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You are here: Home arrow Forum arrow Ethical Hacking Discussions and Related Certificationsarrow Cyber Warfarearrow “AntiSec publishes 935,000 records taken from Stratfor”
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May 26, 2012, 08:58:32 AM *
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Author Topic: “AntiSec publishes 935,000 records taken from Stratfor”  (Read 2416 times)
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securitytech123
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« on: January 05, 2012, 02:57:53 PM »

Hello everyone---
I recently came across this article and I’m seeking career advice in the Cyber-Security Field
“AntiSec publishes 935,000 records taken from Stratfor”
http://www.thetechherald.com/articles/AntiSec-publishes-935-000-records-taken-from-Stratfor
Not to sound insensitive, but does anyone have thoughts/suggestions on how this inevitable trend could provide new employment options?  (I’m CEH Certified, but have limited hands-on experience)
I’m leaning towards seeking a position in a smaller personally-owned business rather than the obvious Mega-Companies (primarily because of my experience level)
Example: My buddies Cyber-Security company (http://riskllc.biz/)  (Three-man operation)

Any thoughts/leads/etc. would be much appreciated
I hope that you and your family had a healthy and happy holiday season 

Michael

Post script: If anyone wants to get pawned, you can find me at http://www.chess.com/home/
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And yes; I really am an Ex-Circus Musician (Bass Guitar)
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« Reply #1 on: January 05, 2012, 03:09:36 PM »

I don't think there is much you can do with these breaches to boost your career unless you know how to prevent them.  So research stories and at some point someone will post the rundown of what occurred to allow the breach.  In the case of anonymous/anti-sec it is typically the same attack vector: poorly secure web application with a even more poorly secure SQL backend that is vulnerable to SQLi attack.  So concentrate in Web Application Security and you should get some leads.  As far as working for a smaller company, unless it is a consulting outfit, you may not find too many opportunities.  regular SMBs can rarely afford nor have a need for a full time security engineer unless some compliance standard requires it.  If your buddy's consulting company wants to expand their expertise then pushing toward a Web App Security guy may help.

Bottom line, you will need to get experience and your best bet would be to get in as a consultant in a security company, even if it is entry level.  CEH will get you past HR but you may lack the technical skills to excel in the job.  You might want to also look into pursuing an eCCPT and eventually an OCSP which will help give you the much needed technical background to get a leg up.
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