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by austincheney
1693 days ago
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I worked in information security for 10 years before I became a developer, so I seen both sides of the fence. Most developers believe they know more about security than they really do qualified by their owned invented nonsense and then invent all kinds of fictitious bullshit to qualify those invented opinions. > How many of those 250 questions are related to proper implementation of cryptography? Many. Back when I took the test there were 10 knowledge domains, one of which was cryptography, and cryptography by far got the lions share of attention. The rest of your comment falls apart into some bizarre nonsense to explain an argument from ignorance. https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/cgi-bin/uy/webpages.cgi?... If you no actual experience on the subject why would make such spurious biased recommendations? |
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That is not an argument from ignorance, that is simple fact.
If you are hiring for "security" at an enterprise company where the role generally consists of vendor management then sure, CISSP is probably exactly what you need/want.
If the certification was worth something it would feature more prominently in requirements for companies with excelent security orgs. Notice it's completely absent from https://www.tesla.com/careers/search/job/security-engineer-f... and https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/1727694?gh_jid=... and https://jobs.apple.com/en-au/details/200293563/product-secur...
Instead note the prominence of proven vulns, low level language experience, etc.
Lesson is simple. If you want to be good (and paid a shit ton) disregard certs, acquire CVEs.