• 18 Mar 2020

    Look for the lessons and be a leader among the COVID-19 panic

    “The hardest thing to explain is the glaringly evident which everybody had decided not to see.” – Ayn Rand Interesting how the world has changed in the past couple of weeks, huh? Here in the U.S., we went from a thriving economy and living in what might be described as the best time to be alive to what seems like an abrupt halt - doom and gloom - all within a couple of ...

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  • 11 Sep 2012

    GoDaddy: ‘Malfunction’ as the new scapegoat?

    We've been hearing about 'computer glitch' for a while. That's what the talking heads on the news always cite when something goes awry with a computer system. Perhaps 'malfunction' is the new scapegoat? That's the route GoDaddy is taking. They say it was a 'malfunction', not hacking, that took them and presumably hundreds of thousands (millions?) of other systems offline for hours yesterday.I'm sure it had nothing to do with ...

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  • 08 Aug 2012

    Pressure washer v. university data center…guess who wins?

    Oops, Georgia State University forgot to check their data center for leaks. Okay, I'm not going to pick on my friends at GSU. In their defense you cannot - in any way, shape, form or fashion - predict or plan for every possible disaster recovery/business continuity scenario or outcome. But a threat exploiting a weakness that knocks phones and Internet access out for five hours, this is a great example. ...

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  • 13 Dec 2010

    Metrodome collapse video: nothing’s really secure

    Check out this video of the Metrodome collapsing over the weekend. Let this be a reminder that no matter:how much engineering goes into a systemhow much attention to detail the contractors pay during constructionhow much insurance coverage you havehow detailed and "water tight" your contracts arehow many fail-safe features are available "just in case"...that bad things can and will happen. Be it in a building or on your network there's ...

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  • 29 Nov 2010

    The best way to survive an accident

    In life and in business I truly believe there are no accidents, just bad choices. This reminds me of a Lexus commercial I saw a while back that touted how safe their vehicle was. The announcer said "The best way to survive an accident is to avoid it in the first place." Regardless of what you believe about accidents, we do have to look at information security this way. Such ...

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  • 23 Aug 2010

    Panic is not a strategy

    Seriously...it's not.In this new piece I wrote for Security & Technology Design magazine, I talk about the lack of incident response planning being one of if not the biggest risk in any given organization...and what you can do about it:Incident response: The biggest security gaffe of all?If anything, never forget what Captain Chesley Sullenberger said after he landed U.S. Airways flight 1549 into the Hudson River last year:"I didn't have ...

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  • 05 Apr 2010

    Pros and cons of disk imaging

    Disk imaging is one of those awesome technologies that so many businesses can benefit from yet so few people (at least from what I see) are using it. Here's a new piece I wrote for SearchDataBackup.com where I talk about the pros and cons of disk imaging and how you can benefit from it:Using disk imaging software in data backup and recovery...

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  • 05 Feb 2010

    My latest information security content

    Here are my latest information security articles covering policies, internal threats and employee monitoring, and (when all else, fails) incident response. Enjoy!Security policy oversights and mistakes we keep makingThe real deal with internal security threatsMonitoring user activity with network analyzersLack of incident response plan leaves hole in compliance strategyIncident response – the often overlooked component of business continuityAs always, be sure to check out www.principlelogic.com/resources.html for all of my information ...

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  • 20 Jan 2010

    Twitter – how about some capacity planning?

    Keep getting the Twitter is over capacity this morning. Good sign they're popular...still not good for business....

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  • 20 Nov 2009

    “Computer glitch” always to blame for someone’s bad choices

    Here's my two cents on the people failure - I mean "computer glitch" - at Atlanta's Hartsfield airport yesterday. Gotta blame something...Hartsfield outage: "Computer glitch" or FAA "people failure"?...

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