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Anyway, the only task they ever gave me was to build Cisco router ACLs to match existing traffic in the stores; they needed to implement access control but wanted to make sure they weren't blocking anything important. Because many of the stores had been opened years before, there wasn't necessarily a consistent IT stack in the store; there were a lot of one-off solutions so they wanted a universal set of rules with per-store exception lists.
So, every week, someone would drop a few terabytes of network logs in an FTP server, separated by store, and I would distill them down to a set of rules; if something was being used in more than X number of stores, it went in the universal rule list, if it wasn't it went in a store exception list. At first I was doing it semi-manually, but eventually I built a database and wrote some SQL to mostly automate it - got it down to about two hours a week, most of it waiting for the DB, by the end. Once it was done, I would send all of my updates to a network engineer who was the designated point of contact for the access control project.
They had a lot of stores, and for some reason could only supply a certain amount of logs weekly, so when my contract was up there were still a number remaining. I tried to set up a meeting with the network engineer to go over the work to be done and the automation I'd built, but he never responded. Eventually I tracked down his desk in the vast corporate complex and paid him a visit. He was pleasant but told me that he wasn't even on the access control project and he thought it had probably been canceled at some point. He had been dutifully copying my updates to a network share somewhere in case they were ever needed. I gave him the SQL scripts and the database info and he put them out on the share where they probably still are today, a decade and a half later.
So that was six months of my working life.
In the Guardian article, an IDF spokesperson says it exists and is only used as the former, and I'm sure that's what was intended and maybe even what the higher-ups think, but I suspect it's become the latter.