Skip to content
NGTEdu Logo

NGTEdu

A PRODUCT OF NGTECH.CO.IN

NGTEdu Logo

NGTEdu

  • Home
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Malware
  • Vulnerabilities
  • Data Breach
  • Home
  • Data Breach
  • Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 9
  • Data Breach

Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 9

5 years ago Tyler Reguly
Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 9

As I had mentioned previously, this year, I’m going back to school. Not to take classes, but to teach a course at my alma mater, Fanshawe College. I did this about a decade ago and thought it was interesting, so I was excited to give it another go. Additionally, after a friend mentioned that their kid wanted to learn Python, I developed an Intro to Python aimed at high school students that I’m teaching weekly. I thought that this would be good fodder for the State of Security. So, whenever I have something interesting to discuss, expect to find it here.

I was talking to my students about crunch time during one of our recent classes. They are in their final semester of school and were forced into online learning at the start of the pandemic. They are stressed. I get that a lot of people are stressed, but there are different stresses for different people and right now a lot of empathy is required to understand what is going on with people. I can hear the stress in the voices of my students when we speak and read it in their emails and chat messages. I’m not a psychologist, but I know that different people have different breaking points and we’re all just dams waiting to burst from the pressure of the stress we’re containing. So, ask yourself… can I turn a valve and alleviate some of that pressure?

Stressors

Stressors come in all shapes and sizes. Yet, the list just seems to keep growing. Pre-pandemic you stressed over finances, health, career choices, relationships… all the standard stuff. The pandemic added so many more stressors to those categories. Can my business survive a lockdown? Can my employer afford to keep me working? What do I do when I see people without masks? Is it safe to go outside? Can I spend 8 months locked in my home with my spouse?

Students normally have the added stress of finding a job when they graduate, but now, with offices on work from home and hiring freezes in place, there are fewer jobs available. Companies have gone out of business, which means more experienced individuals are looking for work and competing with students who have less experience. I’ve had a number of students express that they are concerned with the job prospects available to them in a COVID-19 world. So, if you have open positions and would like to be introduced to intelligent, thoughtful entrants into the cybersecurity world, I’d be happy to arrange that.

 Accommodation

While we were talking about the crunch that my students were experiencing, they asked if I could help out in any way. We discussed moving things around, changing dates, publishing lecture content early… anything that would help them add more flexibility to their schedules. As their professor, I feel it’s my responsibility to help alleviate their stress when I can, just as I try to do with my employees here at Tripwire.

I feel like the pandemic has really helped identify good employers and bad employers. I’ve heard horror stories of companies not making allowances for changes to working and living situations. I’ve seen posts from people complaining about decisions their employers have made and how it has impacted their lives. Times are tough, money is tight, people are spending less… but little things like letting someone step away during the day or allowing people to shift their schedules can make a huge difference.

This is one place where I feel that there are a lot of lessons to be learned from the college. I’ve been completely impressed with their approach and think that corporations could stand to learn from them.

For example, it was suggested that all lectures be recorded, so that students can watch them at their leisure and email in questions after they are done watching (or bring them up during the live lab time). This is a brilliant idea that companies could adopt. Why have all your employees sit through a live demo when they could just watch a recording when they have the time.

Another Example was to include time zones whenever you mention a due date or class time. Since international students may be overseas and students may even be spread out across the country, 6PM for you, may not be 6PM for them. I’ve encountered this many times working for a company that operates internationally. I actually also recently encountered this while working with a PR firm on a movie review. I was setting up an interview with the director of a film and specifically called out ET in all my emails (thank you Fanshawe), as did the PR firm, but they dropped that when sending the schedule to the director, who is on the west coast. As such, I was on the call waiting at 1PM and 30 minutes later finally gave us, but got a notification at 4PM that she had joined the call.

Moving Forward

I plan on continuing to adopt as many of these actions that the college has implemented as make sense. It creates more opportunities for my employees to understand what is happening and less opportunities for confusion. It makes it easier to work and that’s the most important thing.

