Zoom.us and Practical Cybersecurity
Video conferencing platform Zoom has been in the news almost constantly over the past few weeks. Why all the fuss?
Video conferencing platform Zoom has been in the news almost constantly over the past few weeks. Why all the fuss?
Security is often spoken of in absolutes. Is this secure? Is that insecure? The reality is that security is a spectrum. It is a series of implicit and explicit decisions made to meet the business needs within an acceptable risk tolerance.
Contact tracing during an outbreak is a massive undertaking. Google and Apple are collaborating in order to automate parts of this task. Will it work? What are the challenges? We dive into the issue
S02E04 - Host, Mark Nunnikhoven, interviews Founder, Security Trainer, and Coach at SheHacksPurple.dev, Tanya Janca. Together they explore tips and tricks for developing a security mindset.
S02E03 - Host, Mark Nunnikhoven, interviews The DevOps Handbook Co-Author and Director of DevOps Relations at Snyk, Patrick Debois. Together they explore the challenges facing security-first thinking.
S02E02 - Host, Mark Nunnikhoven, interviews AWS Serverless Hero and Cloud Bard at A Cloud Guru, Forrest Brazeal. Together they discuss cloud fluency, digital transformation, and why cartoons are great for communication.
S02E01 - Host, Mark Nunnikhoven, kicks off season 2 with some cloud learning resources, and whatever else the audience requests to talk about.
A Cloud Guru is hosting Cloud Madness. Thirty two cloud services face-off over four rounds but only one will be crowned the champion. Here’s my completed bracket and reasonable for my picks.
Are you addicted to your smartphone? How would you know? Is there anything you can do about it? Over the course of an hour, Rita Celi and I asked people from around Ontario questions about the issue
CES 2020 brought out the big (and small) players in tech and one thing they all had in common was how much they used the word "privacy". Is this privacy-washing or the start of real change?
COPPA was passed in the US in 1998 but a recent ruling against YouTube for violating the decades old law means big changes for creators.
Canadian data privacy laws state that an organization is responsible for the life cycle of the data. Most orgs struggle with protecting it while it's in use, what about after they no longer need it?