Oooph I know the feeling. I have been for months and months trying to get the sustained energy to work on OffSec training. Hasn't happened yet.
- Been reviewing Flipboard's "Surf" app (social web browser)
- Working on some other write-ups for my blog... such as, overcoming my own burnout to write a piece ABOUT said burnout
- Assessing some (un-named) endpoint security software at work
- Testing out some other Fediverse client software, specifically, been using the Mona app more recently
- Going to start thinking about getting back into some training of some kind... not sure what though (yet)
Hello! 👋
You'll need technical chops sure, but the hard part imo is finding the gigs. For that, good ol' fashioned networking. Start a blog, build a portfolio, network with folks and take work where you can find it. Good luck and happy new year!
I've seen a lot of Cybersecurity salary surveys on Reddit (sorry to linking to the other place - https://www.reddit.com/r/cybersecurity/comments/15fo0e6/how_much_are_you_making_in_cybersecurity/). Levels.fyi is also pretty accurate for cyber/software engineer data across the various levels, especially at your typical "tech" companies (https://www.levels.fyi/)
There's no one path in to be sure. But there's lots of ways to educate yourself and build a "hireable" portfolio from home and without getting a typical 4-year degree. Learn to code, get some applicable certifications, start a website (as your digital portfolio), contribute to open source or spin up your own project(s), etc... The IT/software/cyber market is not at its peak (in terms of opportunity), but we're definitely still here and there are openings. It's still a great field with a lot of perks if you can weather the challenges of "breaking in". It's also not going anywhere, despite what some may lead you to believe given the advent of "AI". For those of us in tech, we'll be the first to tell you that our jobs are pretty safe.
If it's infosec you might be interested in, you may find this guide I put together and typically share interesting - https://shellsharks.com/getting-into-information-security.
Good luck!
China. Also, no one is saying FB is fine, but since it’s American then gov pretty much shrugs. It was FB after all feeding the NSA yeah?
Yes. Happens in a lot of companies I think, especially “older” companies that don’t have big security focus. Honestly, I think if you’re a good manager you can be successful even if you aren’t super technical.
I am a pretty heavy “Fediverse user” (Mastodon + Lemmy/Kbin) and my feeds have VERY little Linux talk. There is an incredibly diverse set of folks on the ‘verse but admittedly discoverability is hard. If the only people in your circle are Linux nerds then that’s all that might be boosted into your timeline. Put some effort into finding other folks and unfollow some of the Linux-only voices :-).
Was / am still trying to work on the WEB-300 course. I've also dumped personal money to it at one point or another =/