How To Deliver Tough News
Sometimes you have to deliver really bad news. It's not your fault, but you're the one on the hook. How do you deliver it? How do you deliver it without getting mired into the downside?
Sometimes you have to deliver really bad news. It's not your fault, but you're the one on the hook. How do you deliver it? How do you deliver it without getting mired into the downside?
Criminals are winning the battle against security practitioners. Need proof? Look no further than the new headlines in any given week.
October is National Cybersecurity Awareness Month (#NCSAM). Look for tons of great content online as the community comes together—globally, not just nationally—to try and raise awareness of cybersecurity and privacy issues.
50 million Facebook accounts were hacked. Facebook responded quickly to the issue but could've done better communicating throughout. Here's what you need to know about the hack.
A recent study proved that Facebook uses more information about you than you realize. Behind the scenes, Facebook compiles "shadow profiles" from various sources in order to better target ads...anyone surprised? 😔
In the recent dust up with the founders of WhatsApp, you might have heard the term "end-to-end encryption". What is it? What does it means for you? Why was it frustrating efforts to data mine and monetize WhatsApp?
Amazon announced a host of new "Alexa enabled" devices last week. What are the implications for your privacy at home?
Conferences are usually jam packed with great content. So much so that it can be hard to prepare for them and get the most out of them. What do you look for in a conference? How can I help?
Security is a quality issue. Except we don't treat it that way and that's costing us dearly.
With the initial set of cybersecurity basics segments done, I'm think it's worth moving to a "basics" basics series. The goal would be to help everyone understand how the internet works, how email is structure, etc. Thoughts?
Built-in security is always best. That's "security by design", but when that fails (due to mistakes, oversight, humans), built-in security steps up...or, um, in.
In your personal life you're assessing risk constantly whether you know it or not. In the digital world the same thing happens BUT you probably don't have the required context to make an informed decision.