(Yeah, we know — as does CompTIA —
those provisions apply to just about every modern corporate or nonprofit entity
under the sun.)
On Thursday, the leading IT industry
association announced the release
of CompTIA CyberSecure, a special resource to help organizations get their
employees up to speed about the ABCs of cybersecurity. Employees are among the
most penetrable defense points of any corporate computer network, so hardening
individuals with basic cybersecurity training is a simple step that could have
far reaching consequences.
A free preview of the new training
course is available online. CompTIA CyberSecure can be taken over the internet,
and lets individuals learn at their own pace, or work through the course at
available intervals in their normal work schedule. The course was designed to
help individuals address six primary functions:
● Protect yourself and your company
from information leaks.
● Know basic categories of information security threats.
● Cultivate a safe information mindset.
● Cultivate a safe environment.
● Implement safety strategies online.
● Protect data and networks.
● Know basic categories of information security threats.
● Cultivate a safe information mindset.
● Cultivate a safe environment.
● Implement safety strategies online.
● Protect data and networks.
CompTIA executive Kelly Ricker said
in media release announcing CompTIA CyberSecure that cybersecurity requires the
involvement of everyone in the enterprise and isn't limited to normal work
hours. "Business is conducted at any time, from anywhere, over PCs,
laptops, tablets, smartphones and smartwatches,” Ricker said. “The CyberSecure
training regimen educates workers on the actions they should take to assure
they are communicating and connecting securely in any setting.”
There's another important reason to
consider cybersecurity training for every employee. According to industry
projections, the available global supply of trained cybersecurity professionals
is about to be stretched pretty thin: More than 1.5 million cybersecurity job
openings will be unfilled by 2019.
It's likely that no amount of
awareness training can entirely address that shortfall, but an educated
workforce may be the next best thing to a fully-staffed cybersecurity team. And
if nothing else, the members of the understaffed security team at least won't
have to provide essential cybersecurity training on their own.

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