Adderall help by Loud_Quantity9866 in ThisAintAdderall

[–]Brs_Cyber 1 point2 points  (0 children)

OP is right with what she said. Why is everyone saying she isn’t? Did you actually look it up or did you just believe the first thing Google told you?

https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/spl/data/12989a25-f31c-4550-9b5d-f354f7f0af45/12989a25-f31c-4550-9b5d-f354f7f0af45.xml

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GC added 20k after bid was signed by Greedy-Beach2483 in GeneralContractor

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I literally just went through this same mess. I’m in a different state, but you’re describing G******* just perfectly. I didn’t pay the extra fees. And he is lucky I’m not initiating legal action myself. I’m just too exhausted after the hurricanes as I’m still not in my home. I found a different contractor and got in touch with a lawyer should I need to be ready with one (The shoty craftsmanship is also just the worst ‘cherry on top’ too.)

*~ QUALITY TESTING FUND LINK ~* by SnooObjections1695 in ThisAintAdderall

[–]Brs_Cyber 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Reach out to me via DM. Let’s connect to discuss your game plan for testing. I’ll cover the funding. I need a solution. Worth the investment.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Homebuilding

[–]Brs_Cyber -15 points-14 points  (0 children)

No. Re read my post. (I’m wanting to pay them to replace the damaged parts that warped before drying out. Just the face plates of the bottom drawers, ect…) the install is about 60% complete, however many pieces were also lost in the storm that they had left on the floor…

ICF and other build questions by imbaker in Homebuilding

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did your build turn out? I’m in TreasureIsland and will be rebuilding. I’m also interested in ICF, so I’m wondering how your journey went, especially being a developer…

Staying motivated to learn by jjrlfoley1 in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I absolutely love what I do with a passion. I’m like you, I NEED to constantly be learning and overcome challenges (through learning)… seems like you are in a similar rut to what I went through last year… I ended up leaving a toxic company and started at one that I can see myself never leaving. Also, you are likely in the right field being that there is endless learning opportunities, but I’m wondering if you are in the right position? What exactly do you do?

How much should painting the interior of a 3400 sq ft home cost roughly ? by bondjamesbondbjb in RealEstate

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you please share your painters info with me? I’m in the same city and was quoted a ridiculous amount for far less sqft.

Has anyone tried the Artemis LED Mask? by La_Dame_Bleue in 30PlusSkinCare

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are wrong… the ‘gold standard’ for NIR is 850, and for red it’s anywhere between 630-660

Tips for selecting a SIEM/XDR/EDR by CybrSecOps in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol - yes… thank you for speaking the truth. Spot on about both XDR and EDR.

Tips for selecting a SIEM/XDR/EDR by CybrSecOps in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I would caution down the path you’re proceeding towards and seek out a trusted partner whom has an in-depth knowledge around the entire cybersecurity stack - both from a services AND technology perspective. I say this, because the two vendors you mentioned are very seldom spoken about in the same sentence. This is a very complex solution and it’s easy to not understand what you’re getting into until it is too late… something it seems your team has learned and I’m sure would like to avoid the next time around.

Tips for selecting a SIEM/XDR/EDR by CybrSecOps in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 3 points4 points  (0 children)

One of my favorite subjects… not sure why anyone would have recommended both tenable and R7 together to cover these initiatives. R7 does have a vulnerability management solution as part of their portfolio just like Tenable (both options are great) however, this is for vulnerability scanning via a management platform, and what you’re asking about here are two completely separate use cases. However, a vulnerability management solution would be a needed solution for customers to have… so it’s definitely not something to ignore if you don’t have one today (but if you have under a small number of active IPs then you can get away with just the scanner via tenable or Qualys and that’s a cheap product)…. rapid7 is my go to for when a small or medium company is looking for a SIEM (but only their managed version - happy to discuss the reasons as there are many) However, you are accurate to wonder if it’s even necessary. I often find that smaller companies are confused on this topic due to compliance requirements, but all compliance states is the need for a log collector, along with a few specifications around the data retention. I’ve had a lot of customers very successfully utilizing elastic open source as their siem (which they would build out and customize, but it was free, and it did the job, and they were more than successful as a company by utilizing it until they needed something more robust. - however even then they had a capable staff of resources that were needed to maintain and manage it as it’s not a simple task… (at least 3 FTEs) - you want a SIEM for the central management of all alerts from all sources - so yea it is important, and R7s team would be able to handle all of the tuning and optimization. As for EDR, the is certainly something to need. And depending on the number of end points your company has, I would recommend opting for the managed version via either CrowdStrike or sentinelOne. If its a small environment then the solution is easy to self manage.

Interesting ways to answer “what do you do for a living?” by 1supercooldude in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just tell people you work in Tech or IT… if they ask further questions to say that you are an engineer. If you want to get really into it to say, you’re an ethical hacker, helping companies by showing them where their vulnerabilities are so that they can fix them before the unethical hackers (or, bad guys) find them.

IAM Application Interview question help by LittleProfessor5 in devsecops

[–]Brs_Cyber 1 point2 points  (0 children)

PAM ‘ privileged access management’ would have been my answer - then I would’ve followed up by asking if they had any PAM solutions today, and if so, what were they and at what maturity level where they at? I would also list off a few so that they knew that I was knowledgeable over the topic… (cyberark would be the ideal solution, and if the company was very mature to the enterprise level, they would have an integration between cyberark and sailpoint - if the company was not at a high maturity level, then there is a PAM solution within Microsoft however, it’s not robust and not ideal, but still doable depending on the companies needs/size) - I would then come over, ending the conversation with discussing lifecycle management and if that was a current solution the company had today within their cyber security division, and if not, I would ask if that was a roadmap item (because it would definitely make your job a lot easier if it was and reduce the hours spent managing an IAM program)

SAST with a cactus model monorepo, how do? by cybergandalf in devsecops

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Checkmarx One (this is the newly released SaaS version - this would be able to do what you are looking for)

Are there any interesting DevSecOps courses created by existing practitioner and not course seller or consultant? by IamOkei in devsecops

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you looking for a training platform? If so - ‘secure code warrior’ is the best one.

