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CISSP Study Group

Public • 909 • Free

21 contributions to CISSP Study Group
Once you pass the exam...
Ok, isc2 members, so once you pass the exam, you have to find a CISSP member who will vouch for you, and your experience, else, have iSc2 do it. I found this email buried deep in my inbox...which I missed since passing the exam. Has anyone completed this process yet ? Did you use isc2 or a CISSP certified member? Here is that link: https://apps.isc2.org/Endorsement/#/Home
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New comment Jul 9
Once you pass the exam...
2 likes • Jul 9
I've endorsed several CISSPs. As long as you have evidence of the required experience and have a third party like a manager that I can email who can vouch for the validity it's pretty simple. You will need to know the ISC2 member number of your endorser to enter into the online endorsement form, which is not generally given out on a public forum. Feel free to use me as an endorsement resource if you need.
Wooo!!! I passed!
I PASSED!!!!! I went over 100 qs. Soon as that happened I was sure I failed, so I was just barely paying attention to the rest of the questions, The computer stopped me at 110 Go figure . LOL Im getting a beer!
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New comment Jun 28
Wooo!!! I passed!
3 likes • Jun 26
Congratulations!
Failed Miserably
Failed miserably today. I know the material, that's not it. It's the way the questions are worded. If an orange and an apple? Which way do the birds fly? That's what I saw today, guess I'll read the book again
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New comment Jun 7
0 likes • Jun 6
It's important to re-frame the outcome of your exam: you learned. CISSP is an exam where you either pass or your learn. Now you've seen what it looks like, and you're better prepared for the next time!
Zombieland
In the course of recording a recent podcast, the film Zombieland came up, in particular The Rules the movie uses for comedic effect on how to effectively combat the undead enemies. CISSP is almost exactly like a zombie from the movie: overwhelming, seemingly impenetrable, and relentless. The Zombieland Rules can guide you with CISSP also, though. It's not an impossible exam. It has weaknesses. Armor yourself with The CISSP Rules. #1: Cardio - Exercise of course always helps, but also the bigger theme: prepare. Learn the fundamentals of security. This is not an entry-level exam. #2: Double Tap - Use the Peace of Mind protection when you schedule (if available) to get a second attempt for a discount. Then your first try is just a really, really realistic practice exam (that you may pass!) and you can relax a bit. #3: Beware of Bathrooms - Use breaks during the test judiciously. A break can reset your mind, but also can eat available time. #4: Seatbelts - Strap on all the knowledge available, and there's a ton of resources, both free and paid. Vary your sources for study materials. It's a lot to digest, and different resources highlight different topics in different ways. #5: No Attachments - You will take the exam with nothing other than your brain. No phones, no car keys, no personal items. #14: Always Carry a Change of Underwear - Don't soil yourself during the exam. #16: Opportunity Knocks - If you see easy question, take the win! #17: Don't be a Hero - If you see hard questions that you cannot possibly answer, don't waste time. Answer and move on. You do not need a perfect score, just a passing score. #17: Be a Hero - Budget your time in all aspects: Study time leading up to the exam, as well as available time during the exam. #18: Limber Up - Practice questions are your friend. Remember that explanations are 50% of the value of practice questions. #19: Break It Up - How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. Don't overdo it, just keep pace.
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New comment Jun 8
0 likes • Jun 6
@Chris Harmon Good point, and we discuss on the episode that will drop tomorrow what the best strategies may be for if time starts to become a factor. Our co-host took CISSP on Wednesday and finished with mere minutes, and went the full 150 questions.
0 likes • Jun 6
Indeed he did! You can check his post about it on LI: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7204356708456947712/
What go you into cybersecurity?
Was just wondering how we all ended up here on this path. For me - I think working in cybersecurity chose me more than I chose it. Grew up a lifelong nerd and eventually got old enough to realize I could make money trying to understand how computers and networks work - or don't work! lol
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New comment Jun 5
What go you into cybersecurity?
2 likes • Jun 4
Touched my first computer in 1983. Went to college and had my first email address in 1992. Career started in 1994 making $4.25 an hour (though I didn't realize at the time what it would become). Did my first forensic case in 1995. But the true first thing that opened my eyes was moving off mid-90s dial-up and getting broadband (DSL, if I recall) around 1997/1998 and reading an article about how a cheap blue Linksys router/firewall would improve security over just connecting the computer straight to the DSL line. A whole lot of the fundamentals learned back then still ring true today.
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@matthew-snoddy-3502
CISSP, digital forensic examiner

Active 95d ago
Joined May 4, 2024
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