They mention in the article that their zero-trust architecture is what prevented the attacker from gaining access to on-prem data. So it seemed like it worked pretty well in mitigating the damage.
I'm curious if they actually mean "Zero trust" in the "perimeterless" sense (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_trust_security_model) or if they just mean their on-prem solution doesn't require trusting some central service operated by Retool.
it is a cynical comment that is meant to hilite the relationship between humans where oppressive and untrusting employment leads to increase in antipathy, ill-will, feelings of being abused and all of that leading to insider theft and serious pre-meditated betrayal ?