In his worldwide bestseller Secrets and Lies, Bruce Schneier made the case that achieving successful computer security is about more than just hardware and software, it's people. Truly, the greatest vulnerability in protecting the business assets of any company often lies with the company's own employees. Although corporations go to great lengths to install state of the art systems, they continue to ignore the human element of information security. If a hacker calls up some VP's assistant and makes false claims in order to get said VP's network password and is given it, it doesn't matter if you have the ultimate firewall and the most powerful server on the market. Without proper training and security procedures, employees are highly susceptible to what are called "social engineering" attacks that lead them to unwittingly open doors within the organization, both in the literal sense and the information technology sense. You can say what you want about Kevin Mitnick, but
Social Engineering : The Art of Human Hacking
Christopher Hadnagy, Paul Wilson
audiobookThe Organized Executive: New Ways to Manage Time, Paper and People
Stephanie Winston
audiobookSummary: The Power of Pull : Review and Analysis of Hagel, Brown and Davison's Book
BusinessNews Publishing
bookCompTIA Network+ N10-008 Certification Guide
Glen D. Singh
bookThe Professional Scrum Master Guide : The unofficial guide to Scrum with real-world projects
Fred Heath
bookDealers of Lightning
Michael A. Hiltzik
audiobookThe Greatest Raid of All
C.E. Lucas Phillips
audiobookPlay Money : Or, How I Quit My Day Job and Made Millions Trading Virtual Loot
Julian Dibbell
audiobookRussian Cyber Activity – The Grizzly Steppe Report : Strategy and Hacking Techniques Used to Interfere the U.S. Elections and to exploit Government and Private Sectors
U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation
bookThe Heart of the Antarctic, Volume 2.
E. H. Shackleton
bookGIS – An Overview of Applications
bookA Biography of the Pixel
Alvy Ray Smith
audiobook