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314 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3688
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Title: HPR3688: Education, Certifications, and sipping on the Socials
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3688/hpr3688.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 04:03:17
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3688 for Wednesday, the 21st of September 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Education Certifications and Sipping on the Socials.
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It is part of the series' privacy and security.
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It is hosted by Lurking Pryon and is about 30 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, I discuss, the value of an education certifications and a positive social
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media presence.
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Hey, welcome to another episode.
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Today I wanted to talk to you about education and social media.
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One of the things I get asked all the time is whether or not you should go to college
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or you should get certifications.
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I hate the idea that we have come to an either-or-fork in the road when it comes to this.
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The simple truth of the matter is, education matters and I will stand by that and I will die on that hill.
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So do I think a bachelor's or a master's degree matters?
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Absolutely.
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Do the certifications also matter?
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Absolutely.
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Should you have both?
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Yes.
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Now, you might say, but who cares?
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All right, well, let's talk about it from a hiring manager standpoint.
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From a hiring manager standpoint, you can come to me with a bunch of certifications
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and no background or limited background in which case I'm going to look at you and say,
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hmm, this person had enough knowledge to pass a test.
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Or I could look at somebody who comes to me with little to no knowledge and a degree.
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And maybe they have a certification, maybe they don't.
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However, they have already proven that they can commit to the long haul
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and see a project through to its end.
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That's really the value in the degree from a manager standpoint.
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You have shown that you have the ability to commit and follow through.
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And the certifications, that will come.
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As you get knowledge, you will be able to pass the certifications.
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We live in a world where certifications have been turned upside down.
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Certifications should never, ever, ever have meant to be an entry level or a job requirement
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at the junior level, for the senior level, absolutely.
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But certifications were developed to show whether or not you actually had the experience
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that you were telling people. Way back in the day, it used to be easy for somebody to come up
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and say, hey, I've got experience working on databases and somebody hires them just to find out
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that no, they had no clue what they were doing and left their company in a horrible lurch.
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So people started offering certifications to actually filter out the people who knew something
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from the people who didn't know something. Well, the problem is, the people who didn't know
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something didn't want to be left out. They wanted their paycheck for going in and jacking up
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companies or doing as little work as possible. So they hired really smart people to go in
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and take the test and then come out and write down as many of the questions as possible.
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And voila, we have created test dumps. So now you can go and memorize a bunch of questions,
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go in, take the test and pass it and voila, you have the same certification as the person who
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actually studied their ass off. Well, there you go. That's the world we live in. We have lazy
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people who would rather just study a test dump rather than the people who would actually put in
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the time and effort to learn the material and the result shows. If you look at the sad state
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of information security across the world, you're going to see that there are a whole lot of people
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who are doing just barely what they need to get their paycheck. You don't have a whole lot of
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people in any organization going above and beyond the call of duty sitting there in their spare time
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actually researching learning and making themselves better. Those people are the minority in the work
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center. They are not the majority. And if you happen to work in a work center where that is not
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the case that I'm going to tell you do not leave. If you work in a place where everybody is
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exceptional, do not leave because you will go somewhere where you find that you are the exceptional
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person and everyone else sucks. And you're going to be like, oh, that's great. I'm the exceptional
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person except you're going to be the person always getting called at 2 a.m. You're going to be
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the person who's always stuck fixing stuff, always taking phone calls on vacation. And yeah,
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life is not going to be good. So exceptional people are not that common. And unfortunately,
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we need more of them. Do certifications have a place in the world? Sure. Have we abused it
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and absolutely throttled the hell out of what it was supposed to be? Yes. Today is just the money
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making embargo. So now it's just a matter of whether or not you have forked out the money to get
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this little piece of paper that somebody wants as a prerequisite for the job. Well, here's the
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problem. The person who is actually hiring for the job is never even going to see your resume until
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it gets past those little words that say security plus or whatever the case happens to be. So
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here are my pro tips. If you do not have a certification, put down that you are studying for a
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certification, start studying, and put a date on it. Now, this brings me to the next part of the
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conversation, which is social media. And I'm probably going to catch a lot of flak for this one,
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but I'm going to stand by it. I think that everyone should develop two social identities. One
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that is completely absolutely 100% private. This is the social media that you share with the people
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that you actually know. The ones that you have actually spent time in a room together,
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your family, those close friends. That little social media circle should be incredibly small,
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private, and locked down as much as possible. Then you should have a second 100% public profile.
