Training courses have lots of good things going for them, but one of the bad things that can happen – especially in live, in-person training courses – is that there’s so much material to cover in the 3 or 5 days of sessions, you’re almost always bound to hit that point exemplified by the classic […]
Can you really make security architecture a habit?
Interestingly enough, I was listing to a podcast yesterday on how to train your brain regarding habits with Tara Swart, a neuroscientist and senior lecturer from MIT and Nir Eyal, a behavioral designer. I really enjoy all this psychology and neuroscience stuff, as you might’ve noticed, because it’s one of the best ways I’ve discovered […]
A potential cure for cybersecurity envy
Since Thanksgiving is now in the rear-view mirror, we can start talking about what’s next for the end of the year. And for a lot of people, that means shopping for Christmas. One of the things I remember about being a kid was that one of my friends in particular used to get all the […]
When the “gold standard” turns out to be the foil wrapper off a 25¢ piece of chocolate
Funnily enough, just like with governance itself, there’s both good and bad guidance about governance. Now, “bad” may be in the eye of the beholder for sure, so on this Turkey-day in the US, I’m going to briefly go hunting some sacred cows instead of flightless birds. When I was a kid, my parents used […]
Set in stone or styrofoam?
That’s really the question we need to answer when we’re looking to identify the decisions we associate with any individual owner in our complex web of organizational governance. But, like so many other things, we often don’t ask the right question, or, people’s default psychological tendencies make it hard for themselves to know the difference. […]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 24
- 25
- 26
- 27
- 28
- …
- 41
- Next Page »