Effective and Realistic Security Training?
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Agreed, you have to get the onus onto the user. SMBs will almost never do this. So the training itself ends up being more of a waste of time and money.
You're better off removing as much access as possible from users, killing internet access, killing email, etc so they can't be tricked. Those seem like a better spend of your dollars.
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@Dashrender said:
You're better off removing as much access as possible from users, killing internet access, killing email, etc so they can't be tricked. Those seem like a better spend of your dollars.
Read: Your best bet is to fire insecure staffers.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
You're better off removing as much access as possible from users, killing internet access, killing email, etc so they can't be tricked. Those seem like a better spend of your dollars.
Read: Your best bet is to fire insecure staffers.
when you pay only 12/hr none of them care.
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@Dashrender said:
when you pay only 12/hr none of them care.
Read: when you pay only $12/hr you don't care either
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
when you pay only 12/hr none of them care.
Read: when you pay only $12/hr you don't care either
Ok, at what point do you? $15? $20/hr?
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@Dashrender said:
Ok, at what point do you? $15? $20/hr?
At the point where you are able to start hiring staff that cares. It's that simple. If you determine that $12 cannot get you secure staff, then paying $12 means you don't care. If paying $18/hr gets you staff that cares, that's how much you need to pay if you care.
That $12 means you don't care was based on the foundation of your statement.
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OK that makes sense.
The the larger problem is making the company care in the first place. Most places, including huge corporations wouldn't fire people over this. Until that trend changes, the other doesn't matter.
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@Dashrender said:
The the larger problem is making the company care in the first place. Most places, including huge corporations wouldn't fire people over this. Until that trend changes, the other doesn't matter.
I agree with the problem of making the company care... but that doesn't mean we shouldn't train the end users... Even if 1 person learns something, we've don our job.
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@Dashrender said:
The the larger problem is making the company care in the first place.
Is it? If the company doesn't care, you shouldn't either. Making it not a problem at all.
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@dafyre said:
@Dashrender said:
The the larger problem is making the company care in the first place. Most places, including huge corporations wouldn't fire people over this. Until that trend changes, the other doesn't matter.
I agree with the problem of making the company care... but that doesn't mean we shouldn't train the end users... Even if 1 person learns something, we've don our job.
To what end though? Spending the money but effectively getting zero security gain on the company to me is just wasting money. Even if you get 50% to sit up an listen and care, the other 50% can/will bring your company to it's knees.
This must start with the company caring first.
Unless I'm missing something? -
@dafyre said:
Even if 1 person learns something, we've don our job.
If the company doesn't care, what makes this our job? I think the core thing here is not feeling that things are our jobs that the company has not made our jobs. It's less of an issue that a company doesn't prioritize this, but that we often prioritize it on our own.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
The the larger problem is making the company care in the first place.
Is it? If the company doesn't care, you shouldn't either. Making it not a problem at all.
You're right I said that wrong...
The larger problem is that the company needs to care first. If they don't, nothing else matters.
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@Dashrender said:
This must start with the company caring first.
Or with IT not caring. The first step is aligning IT's desires to match the corporate desires. A mismatch there will never go well. Sure, it sounds great for the company to care about security, so IT can try to drive that if they want. But remember, nothing is a need until the company needs it. If the company doesn't care about security, security doesn't matter. It's that simple (until someone is breaking a law.)
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@scottalanmiller If the company doesn't care, would we be doing security training to start with?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@dafyre said:
Even if 1 person learns something, we've don our job.
If the company doesn't care, what makes this our job? I think the core thing here is not feeling that things are our jobs that the company has not made our jobs. It's less of an issue that a company doesn't prioritize this, but that we often prioritize it on our own.
How many times have you (well Scott would never stand for this, so he's exempt from this question) have you (IT folks) been blamed for a problem like this..
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@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller If the company doesn't care, would we be doing security training to start with?
That's my point.
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I've been lucky and not been blamed for it... but I have gotten to tell several people "I told you so" over the course of the years.
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@Dashrender said:
How many times have you (well Scott would never stand for this, so he's exempt from this question) have you (IT folks) been blamed for a problem like this..
Scott's answer is: don't take anyone's s&1t
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
How many times have you (well Scott would never stand for this, so he's exempt from this question) have you (IT folks) been blamed for a problem like this..
Scott's answer is: don't take anyone's s&1t
That generally means either quiting or being fired.
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@Dashrender Or simply standing your ground when you know you are right. If it comes to being fired, then so be it.
But I agree.