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Source: Australian IT - Posted by Jen Olson
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AFTER five days learning how to enter networks illicitly, 12 more white-hat hackers have joined the growing ranks of IT experts who think and act as the bad guys do.Heightened security concerns have led to a jump in demand for consultancy Ernst & Young's eXtreme Hacking Course, a master class for network professionals employed by major corporations, government departments, law enforcement agencies and IT firms. . . .
AFTER five days learning how to enter networks illicitly, 12 more white-hat hackers have joined the growing ranks of IT experts who think and act as the bad guys do.Heightened security concerns have led to a jump in demand for consultancy Ernst & Young's eXtreme Hacking Course, a master class for network professionals employed by major corporations, government departments, law enforcement agencies and IT firms. The leader of last week's course in Sydney, Ernst & Young director Darren O'Loughlin, said the aim was to encourage a new mindset. "Let's say we've got a suburb where there's a burglar going around, breaking into homes, so people put bars on their windows," he said.
Read this full article at Australian IT
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