Nope? Well, neither do I, actually. But we all remember that in 1969 the United States put the first men on the moon. The name of the company was actually two different ones: the command module was built by North American Aviation of P-51, B-25 and F-86 fame, and the lunar module was built by […]
Who’s afraid of Security Ghosts and Ghouls?
In my inbox this morning was from a fellow email subscriber and buyer of the upcoming Definitive Guide to The Agile Security System™ where he was talking about experiencing first hand the value of using SABSA attributes tailored to your stakeholders. However, he also mentioned the quite common challenge of getting people to listen to […]
Seat belts save lives, but does the CSF?
According to the WHO, the effectiveness of seat belts in worldwide studies is about 50% in avoiding the loss of life during a car crash. This is pretty concrete, and the studies have been validated since the ‘60s in some form or another, so there’s a pretty high confidence in that probability. However, our friend, […]
Avoiding being n-trouble thanks to tomorrow’s security frameworks
Back in the day when I was a wet-behind-the-ears CS student with a 14.4K modem and a NeXTcube on my desk (yes, I was very lucky, and it was a helluva upgrade from my previous Zenith Z-183 laptop), I discovered the pbmplus library. I actually don’t remember why I needed it, but it was the […]