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A free 15-minute training that covers secure communication, data classification, phishing, physical security, social engineering, data privacy, third-party/application security, laptop standard, protect data, and acceptable use.
The Computer Security Resource Center (CSRC) has information on many of NIST's cybersecurity- and information security-related projects, publications, news and events. CSRC supports people and organizations in government, industry, and academia—both in the U.S. and internationally.
Security and Privacy: awareness training & education. Created May 24, 2016, Updated September 12, 2024. Public Law 100-235, 'The Computer Security Act of 1987,' mandated NIST and OPM to create guidelines on computer security awareness and training based on functional organizational roles.
Public Law 100-235, "The Computer Security Act of 1987," mandated NIST and OPM to create guidelines on computer security awareness and training based on functional organizational roles.
The mission of NICE is to energize, promote, and coordinate a robust community working together to advance an integrated ecosystem of cybersecurity education, training, and workforce development.
The two publications are complementary - SP 800-50 works at a higher strategic level, discussing how to build an IT security awareness and training program, while SP 800-16 is at a lower tactical level, describing an approach to role-based IT security training.
A document that specifies, in a complete, precise, verifiable manner, the requirements, design, behavior, or other characteristics of a system or component and often the procedures for determining whether these provisions have been satisfied. See specification requirement.
Enables a paradigm shift for cyber security education. Implementation called a “security kernel” [Anderson] Major credit: Cynthia E. Irvine, The reference monitor concept as a unifying principle in computer security education.
Announced today at the NICE K12 Cybersecurity Education Conference, the Roadmap provides strategies for increasing the quantity, quality, and diversity of students pursuing cybersecurity careers. The Roadmap outlines five major elements: Learn more.
The pathways to – and through – a career in cybersecurity are truly innumerable. There is a wide array of starting points, countless combinations of education, training, and learning experiences, and a broad range of job opportunities.