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lan321 3 hours ago

This gets me wondering, who does the cleaning at data centers and such? Do you need to do background checks to swing the mop in there? Is there a market for high clearance cleaning personnel? (like with the extended PSP in CH)

My hunch is telling me there could be a couple positions with decent money (by normal person standards) for little work in that direction. Wouldn't be the first time I've been wrong though.

chuckadams 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Yes, it's routine to hire background-checked cleaning crew, and some higher-security operations even require the company to put up an extra bond. One only needs a clean enough record, but I've known a few people in housekeeping with old drug convictions who still had no problem working in secure areas at defense contractors. When they would go into the secure area, there would literally be a flashing light with someone loudly announcing "INSECURE!", and everyone working there would lock their screens and basically go on coffee break. Obviously not a thing a server room has to do, but those have cameras watching the every move of the cleaner, the racks are in locked cages, and the cleaner has to leave any electronic devices they have in a bin at the door. It's not like they search them thoroughly, but there are severe consequences for getting caught, and they don't have or need much time to clean the server rooms anyway, let alone get away with espionage.

There's still a lot of mischief you could pull off with a cleaning crew, but facilities maintenance beyond housekeeping has a lot more opportunities.

mr_mitm 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

A good moment to point out that the infamous "cyber bunker", a data center catering to criminals, was infiltrated by a female police officer who managed to get hired as a cleaning lady.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CyberBunker#Documentary

chuckadams 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Criminal organizations have the problem that they can't exactly run a background check. They need other criminals, and of course there's an obvious problem with that...

netsharc 33 minutes ago | parent [-]

A professional enough criminal organization probably has a few paid cops to do this...

jeffbee an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

The direction the industry has taken is not to hire elite mop guys, but to make physical access threats less and less relevant.