“I pulled it,” he said.
The second sign came on Thursday. He arrived at 6:47 a.m., earlier than usual, to find his workstation already logged in. The screen was dark, but the hard drive light blinked in a slow, arrhythmic pulse—like a heartbeat, or a countdown. He jiggled the mouse. The lock screen appeared, asking for his OneLogin MFA. He provided his fingerprint. The system unlocked. Everything looked normal. His email. His calendar. The engineering tickets. But the mouse cursor moved half a second after his hand did. A ghost in the machine. onelogin airbus
It had started as a quiet revolution. Six months ago, the IT director—a young, perpetually caffeinated woman named Safiya from the Toulouse headquarters—had rolled out the new identity and access management platform. “OneLogin,” she’d said at the all-hands, her voice bouncing off the hangar walls, “will unify every system, every login, every piece of data access across Airbus Commercial, Defence, and Helicopters. One identity. One key to the kingdom.” “I pulled it,” he said