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#1 |
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here's a question, being a security group...
what sort of jobs would a CEH suit, i got a qualification in it, but i imagine alot of companies would be scared by the word "hacker" in the title lol... any ideas? Myke |
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#2 |
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Posts: n/a
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Myke <> writes:
> here's a question, being a security group... > > what sort of jobs would a CEH suit, i got a qualification in it, but i > imagine alot of companies would be scared by the word "hacker" in the > title lol... any ideas? I'd be more concerned by your email address as a potential employer than your EC-Council certification. I know CEH's in penetration tester roles at security consultant firms. I also know a CEH who's moved into doing forensics/incident response work. It's a base level certification and depending on your trainer, a fairly decent one. It'd best serve you in companies or departments that have people who understand security, who understand the value of internal penetration testing and ethical hacking. Joe's mid-size account firm with a 2-person IT group might not be a good fit per se, but larger organizations where you ahve dedicated security guys shouldn't be scared off by the term hacker. In fact, I think ethical hacking is two words that tell the story very well describing the type of work done in a penetration test or value added vulnerability assessment. -- Todd H. http://www.toddh.net/ Todd H. |
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#3 |
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Posts: n/a
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On Sat, 16 Feb 2008 14:37:45 -0600, Todd H. wrote:
> Myke <> writes: > >> here's a question, being a security group... >> >> what sort of jobs would a CEH suit, i got a qualification in it, but i >> imagine alot of companies would be scared by the word "hacker" in the >> title lol... any ideas? > > I'd be more concerned by your email address as a potential employer than > your EC-Council certification. > > I know CEH's in penetration tester roles at security consultant firms. > I also know a CEH who's moved into doing forensics/incident response > work. > > It's a base level certification and depending on your trainer, a fairly > decent one. It'd best serve you in companies or departments that have > people who understand security, who understand the value of internal > penetration testing and ethical hacking. Joe's mid-size account firm > with a 2-person IT group might not be a good fit per se, but larger > organizations where you ahve dedicated security guys shouldn't be scared > off by the term hacker. In fact, I think ethical hacking is two words > that tell the story very well describing the type of work done in a > penetration test or value added vulnerability assessment. thanks, thats pretty useful. as for my email, this is my non-business email, more of a personal email. i do need to get myself a more appropriate one. i'l probably be looking at hosting and perhaps do some sort of website to promote what the differences between hacker and cracker is. Myke |
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