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shodown wrote: » Freelancer, build up your reputation with contract work. Nobody there checks background. I have a friend who had some trouble with jobs and he was working 1099 through various agencies with no serious problems. He has had problems getting a perm positon. His solution was to create his own company and hire himself.
joshmadakor wrote: » Would the military take you? (I'm thinking army) The army seriously takes anyone from what I've seen. IT related MOS: Information Technology Specialist Jobs (25B) | GoArmy.com
instant000 wrote: » Actually, don't worry about it. Just be honest, if it comes up within the time period that you will be investigated for. Going through a phase, and then correcting yourself means that you learned from the mistakes. Like a previous poster said, it's not something to worry about. If this guy can get a job in security, so can you:Kevin Mitnick - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
cmoninger wrote: » New to this forum. Probably a bad way to introduce myself. I've always been interested in IT. My dads a project manager for a pretty big e-commerce company. I'm 28 years old. We got our first computer in 1993, back when it was DOS and Windows 3.x. I started writing code that same year at age 9. QBASIC. I taught myself C++. I run Linux only and I know what I'm doing with it. I have a few semesters in at a local community college for programming. My life went out of control due to an unfortunate sequence of events and I became an alcoholic. I have 4 DUI's. I went to prison due to these charges. I really want to get into the IT field. But I'm wondering if I'm wasting my time even trying? I know IT Security is what I want to do. But I think it will be hard for me to get a job. I'm willing to do anything for this. If anyone can help me out with an HONEST answer, I'd greatly appreciate it.
N2IT wrote: » It can happen. I have a friend who has 5 DUI's. He makes 4 times more than I do. DUI's are extremely common. 4 is quiet a bit, but don't let that discourage you.
SteveLord wrote: » Totally inaccurate...and I am talking at least a few years worth by now. The military has been overstrength and budget reductions make getting in and even rejoining, a lot harder. Primarily for those who do not have clean bills of health and are free of legal issues. Waivers are far and few. And waivers are approved/denied at the federal level, which means if you even got that far, it wouldn't be a fast process by any means. Contrary to what some may believe, military enlistment is NOT a civil right.
joshmadakor wrote: » Gotcha, sorry about that
cxzar20 wrote: » You have a chance at something in the private sector, but unfortunately it is highly improbable that you could get a position in the government or as a contractor. These positions typically require a security clearance which most of the time are denied for DUI or bad credit.
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