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Put yourself out there. Brand yourself. Get on LinkedIn. Make sure that you're on Facebook. Make
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sure that you're on Instagram. Get on the big social media platforms. Start posting. Start making
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friends and start building a network. Now, there's a number of reasons why you should do this.
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So let's just start at the top. As a hiring manager, whenever I got resumes, the very first thing I
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would do is go and find the social media for all of the potential candidates. You would be surprised
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how many candidates had their resume thrown in the garbage from the crap that I found on their
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social media because they didn't bother to filter out anything that they put out there. And
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people can be really, really stupid on social media. Now, the other thing is, and I personally
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did not do this, but I know other hiring managers do, is they went and looked at the friends that
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the candidate associated with. So for example, you may not be 420. You may not be smoking dope every
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day. But if all of your friends are pot heads and they're posting stuff about their bongs and pot
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and all the great stuff they've got, that's probably going to reflect back on you, even though you
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are not that kind of a person. So keep in mind that when it comes to your public profile, you need to
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be very careful about what you post and who you have an acquaintance with. This is going to be
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something where you may have to sever ties with people on one of your social medias. Preferably
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the public one. Hey, the public one. Now, something that's even worse than having bad stuff on your
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social media is having no social media. Candidates that have no social media are a huge red flag.
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That's because this is abnormal. This is not the way society works today. This is not how people
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interact and communicate. So if you come in as a candidate with no social media presence,
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that is going to be a huge red flag for your employer. And you're already sitting there saying,
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well, but you know, that shouldn't be the case. Well, I'm going to tell you it is the case. Pure,
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straight, simple 100%. No social media. You might as well be sitting there writing your manifesto
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for blowing up whatever government building. They suspect you might be planning on doing. Is that
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the case? No. There's a lot of us who really don't like social media at all. I'm one of them. I
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hate social media. I hate being on it. It's a waste of time. But is it necessary? Yes. Point number
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building a network of connections. You're going to find that the majority of jobs that you get in
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your career are not going to be from you applying for jobs. They're going to be jobs that you find
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out through your network of friends. So if you build yourself a large network and you have a large
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number of friends and acquaintances, they can be people that you don't know. But they know you
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from your social media presence. You're posting professional things. You're posting about your
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career field. The stuff that you're interested in. You're posting about stuff that relates to your
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job or the stuff that you're studying. That is stuff that is going to reflect very well on you.
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And people will gain a good favor of you. So whenever it comes time to look for a job, you can put
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it out there that, hey, I'm looking for a job. And you'll be surprised how many people will pop up and
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say, well, hey, it hasn't hit the waves yet. But we've got a job opening over here. Somebody
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just put in their resume. There are two weeks notice. So some of your resume will take a look at it
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and see what we can do. You're going to find that networking is going to be the best way to get
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the best jobs in your career. So you need that social media presence. You need that network of
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connections. Now, which social media's look bang for your buck? You need to have LinkedIn.
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Recruiters are looking through LinkedIn. That is the number one place they go to look for candidates.
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And they do keyword searches. Remember how I said when you're studying for that certification to
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put it out there? So the moment that the words security plus or certified ethical hacker or
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fill in the blank certification. As soon as those words appear on your LinkedIn or you're
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indeed, indeed is another one that I highly recommend. Put that on there. Now those key words
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are going to show up. I would simply put down, hey, security plus estimated completion date,
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put it for three months down the road. What do you think is reasonable for you to study and pass
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that certification and start studying for it. But what you're going to find is even though you
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don't have the certification, the fact that those words are now on your profile now puts you
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in the visibility of those recruiters who are looking for people for positions that require
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that certification. It's not having the certification that gets you seen by hiring managers.
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It's the keywords on your resume that gets you seen by the hiring managers. A lot of times when
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you send resumes into a company, they will just run it through one of the CR and they will do a
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keyword search. And if your resume does not have the right keywords for the job description,
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it goes into the bit bucket and no one ever calls you back. Get those keywords on there.
