Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

The Psychological Toll of Working in Cybersecurity - When You Can't Unsee What You've Seen

Are you prepared for the psychological toll that comes with handling disturbing content in the cybersecurity world? Welcome to Razorwire, where today we’re exploring the realities behind a career in cyber — from technical warfare to the often-overlooked human cost. In this episode, I’m joined by therapist and consultant Eve Parmiter to examine the real psychological impact of repeated exposure to distressing material that many of us face during incident investigations, content moderation and threat research.

Is your VPN a silent entry point for attackers?

Is your VPN a silent entry point for attackers? Credential stuffing and password spraying exploit weak authentication, giving attackers a way into VPNs and edge network devices — making them prime targets in today’s identity-driven threat landscape. In this snippet, our expert breaks down: Watch the full webinar: Adapting to a New Paradigm in Security – Implementing ITDR in Your SOC: netwrix.com/go/adapting-to-a-new-paradigm-in-security-yt.

Interview: Predictive vs. Reactive with Robert Boles, Founder / CEO of BLOKWORX [248]

On this episode of the Cybersecurity Defenders Podcast we speak with Robert Boles, Founder / CEO of BLOKWORX. A veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, Rob founded BLOKWORX in 2006 to further his passion for creating fast, secure networks. Since 1999 Rob was a core technical contributor and presenter on an Advanced IP Team, delivering bleeding edge WAN and Managed Security services to Small, Mid-level and Fortune 500 businesses around the world.

The MemcycoFM Show: Ep 15 - How CISOs Apply Zero Trust Thinking to Credential Harvesting Prevention

A customer opens their bank’s login page. At least, that’s what they think. The design is flawless, the fields are familiar. But it’s a cloned site built to harvest credentials. Within seconds, their details are replayed against the genuine portal. To the bank’s defenses, it looks like business as usual — same username, same password, same MFA prompt.