There’s been a long held stigma amongst our infosec cohort and it’s getting in the way of doing business. What’s the stigma, you ask? “Know-it-all” techies who are unable to communicate. Unfortunately, this shortcoming also puts our jobs at stake.
There’s been a long held stigma amongst our infosec cohort and it’s getting in the way of doing business. What’s the stigma, you ask? “Know-it-all” techies who are unable to communicate. Unfortunately, this shortcoming also puts our jobs at stake.
According to a recent cybersecurity survey, the board of directors polled said that IT and security executives will lose their jobs because of their failure to provide the board with useful, actionable information. It gets worse. More than half of board members say that the data presented is too technical.
In an effort to redeem ourselves and to understand the problem, I suggested role playing with the Inside Out Security panel – Cindy Ng, Kilian Englert, Mike Buckbee, and Kris Keyser – and to also practice speaking with executives about cybersecurity.
I presented two practical scenarios. The first prompt: explain why you might need UBA, even if you already have a SIEM tool. The other: explain the importance of keeping the health data generated from a wearable, safe and secure.
Articles discussed in our podcast:
Tool of the week: Powersploit