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If they want somebody that has a security plus and you don't have that, put security plus on your
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resume and say, hey, I'm studying for security plus. Here's my estimated date that I'm going to
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complete this in test. And you're going to find that employers really don't care if you have the
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certification. What they care about is whether or not you are willing to do it. So you're going to
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find that a lot of employers will look at you and say, well, okay, I realize you don't have the
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certification yet. You say you're going to get it in this time. So we'll do like a three month
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or a six month and we'll see how you do. And I'll come back and if you don't have that certification
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within that time period, then we'll have to rediscover and maybe you'll be looking for new employment.
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Again, motivation. So keywords are what's going to get you seen by hiring managers.
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College degrees. Those show that you have the ability to put together a plan and stick with it
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through to the end. It doesn't matter if that degree is in cyber security or underwater basket weaving.
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The fact that you took the time to go through and follow through to completion is what matters
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in the business world. Now again, when you talk about most bang for your buck at the master's level,
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100% MBA. Master's a business administration. I'm going to stick with that one. Get your
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minor in cyber something or other, but that MBA by far is going to be worth its weight and gold.
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It's sad to say that not all certifications are worth the same amount of money. And it's also
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sad to say that not all degrees are worth the same amount of money. This is where you need to start
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looking and figuring out what it is that you need to move yourself in the trajectory of the
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progression that you want to go in. For example, there's been debate for years about the OSCP,
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the Offensive Security Certified Pantester versus Certified Ethical Hacker.
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Look, which one is better? Yes, I don't care. At the end of the day, CEH has name recognition.
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Managers who don't know anything about cyber security know CEH. That means something to them.
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And you might be sitting there saying, oh, but my OSCP, I really knew something. I had to go,
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nobody cares. At the end of the day, if they don't know what those acronyms stand for, they don't care.
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And the fact is, you are not trying to impress them with the things that can't show up on your resume.
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You have to impress them with the words that they understand. And this is where a lot of people fall
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down flat and they don't find themselves moving in the way that they should in their career.
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You need to make sure that you are moving with the career field. And if the career field says,
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hey, CEH is what everyone should have, then you should be getting your CEH. Does that mean that you
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should get that and stop? No. By all means, no. Get that CEH and then go get the OSCP.
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Hey, which one doesn't matter. Which one's going to get the money? That matters.
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So keep in mind, the same goes for degrees. When you're going in, you're paying money to get
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a college degree. They don't all have the same payout on the back end. And that's not what they
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tell you. They tell you, oh, cyber security, this is really hot. And okay, for the junior level,
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positions, yeah, those matter. People want to see people with cyber security degrees coming into
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those junior level or maybe even mid-level positions. But again, when you start getting to the
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management level, that degree in cyber security. I don't care if you have a PhD in cyber security.
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Chances are, the person who has that MBA is going to be picked over you. Again, that's the gold
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standard. When it comes to certifications, you also need to make a decision as to whether or not
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you want to be a technical person or if you want to be a management person. People always come
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to me and they're like, oh, should I get the CISSP? Well, they're two completely different things
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going in completely opposite direction. The Casp is very, very technical. That's for people who are
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engineers and architects in a large enterprise environment. That is something that is really
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going to have a lot of technical background and a lot of technical application. The CISSP, on the
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other hand, that's a management certification. That is teaching you how to translate geek speak
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into management so that you can talk to the sea level executives and tell them what it is that
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geeks are actually trying to say. We have a problem. There's a disconnect. We at the geek level,
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we have a language. At the management level, they have a different language. The CISSP is the
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translator. They're the ones who sit there and make it happen. The way they communicate and relay
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that information to the upper management is what makes the difference as to how your program moves
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forward. The CISSP is really aimed at managers. It's not aimed at technical people. It's not a
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technical certification. When people come to me and they're like, oh, I need to get the CISSP
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so I can move up and I ask them, what do you want to do with your life? I want to be an architect.
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I'm like, then why are you getting the CISSP? If you want to move into management and you want to
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be a manager, you want to be the manager of your work section, whatever the case happens to be,
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you want to be a project manager. Again, if you want to be a project manager, PMP might be the way
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you need to go. Start looking at what certifications matter for the position that you want.
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A lot of people just go for big shiny because everybody has it or everyone talks about it.
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Instead of looking for the big shiny for the career field or trajectory that they are actually
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trying to land themselves in, you have to know where it is that you want to go and what it's
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going to take to get there. You have to map out a plan and say, okay, this is where I want to go.
