I won’t go into too many details, but I had predicted this problem coming up a year ago and did a bunch of design work on a solution, but then let it sit in the backlog – no one was asking for it yet. When the customer got routed to me as the expert in the domain the problem was in, I made sure the solution would work for their needs, and then within a week I had implemented the new feature and unblocked not just this customer, but basically all of our future enterprise customers.
The feature was heavily security related, pertaining to authentication to our platform. Our engineering team was swamped with other prioritized work. I was able to take the project, build out the backend, frontend, and an implementation plan for the customer, within about 2 weeks. Last week they started moving from the testing stage to the implementation phase for production, and that’s very exciting for me. I feel like in all my time in security, it’s been very rare to have any sort of direct customer impact, let alone direct customer impact that has the potential to actually increase revenue.
Security doesn’t have to be just a cost center, I guess. I’m already scheming on the next enterprise security feature I’m going to build next quarter.
Not only do I have all the work I’ve been outlining in my Upcoming Projects
section of my posts, talks, trainings, music performances, music production, etc, but I’ve also taken on another pentest outside my normal work this month. I’m excited about the pentest, for sure, it’s an interesting target and I have plans for the income it produces. But also the timing on this one wasn’t great, since we’re traveling next week and will be traveling for a week and a half. So I have to carry my work laptop for my work things, and my personal laptop for the pentest work.
On the flip side, the additional monetizable work gives me courage that I could probably survive on my own if I wasn’t working my 9-5 anymore. Not that I have any plans to quit anytime soon, but I would one day really like to be independent and work for myself. And it seems like we’re getting there.
I also have a secret that I haven’t shared with any of you yet. I’m not sure when I will. But it’s exciting, for sure.
Tor: From the Dark Web to the Future of Privacy
By Ben Collier
ISBN: 9780262548182
Learn More
I’m excited to get started on this book this week, I’ve long been an advocate for Tor and am excited to read a more thorough biography of it.