Originally Posted by
FangsF15
Totally different situations. EasyBid/Easy swap and iCrewMax both had tunnels into the Delta servers, which would require significant cyber security certifications. Curly simply gets an Excel spreadsheet copy of the monthly seniority list, and a copy of the AE results. His ‘access’ involves either an email from a bro, or a non-retiree login to download two files. And again, this is a retired DL pilot, who used to have access to the same info at will.
Not at all defending cutting off EasyBid, nor saying Curly doesn’t have some special deal. Just that it’s not apples to apples .
I don't see it the way you do. What other third parties can "tunnel" into our servers? Have you looked at the HR side of the house? Probably not.
There is no reason Easy Bid, Easy Swap and iCrewmax were throttled other than company hatred. Software access licenses and access agreements are available and many many fortune 100 companies use thrid parties with licensing and security arrangements. It's nothing new.
The real question I have here is whether or not our SL is protected company information. If so, then Curly getting it from a bro means the bro violated our company IT policies. I don't know the answer to that question about whether the SL is protected Delta information or not. My guess is there is some control on it as the company does not offer it publicly and it's only available to those with a valid Deltanet login and permissions to access the Flight Operations tab.