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Right now, these are the major certifications that people are looking at. This is the type of
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degree that they're wanting to see and start working your way toward it one degree at a time.
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Work your way there. Is it going to take some time? Maybe. Maybe you'll get lucky and you'll get
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pulled right into a position. The world may never know. Again, we need more people in cybersecurity
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and it's not just cybersecurity people that we need. I keep talking about diversity and
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different thinking, different ways of approaching problems. When it comes to cybersecurity,
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we lose side of the fact that cybersecurity is there to enable the business to accomplish
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its mission, whatever that happens to be. We are to be a business enabler, a business facilitator.
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We are not there to shut down the organization so that they can no longer make money.
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That is not the name of our game. We are there to help them do business in the best way
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that we can. Again, it's all risk assessment. So, hey, look, here's the way you want to do this.
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Here's the risk associated with this. And do you want to accept that or you want to do something
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too lower the risk for this particular thing? And again, it's up to them to make a decision.
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But that is the nature of the game. Now, we need other people coming in who can look at this
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and say, well, hey, when I was on this side of the business, these are the kinds of things that
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really got in my way and stopped me from being productive. So, they can start giving you input
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from a different vantage point. Psychologists coming in and saying, hey, look, we can start
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taking a look at the types of attackers that are coming after us. And we can start understanding
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psychologically the kinds of things that they are doing and maybe the kinds of things that they
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are looking for. We can actually build profiles on our threat actors. There are so many different
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ways that people with different backgrounds can help out in cybersecurity. So, should you be
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getting into cybersecurity? Absolutely. Is the career field going to go away? Nope. Not going to
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happen. We keep talking about AI and machine learning. That's great. Machine learning really
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kind of worthless if we haven't seen the attack before. Doesn't really matter what product you're
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selling. If we haven't seen the attack before, machine learning is pretty much going to die. AI
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isn't there yet? Nope. Not there yet. Getting better? Yeah. And again, keep in mind, not everybody has a
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bazillion dollars to throw out and not everybody has a perfectly locked down network and users that
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are completely security focused. Matter of fact, I would think that list is probably kind of small.
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So, come on in. The water is fine. So, again, get your degree. It matters. Education matters.
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Not only that, but it'll expose you to different parts of the career field. As you're going through
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and you're getting your degree, I want to be in cybersecurity. You might take a database course
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and say, holy crap, this is exciting. I really like doing this. Well, hey, databases need to be
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secured too. We need people that know databases and security. We need people who are developers and
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know security. It does the team know good to have a cybersecurity person come to you and say,
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hey, this is wrong with your web application. And the web developers say, okay, how do I fix it?
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And they're like, yes. Okay. So, what do I do? I just keep doing it until it goes through the
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scanner clean. Is that really helpful? No. Do we need people who can look at the results at the
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output and say, hey, look, here's the problem. Here's what's going on. You've got this particular
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thing going on. We need to sit here and filter this out. You aren't doing proper input validation
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here. We need to clean that up. Whatever the case happens to be, we have to be able to talk the
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language with people who may actually fixing the problem. And we don't have enough of those people
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out there. We need more people. So, certifications, do they matter? Yes. Do you absolutely have to
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have a certification to get a job? No. Do you need the letters on your resume and on your LinkedIn
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in order to get noticed and recognized for that job? Absolutely. Estimated completion date.
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Same thing with your degree. If you're going to get a college degree, put it on your LinkedIn,
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put it on your indeed, and put down your estimated graduation date. It doesn't matter that you
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actually haven't graduated yet. It's the fact that you are currently doing that. That is something
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that you are currently working on. That is perfectly fine and perfectly acceptable. Think about an
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organization that had a risk assessment. And they come in and they find all of these things wrong
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with the organization. Does the organization fix everything all at once? No. They create a five-year
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plan. And they're like, okay, we're here. We're going to do this this year and then this this year
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and then this this year. And it's all working toward the results of that first risk analysis.