I actually find myself feeling, at times, like I’m taking advantage of people because allowing a little leeway makes things run so much more smoothly that productivity seems to increase. Instead of rushing to finish a task to be able to go run an errand, people run the errand, return to work, and finish their task without the rush. We all know rushing leads to mistakes, so it’s an easy way to reduce mistakes and the amount of work that needs to be reviewed.

So, as we come to the end of the year and people are dealing with normal stress, holiday stress, and business stress (end of quarter/end of year), ask yourself how you can help to make their day a little less stressful. How can you help them out at crunch time? It’s easy to forget how much work we’re piling on when we don’t know what other issues people need to handle concurrently. Talk to people and ask them what their complete workload is like and try to work that in to any scheduling you are performing. You might just find that a little scheduling relief leads to more productivity.

More Reading

Helping Inspire the Next Generation of Cybersecurity Professionals

Back to School – Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 1

Developing Confidence – Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 2

Asking Questions – Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 3

Problem Solving – Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 4

Obfuscation – Lessons from Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 5

Picking the Right Tool – Lessons from Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 6

Feedback Acceptance – Lessons from Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 7

Foundation Building – Lessons from Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 8

The post ” Lessons From Teaching Cybersecurity: Week 9″ appeared first on TripWire

Source:TripWire – Tyler Reguly

Tags: COVID-19, Finance, High Severity, TripWire

Continue Reading

Previous As Modern Mobile Enables Remote Work, It Also Demands Security
Next Cyberattacks Target COVID-19 Vaccine ‘Cold-Chain’ Orgs

More Stories

  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Vulnerabilities

FBI Warns Russian Hackers Target Signal, WhatsApp in Mass Phishing Attacks

2 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)
  • Critical Vulnerability
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Vulnerabilities

Oracle Patches Critical CVE-2026-21992 Enabling Unauthenticated RCE in Identity Manager

5 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)
  • Critical Vulnerability
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Malware
  • Vulnerabilities

CISA Flags Apple, Craft CMS, Laravel Bugs in KEV, Orders Patching by April 3, 2026

7 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Malware

Trivy Supply Chain Attack Triggers Self-Spreading CanisterWorm Across 47 npm Packages

7 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Malware
  • Vulnerabilities

Trivy Security Scanner GitHub Actions Breached, 75 Tags Hijacked to Steal CI/CD Secrets

21 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)
  • Critical Vulnerability
  • Cyber Attacks
  • Data Breach
  • Malware
  • Vulnerabilities

Critical Langflow Flaw CVE-2026-33017 Triggers Attacks within 20 Hours of Disclosure

24 hours ago [email protected] (The Hacker News)

Recent Posts

  • FBI Warns Russian Hackers Target Signal, WhatsApp in Mass Phishing Attacks
  • Oracle Patches Critical CVE-2026-21992 Enabling Unauthenticated RCE in Identity Manager
  • CISA Flags Apple, Craft CMS, Laravel Bugs in KEV, Orders Patching by April 3, 2026
  • Trivy Supply Chain Attack Triggers Self-Spreading CanisterWorm Across 47 npm Packages
  • Trivy Security Scanner GitHub Actions Breached, 75 Tags Hijacked to Steal CI/CD Secrets

Tags

Android APT Bug CERT Cloud Compliance Coronavirus COVID-19 Critical Severity Encryption Exploit Facebook Finance Google Google Chrome Goverment Hacker Hacker News High Severity Instagram iPhone Java Linux Low Severity Malware Medium Severity Microsoft Moderate Severity Mozzila Firefox Oracle Patch Tuesday Phishing Privacy QuickHeal Ransomware RAT Sim The Hacker News Threatpost TikTok TripWire VMWARE Vulnerability Whatsapp Zoom
Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved | NGTEdu.com
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Read More here.Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT