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joneno wrote: » Are you serious? what happened to all the gsecs, analysts, cism's, cissp's and what not...heads are rolling!
Forsaken_GA wrote: » I won't be surprised if this causes a mandate to transition away from RSA in alot of companies.
chrisone wrote: » This is a perfect reason why you need to implement biometric security in high end businesses. Cut off certain sections of the network to only be accessed with a biometric access. I dont think this type of information should travel WANs. Someone in the pentagon or in a remote lockheed martin site needs information on top secret information, they better hop their ass in a plane to the HQ facility lol
Forsaken_GA wrote: » You're kidding right? Our president can't even fly his ass back to the states to sign a bill allowing the violation of our rights to continue. Americans can't function without convenience anymore.
tpatt100 wrote: » Oh and my last job? Yeah contractors were hired to do the work of government IT people who knew almost nothing on IT. So they had to hired more people to do the work for people already hired.
rwmidl wrote: » At my last gig, in our building at least, it was all us contractors who were in charge of IT security. Even some of the feds thought it was kind of funny that contractors were responsible for security.
NightShade03 wrote: » Haha excellent! I love when everyone overlooks the "human" factor involved when that usually ends up being the weakest link in the chain.
NOC-Ninja wrote: » Some of the engineers were technicians that were working for more than 5 years in that place. I guess working years and years made them move up to become engineers and they dont even engineer anything. These guys have no degrees nor certifications. Its crazy!
tpatt100 wrote: » . So they had to hire more people to do the work for people already hired.
chrisone wrote: » ..These guys are the typical "i will learn on the job" type..
NOC-Ninja wrote: » Its really sad. We have our own Security Engineers. Seriously, they don't know crap about network. It's really sad. I dont even get how they got hired. I guess they were friends of the higher ups and they gave these guys a chance. Most of them don't even know how to config a router or a switch. Not only does they low ball their employees but also hire stupid engineers. Some of the engineers were technicians that were working for more than 5 years in that place. I guess working years and years made them move up to become engineers and they dont even engineer anything. These guys have no degrees nor certifications. Its crazy! We have an engineer that dont know the meaning of WEP. Its that bad! I even caught one of the guys sleeping on his desk. Im not even surprise if lockheed martin gets hacked. Its the managers or directors fault. They don't to hire the skilled people or maybe they cant afford those guys? Heck, I know a network engineer that has been working for lockheed for 5 years that does not know how to configure an SSH.
Turgon wrote: » It's just another example of how bloated and ineffective the IT security genre is.
afcyung wrote: » I think this problem stems from people not taking security seriously when they start out in IT. I see a lot of people who think that security is something you only do when you work in a dedicated security position. This is the one area I think the DOD got cyber security right in making everyone who works on the network an information assurance technician and thus responsible for security. I think it will help create knowledgeable people to becomes leaders in cyber security.
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