• duhbasser@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    I work in cyber security and have gotten to work with some very talented female engineers. It’s always shocking to me the amount of disrespect some third party will display towards them. Like talking down or whatever.

    What’s also entertaining is watching my coworkers absolutely destroy these ass hats.

    • not_amm@lemmy.ml
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      21 hours ago

      I’m studying cybersecurity and there are barely any women, but our directors are always encouraging them to participate and speak more. I’m friends with some of them and they hardly encounter anyone hostile. There are some men that speak behind their backs, but I’m glad a lot of people defend them and are open about their stance against sexism and misogyny. It’d always funny when anyone says something sexist and everyone around responds making fun of them or just ignoring them and leaving them alone on their comments.

      Of course, it’s not perfect, but I’m glad that it’s getting better. Also, women were the whole top 3 or 5 of all students in our faculty lol

      • duhbasser@lemm.ee
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        18 hours ago

        Yea I’ve never understood the negative reaction to working with women in cyber security but those people are losers anyway.

        On another note, how are you liking cyber security? Any questions? Concerns? Areas you’re interested in?

        • Psychadelligoat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 hours ago

          Yea I’ve never understood the negative reaction to working with women in cyber security

          The ND boys who got bullied by girls for being little creepy weirdos got into tech as a replacement for a sex life, grew up creepy about it, can’t be normal when the thing that they replaced in their lives is suddenly back and fucking with said replacement

          Source: I was one of the ND boys getting bullied for being a creepy little weirdo and got into tech, but I learned how not to be such a creepy little weirdo from the bullying and managed to make a friend and learn and grow. Others… Don’t. Having known many of them closely, only some of them can be forgiven for this lack of decency

          • duhbasser@lemm.ee
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            2 hours ago

            Honestly, good on you dude. Being able to identify a toxic behavior and then make changes to better yourself is something a lot of people don’t do.

        • Batman@sopuli.xyz
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          15 hours ago

          As an older woman studying cybersecurity as well, it is very good to hear this from y’all.

          Not who you asked but, I’m still early on and have heard I should go ahead and start some certifications on my own. Suggestions on the first few possibly from someone in the field?

          • Psychadelligoat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            9 hours ago

            I found certifications to be a waste of time and money, honestly. I literally had HR at multiple places tell me it was entirely irrelevant to their decision to even interview me when it was a job requirement to have

            Im rather convinced it was once useful as I knew someone who did it, but at some point it swapped to the same fucking scam colleges are in the US: pay to be sub-entry-level in their eyes

          • duhbasser@lemm.ee
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            14 hours ago

            Certificates when you first start are good for getting your foot in the door but the best way to learn in a real world experience. To answer your question, 99.88% of people would said Security+, but that cert is nothing compared to actually dealing with actual real world BS. Certain types of attacks don’t follow a pattern and being able to adapt to that isn’t going to be taught in Security+