APIIT becomes EC-Council Academia partner to offer Cyber Security Certifications island.lk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from island.lk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Career Options That Do not Require Bachelor s Degree
Never before in human history have there been so many job opportunities as there are now. The abundance of jobs created today was never heard of before.
| 21 May 2021 2:47 PM GMT
Never before in human history have there been so many job opportunities as there are now. The abundance of jobs created today was never heard of before.
Many people believe that obtaining a decent job requires at least a bachelor s degree. There are, however, a slew of decent and well-paying positions that depend on your skillset to do the job, rendering a three- to four-year bachelor s degree redundant.
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In response to the growing requirement for better equipped cyberwarfare capabilities in the Philippines Cyber Battalion, the Army Signal Regiment (ASR) of the Philippine Army has partnered with EC-Council, to train and certify their army personnel with EC-Council’s cyber security certifications including the EC-Council’s Certified Network Defender (CND) program, the Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) program, the Certified Penetration Tester program, and the Certified CISO program.
EC-Council’s latest advanced cyber range platform, CyberQ, is an important part of the deployment to provide real world cyber challenges to inject critically needed advanced skills to the elite forces of the ASR.
Digital Forensics Lead, CEO, and Founder at LIFARS, USA
Ondrej Krehel is the digital forensic lead, CEO, and founder of LIFARS LLC, an international cybersecurity intelligence, digital forensics, and incident response firm based in New York City.
He is the former chief information security officer of IDT911, the nation’s premier identity theft recovery and data breach management service. He previously conducted forensic investigations and cybersecurity consulting at Stroz Friedberg, including various U.S. government engagements and missions.
With two decades of experience in computer security and forensics, Krehel has conducted a wide range of investigations, including data breached through computer intrusions, theft of intellectual property, massive deletions, defragmentation, file carvings, anti-money laundering, financial fraud, mathematical modeling, and computer hacking. Krehel’s experience also includes working as the IT security technical project leader for the Loews Co
Publishing exploit code does more harm than good, says report
Disclosing exploit code before patches are available gives malicious actors a ‘massive’ head-start, says Kenna Security
Share this item with your network: By Published: 13 May 2021 13:12
Cyber security researchers and ethical hackers may wish to consider easing off on publicly disclosing vulnerability exploit code before patches have been made available, because doing so gives malicious actors a “clear and unequivocal” advantage, according to new data crunched by vulnerability management specialist Kenna Security and Cyentia Institute.
In the research study,
Prioritisation to prediction, volume 7: establishing defender advantage, Kenna said that in about one-third of cases, it had found that ethical hackers – whom the industry relies on to some extent to identify new vulnerabilities and write proof-of-concept exploit code – made their code publicly available before the patch.