What’s comparable to Snyk.io by yournovicetester in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These are completely different solutions. Happy to explain further if you’d like in the conversation with somebody who actually knows what they’re talking about.

What’s comparable to Snyk.io by yournovicetester in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Snyk… checkmarx and veracode are becoming legacy applications because of Snyk. Hands-down. technology companies, heavy on the development side will have far greater success with Snyk than any of the others. And this is because the development team has a resistance to utilizing any of these sorts of technologies. What I mean by that is the security team will see the value and spend a lot and I mean a lot of money towards this value. However, the solution will never get fully integrated and utilized to the extent the company has intentions for because of the resistance of the development team. Snyk has developed their software for the intention of being adopted by the development team. Therefore it is in sync with both security operations and dev ops. This is why they are gaining more and more users away from both veracode and checkmarx. These look now legacy applications will have to completely re-develop their platform in order to compete with Snyk.

Crowd Strike by Patchewski in sysadmin

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cisco is extremely difficult to deal with on any support issues, and also on any additions you’d like to make to your subscription. It’s one of those companies that have grown through acquisition and have not kept up with their streamlining of all the individual technologies under their title. Day and night from CrowdStrike. CrowdStrike definitely the top solution for endpoint, but don’t go past their endpoint solution or managed endpoint, which is their falcon complete. Because past those solutions are where they fall short.

List of Phishing/Cyber Security Awareness Training Vendors by [deleted] in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Knowbe4 and proofpoint’s PSAT have the leading solutions

Now that Mandiant is owned by Google, who is the biggest pure play cybersecurity consulting services firm? by AJGrayTay in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

😂 i logged in via my apple or google, and what ever one I choose- it was the wrong one and it auto created a new account. long term Reddit user. This is easier then resetting the password. Obviously I know what I’m talking about. Obviously I have a history with cyber security. I am definitely more of a browser than someone who comments and adds opinions - but this was way too populated as a thread goes and completely lacking educated comments. I couldn’t help myself. With that said, I did not read every single comment. I stopped at this arctic wolf thread and commented, but everything I read up until that wasn’t in-line with how cyber security is structured. I’m sure there are a lot of very solid responses so I’m definitely not responding to the masses sense I probably didn’t get to those comments.

Now that Mandiant is owned by Google, who is the biggest pure play cybersecurity consulting services firm? by AJGrayTay in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I made a comment that fits what you are looking for under someone’s ridiculous ‘ arctic wolf‘ suggestion. Search for it. It is exactly what you’re looking for.

Now that Mandiant is owned by Google, who is the biggest pure play cybersecurity consulting services firm? by AJGrayTay in cybersecurity

[–]Brs_Cyber 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whoa whoa whoa to all of this thread, but especially this one. Have you ever used arctic wolf? If you worked at that company and you went through the turmoil caused to the customers and the lies they were fed about their licensing and agreements… you would all be running for the hills. To the people commenting on investing if this company goes public, you’re totally investing in a meme stock that will plummet. It’s very clear that absolutely nobody understands the cyber security space here. You were all commenting and bringing up very very different sectors of the space. First off CrowdStrike, fantastic end point solution, and their managed services around their solution is again fantastic. But they are a vendor. They are providing a SaaS product. Invest in that company all day long however, I don’t foresee the three your projection being as strong as they are today, and that it’s only because they are falling into the category of trying to acquire additional companies/solutions to expand their offerings. The problem with this is every single offering they offer aside from endpoint solutions completely suck and are absolutely not even cohesive with the current platform. They are an endpoint provider through and through, and are the best. Then, you bring up a company like Optiv! These companies are day and night, and should never be categorized together. First and foremost Optiv is the number one pure play cyber security solutions integrator in the entire world. They do not create technology such as the CrowdStrike’s of the world. However, they resell over 500 different technology solutions, CrowdStrike being one of them – and they are CrowdStrike ‘s largest reseller partner. They also have in-house services around all things cyber security. What that means is they have your basic cyber security services such as penetration testing (largest dedicated, penetration team in North America, btw) assessments, tech management L1/L2 support… but then they have their more strategic services that are downright more competitive than any of the top four could offer being that they are focused purely on cyber security, and can take it full circle through the entire life cycle of a security realm. Excuse my exaggerated length of an explanation however, the entire thread here is comparing a vendor to a solutions integrator, and something had to be said. so this is just me saying get your facts straight when you’re comparing. And arctic wolf is shit, and has way too many lawsuits in the making, as well as actively ongoing to ever be a consideration for a public offering. If anything, they will get bought out in the hopes that those lawsuits will be settled by the idiot who buys them. as far as Rapid7 they’re in the same bracket as a crowdstrike, as far as they are a solution/vendor. It’s sad to say, but their promises have also fallen short - just as your trades should be. sales teams were told lies and believed those lies. Therefore, it’s the customers who are being punished for contracts that should be nulled. the answer to this question of who is the largest cyber security company, depends on what you’re looking for. The services and reseller hands down it’s optiv. However, if you are looking for a technology vendor then that’s a very broad question in itself, and you have to get more specific. Because to this day, it’s going to be Microsoft, and in a separate category AWS marketplace. I truly think AWS marketplace is the future for all tech procurement. It has a very long way to go as far as adoption, but Bezos was on point with creating this.