faintingheart wrote: » Okay i found this website http://www.jobskillshare.org/ is it a good idea to use this website to train myself to become a helpdesk support?
dmoore44 wrote: » Just curious... but what has caused you to decide that security is the role you want to pursue? Pursuit of the bachelor's degree is a great first step towards a career in the broader IT space, but just to be clear, security is only one component of the whole and is usually a niche that someone moves towards after a few years in a more general IT position (server admin, net admin, DevOps, DBA, etc...). The general theory goes that the most effective security analysts are those that have experience with the technology that they're trying to secure. As with some of the other responses above, I'd also caution you to wait a few years before pursuing a master's. I think you'll get more out of the master's program if you've got a few years experience, but, perhaps more importantly, your contributions to class discussions and homework assignments will be much better. Or, you may also decide that once you get in to security, it's not what you expected, in which case, you'd probably be glad you didn't spend time, effort, and money pursuing an education that's not going to be directly applicable to your career.
PJ_Sneakers wrote: » I work with two people who have masters degrees in cybersecurity. Neither one can tell me what multifactor authentication is. They can't tell me what ARP does. They don't know what a subnet mask is. Neither knows the difference between symmetric and asymmetric encryption. They literally don't know anything about cybersecurity, other than the definition of cybersecurity. Please don't be one of them.
Remedymp wrote: » Although I would be inclined to agree with you that there are less technical people available. I just find it hard to believe you ran into someone who acquired that much education and they couldn't tell you what Multi-factor authentication was or the various forms of encryption.