by Sarah Clarke | Mar 4, 2015 | Analogettes, Corporate Security, InfoSec, Security for all
Wednesday Wee One, or tweet-size InfoSec analogy, or #Analogette So I squeaked in on the deadline this time. Got the tweet out this morning, but got distracted and forgot to post it until now. Some language lovers will no doubt point out this isn’t really an...
by Sarah Clarke | Feb 19, 2015 | Analogettes, Corporate Security, Security for all
As some who follow me on Twitter know, I occasionally tweet a bite-size analogy. Sometimes with, sometimes without pics that cheer me up. A few folk have shown their appreciation by viewing, faving and sharing them, so here is a collection of my efforts thus far. For...
by Sarah Clarke | Feb 2, 2015 | Corporate Security, InfoSec
Is your security focus blurred? On 30th January Hacked published an article entitled: An Airgap Won’t Secure Your Computer Any More. Researchers harvested keystrokes by interpreting electromagnetic emissions. Suggested mitigation…stick your PC in a Faraday...
by Infospectives | Aug 21, 2014 | Corporate Security, InfoSec, Published elsewhere, Security for all
My latest piece for The Analogies Project – using real life and stories to demystify InfoSec. An excerpt: “Bike helmets, warnings about strangers, weather forecasts and traffic lights don’t guarantee your kid’s safety. It’s about how they choose to...
by Infospectives | Aug 14, 2014 | Uncategorized
From the ISC blog, an interesting post looking at an apparent security awareness anachronism – more security knowledge seemingly breeding denial about the need to fix things, just when the likelihood of breaches is skyrocketing.