Then she called him.
She looked at the Miradore dashboard one last time—the green checkmarks next to all 199 other devices, the automated patch report, the geofence logs, the health scores. Her remote team, scattered across continents, each one a potential open door. And yet, all locked down, all compliant, all safe. miradore remote teams
Her stomach dropped. Mark Chen was their lead UI designer. Two weeks ago, his company-issued laptop had been stolen from a co-working space in Barcelona. They’d wiped it remotely via Miradore, issued him a new one, and thought the crisis was over. But this alert wasn’t about the stolen machine. It was about the new one. Then she called him
"That’s it?" he whispered.
The ping from Lisbon came in at 3:14 AM. And yet, all locked down, all compliant, all safe
She opened the secure chat. "Mark? You awake?"
Maya didn’t type back. She acted. From her console, she isolated the device. One click in Miradore’s menu: Lockdown Mode – Block All Network Traffic. Within two seconds, Mark’s laptop was a digital island. No email, no Slack, no access to the Figma files containing next quarter’s unreleased product line.