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2021 - A year in review

CILIP

I would like to say a particular thanks to our President, Paul Corney, the CILIP Chair, John Trevor-Allen and our Honorary Treasurer, Alison Wheeler, for their tireless and steadfast support and leadership through the past 12 months. A year in review. We are continuing to experience a significant ?retirement retirement wave?

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Nation-State-Sponsored Attacks: Not Your Grandfather’s Cyber Attacks

Data Matters

Attorney General described a recent takedown of a Russian government-sponsored botnet called Cyclops Blink before it was weaponized and caused damage. and foreign government agencies. government reported a significant rise in hacks perpetrated against private companies by nation-state-sponsored threat actors. Not anymore.

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Top Cybersecurity Accounts to Follow on Twitter

eSecurity Planet

Also read: Top Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) Solutions for 2021. Starting with her first desktop on a Unix machine at age 12, Eva Galperin’s contributions to cybersecurity include research on malware and privacy. — Eva (@evacide) October 4, 2021. Eva Galperi n | @evacide. October is now BGP Awareness Month.

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Apprenticeships: supporting new talent in to libraries

CILIP

Over the next 12 months apprentices Ambreen and Hannah will be writing a regular Insight column for Information Professional, but before that Julie, Ambreen and Hannah introduce themselves and the scheme. Moving forward in 2021. We have big plans for our apprentices in 2021, which we will cover in future issues. existing staff.

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hacking Diversity

ForAllSecure

There are studies that show that men are more likely to apply for jobs that ask for 10 years of Kubernetes experience than bluster their way through the job interview. Women Studies show that unless they meet all the requirements, they're much less likely to apply. So, what, the company wanted one of the creators of Kubernetes?

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The Hacker Mind Podcast: Hacking Diversity

ForAllSecure

There are studies that show that men are more likely to apply for jobs that ask for 10 years of Kubernetes experience than bluster their way through the job interview. Women Studies show that unless they meet all the requirements, they're much less likely to apply. So, what, the company wanted one of the creators of Kubernetes?