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Shared Links (weekly) Jan. 8 2023
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Mental health: 66% of cybersecurity analysts experienced burnout this year
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5 Ways to Reclaim Your Mental Health at Work in the New Year
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2023 New Year’s Resolution: Don’t Get “Whacked” By A State AG for Cybersecurity Compliance
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Why I’m still on Twitter– this resonates. The alternatives aren’t integrated into the tools I use to share my blog posts on Twitter and to let people follow my blogs there. (let alone set up multiple accounts.)
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Bring back personal blogging – We’ve tried social media. Maybe it’s time to go back to having our own space to share our own voices and follow the ones we want to listen to.
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Taking a skills-based approach to building the future workforce
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Shared Links (weekly) Jan. 1 2023
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Here’s what cybersecurity professionals at companies actually do, and why they’re so vital
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New Virginia legislation to protect personal data goes into effect Jan. 1
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Bookmark This! Employee Mental Health Edition – hr bartender
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Trust, Risk, and Opportunity: Overseeing a Comprehensive Data and Privacy Strategy
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Shared Links (weekly) Dec. 11 2022
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15 Things Companies Should Stop Doing If They Want To Improve Their Cybersecurity
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Looking Back at 2022 in LegalTech Reveals Trends Going into the New Year: An Ediscovery Day Recap
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The Economic Cost of Poor Employee Mental Health– Yes the costs can be large, but pay attention to the issue because you care about the people who work for you regardless.
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Computer Repair Shops are Not Safe
I’ve written before about the IT people in your company who probably know more about you than you might think. This now extends to taking your personal devices to a repair shop. You should assume someone might be surfing through your data while working on your computer, and you should decide if you are OK with that or if the physical destruction of the device after being replaced is the safer option.
