Fortress in a Box: Kubernetes Security for the Organizations That Can't Afford It
In January, a tweet stopped me mid-scroll. Someone was remembering a breach from 2022. The Red Cross. 515,000 people — refugees, missing persons, families trying to find each other after conflict. ...

Source: DEV Community
In January, a tweet stopped me mid-scroll. Someone was remembering a breach from 2022. The Red Cross. 515,000 people — refugees, missing persons, families trying to find each other after conflict. Their data, exposed. The program built to reunite them, shut down. I closed my phone. And I thought: why doesn't something exist to prevent this? The problem nobody talks about NGOs and human rights organizations are among the most targeted entities on the internet. Not because they're careless, because they're valuable. They hold sensitive data on vulnerable people. They document atrocities. They protect dissidents. And most of them have little to no security budget. The Red Cross (2022): 515,000 records from the "Restoring Family Links" program stolen. The program was shut down. Amnesty International (2022): Breached by state-sponsored attackers. An organization that protects human rights, being surveilled. Bellingcat (ongoing): The investigative group that exposed war crimes is constantly