Description
Total length of the course: <1 hour
Threat hunting sits at the sharp end of cybersecurity, but it remains one of the least understood disciplines outside the field. In this conversation, get to grips with what threat hunters actually do, how the discipline has evolved over the past decade, and how practitioners think about adversary behaviour - especially through the lens of Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs). From the realities of non-state hacking groups to advice for students wanting to start threat hunting themselves, the conversation closes with the question that keeps practitioners up at night: what are the main threats we should be hunting right now - and what are we still missing?
Content details
How do you define threat hunting?
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What are ‘tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs)’?
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What first drew you into this kind of work? Was there a specific incident or discovery that hooked you?
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How was threat hunting done ten or fifteen years ago, when you started?
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What does a day in the life of a threat hunter actually look like?
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Should governments be worried about politically motivated hacker groups, or are they more symbolic than effective?
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Is it easier for non-state hacking groups to conduct cyber operations compared to state actors?
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How can students start building threat-hunting experience even without enterprise-scale data and tools?
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What worries you most in the global threat landscape at the moment?
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