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And then the second year comes along and another risk analysis comes out. And now your objectives
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have changed. Now you've got to change that five-year plan. Do you think that managers understand that
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when you're planning for something, that that is a perfectly legitimate thing to do? So,
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long as you're actually doing it, yes. And the same holds true for every other part of the business
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community. Work on it. Work toward it. Don't sit there and feel that you can't take credit for it
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until you actually have that piece of paper in hand. That is going to hold you back. That is going
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to be a detriment to your progression. So, education, get it. Certifications? Yes. Do I personally
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feel that they've been tweaked into something that they shouldn't have been? Yes. Is there anything
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I personally can do about it? No. Is it the world we live in? Yes. So, I say this even as I
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am studying for another certification. Yay! More letters to throw behind my name.
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Now, do I throw all the letters behind my name? No. Nope. No, I don't. Now, you see those people,
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they've got all those acronyms sitting behind their name. They've got all these little badges
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floating around. If you want to do that, you want to be that person, you can. I'm just going to
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say that I believe most people look at that and they say, huh, that's not really modest.
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There you go. Pick one certification and throw that behind your name. CISSP. Boom. There you go.
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Done. CEH. Done. Boom. Do you have to put all of them? No. No. That's ridiculous. Especially
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your email signature line. For God's sake, please stop doing that. All right. So, anyway,
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there you go. Hopefully this helps those of you who are out there looking to grow your network.
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And again, for those of you who are wanting to avoid the social media, keep in mind,
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people are looking at that and having no social media is really a big negative. Create that
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completely public profile. Have that public facing Facebook. Have that public facing LinkedIn.
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Have that public facing Instagram or whatever else that people are on. Look at the major
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platforms that people are using. Get on them and be active. Make friends. Build your network.
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Look for other people who are in your career field or in the career field that you're trying to
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get into. Stay abreast of what's going on with the current topics, the current news, the current
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threats, whatever it happens to be. And keep posting. Stay consistently regular on that social media.
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You don't have to be sitting there posting pictures about how you feel, about blah, blah, blah.
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You don't have to jump into political discussions. You don't have to do any of that. I scroll past
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all of that crap. But hey, when I see a new vulnerability that people who have an iPhone really
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need to patch like yesterday, then yeah, that's the kind of thing I'm going to post. When I sit here
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and I find out, hey, here's a new exploit. Here's how it was exploited. Am I going to share that?
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Yes, absolutely. Somebody is sitting here feeling the X candidate is something, blah, I don't care.
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Don't waste my time. Doesn't matter. Not going to sit there and turn my feed into that kind of
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garbage. I'll just scroll right past that you should too. And you should make sure that you are
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continuously checking your public profile to see what is out there. What kind of things come up
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when you Google search your name or the email address that you are using for that public facing
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side. And I would highly, highly, highly recommend 2FA everywhere you can, especially on the phone
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number that you use for registering and getting those backup verification codes or those SMS
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codes whenever you log in. Make sure that you've got two-factor authentication on that so that
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somebody can't come and simply sim swap you and end up with all of your public facing profiles
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that would not be good. And again, you've got to be consistent, you've got to be vigilant,
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and the other thing is is if you're consistent on LinkedIn and you are consistently posting things
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and you happen to be looking for a job, that is not going to raise any red flags. However,
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if you have a LinkedIn and your boss knows that you have a LinkedIn and you never post anything
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and then all of a sudden here you are hopping on LinkedIn all over the place. Well, that's kind of
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a red flag. That kind of tells me that this employee is probably looking to jump ship. And yeah,
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if you think managers don't do that, well, you don't know your managers. Just say it. Yes,
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they keep tabs on you. And if you're sitting there and you're consistently doing things,
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hey, are they going to actually go look at all the posts you do? No, do they get updates when
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somebody in their network has posted something? Yep. If they follow somebody to get updates when
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they do something, yep. If you never do something, and all of a sudden you start doing a whole
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lot of it, that's something out of the ordinary. Oh, look at that. User behavior analysis. Here's
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something exceptional. Maybe we should take a look at that. Bit with your own truth serum. So,
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think about it. I know a lot of us, we don't like to have social media. I'm right there with you.
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However, is it a necessary poison? I believe it is today. So, build that public profile,
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and seek out those with similar interests. And who knows? Maybe we could even find a quarter
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on the internet where we could actually have a social media part that is not just
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diatribe and flotsome from people who have no other interest in life than politics or religion.
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Just saying. Might be nice for a change. So, that's all I've got for you today. This is
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me signing off. So, hey, have a good day. Okay, now where the fuck is my mouse?
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio. Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
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