Do you have what it takes to get into Cybersecurity in 2024

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In this video, we’ll talk about the key things that you MUST have in order to be successful in Cybersecurity in 2024. We’ll be going through important characteristics and traits, as well as what you need to do to prepare for Cybersecurity. Enjoy!

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Links:
– Protect yourself against scammers –
– Splunk Basics –
– Splunk Setup –

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36 Comments

  1. Hello Jono.. I came here and subscribed im a cybersecurity newb and just watched Crin's – Cybersecurity Snake Oil vid. You got a medal on that vid, highly recommended – so Im going in blind and will watch lotsa your vids. Take care, good job!

  2. Most people want to get into cyber security for the money, but if that’s your only reason, you’re in the wrong field. The job can be stressful, highly technical, and often you’re limited to basic tasks with restricted access. Vendor certs help, but they’re not everything what really matters is being able to research, analyse, make quick decisions, and communicate clearly with different teams. If your degree isn’t hands-on or practical, you’re likely wasting your time. Cyber security isn’t glamorous it’s demanding, constant learning, and not for those just chasing a paycheque. Be prepared or look elsewhere.

  3. I was a dental technician for 15 years, and I decided to leave that career and start learning cybersecurity. I'm 36 now, and I honestly don't know if this is the best path for my future. What I do know is that if I don't start learning, how am I supposed to know whether it suits me or not?

  4. I'll be 30 in a couple months, and I need to change careers! I'm tired, broke, broken down, and angry! Ready for a change in my life! And damn ready to make tech work! I enjoy every second of the grind! Even with a full-time job and a part-time passion!!!

  5. 2:21 but it will also get easier to some extent. AI is helping a lot of modern SIEM and XDR tools analyse data much more efficiently, allowing analysists to spend more time on the important alerts.

    It's not so black and white

  6. I see cybersecurity as a form of power, if you possess it, you hold real strength. Calling cybersecurity "hard" is a very broad statement because difficulty depends on the person. For example, you might find a 14-year-old kid with no prior experience ending up having a deep knowledge in cybersecurity, while at the same time, an experienced IT expert might struggle with it. So, rather than labeling it as simply "hard," it’s more accurate to view cybersecurity as a continuous learning journey that requires discipline. You don’t even have to be passionate about it to learn, consistency and commitment matter.

  7. Thank you for posting! I need advice: My wallet on OKX contains some USDT TRX20, and I have the seed phrase: clean party soccer advance audit clean evil finish -tonight involve whip -action-. Could you suggest how should I handle moving them to another wallet on Binance?

  8. I want to get into this field, I have no IT background I’m 18. I know since I’m young people might just think I’m optimistic about everything but really I’m not, nothing really interests me professionally apart from cybersecurity, I really find it interesting and am willing to learn whatever I have to learn and more in order to get into it, it’s a field that doesn’t bore me, I’ve heard people say it could be repetitive and have some boring parts to it which could be true but to me the idea that there’s always new things to learn and room for you to grow yourself and move up in all the different branches of cybsecruity is amazing to me, someone with the mindset I currently have recognizes that yes it is hard but it’s not something that we hate to learn we love the grind and the learning process it’s something we are passionate about at least, someone who doesn’t have this same inclination sees this and since they don’t have that much interest in it they are not willing to grind for it

  9. As someone who has built and fixed computers from 13 years old and continued to be fascinated by them I'm getting into cyber security myself and I know that it will be some hard work. However, i never give up on what i truly want in life. This is one of them, and hopefully more people share the same drive.

  10. I joined SOC for the fucking money. I don't care about the security of the company. But then I'm here as a SOC so might as well do my job properly as a SOC. But I'm not the type of person who have passion about security. I'm just here for the fucking money

  11. i am a undergrad student and trying to get into cybersecurity learning .I have only started now and this kind of gave me a reality check that i have to grind harder to make it to top. Thank you

  12. "How do I become an MMA fighter"….

    Well it isnt going to happen overnight and there's a lot to learn. Cyber Security is not an entry level position.

    Get into IT /programming. No one cares if youre looking for a WFH job. The market and salary is based on what people can't do not what you want

  13. I'm a software engineer for more than 20 years, of which more than 6 as a freelancer. Lately I'm thinking of shifting my focus to cyber security.

    Anybody got some good entry points of whee to start and services you can offer as a freelancer?

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