
(I currently have 7 classes published here)

Illumeo – as of 04/07/20 an Illumeo subscription is about $299 per year with CPE credits My Udemy Classes, ($29.99 or less) include:īuilding a Relevant and Meaningful LinkedIn Networkĭeveloping a Professional Reputation using LinkedIn My Newest LinkedIn Support/Training/Coaching program is live in a Private Facebook Education Group. Please consider joining this Quora Space to help support my content there. Membership into this Space is $3.00 per month or $25 per year. I am now going to start offering even more knowledge, ideas, tips, tricks, best practices, and guidance about using LinkedIn as a Business Tool in a Public Quora Space named Master LinkedIn as a Business Tool. My Quora account is nearly to 10Million views of the over 5200 answers I have put on there since March of 2016. In some cases, I am paid a commission from these links. This editorial was written by the Dallas Morning News.These are affiliate links to my classes & the products I recommend. Government and the private sector have a responsibility to see that does not happen. Having a firewall is no longer enough.Īt some point, bad actors are going to utilize the data they hack to do something that goes beyond inconvenient and into the cataclysmic. If the federal government can pass laws such as Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank to provide audit and oversight of companies, then why not themselves?īusinesses should consult more with cybersecurity experts to update and implement best practices to maintain data integrity. We need to demand reforms for both government and the private sector. So complacency is not an option the stakes are too high. Imagine what Russian operatives could do with that information and $15 million to spend. The cybersecurity researcher who found the unsecured data said he could use it to locate the home address of every person that the Republican National Committee believes voted for Donald Trump.įacebook recently disclosed that Russian operatives spent $150,000 on targeted ads. The database included not only publicly available (but normally diffuse) voter registration information but also voters' social media behavior, their views on Wall Street, Hillary Clinton and the Affordable Care Act, etc. The group recalled not a breach, but a faux pas by a data firm that allowed nearly 200 million records containing voter information to sit on an open server for 12 days.
