J Wolfgang Goerlich

Advisory CISO with @Duosec (now @Cisco). Unflinchingly optimistic greybeard in a cyber dystopia. Strategist. Futurist. Chaotic good. Views expressed are my own.

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Book Recommendations:

JW

Recommended by J Wolfgang Goerlich

I chatted with @kim_crawley about her new book, 8 Steps to Better Security. Her favorite step? Building a strong security team by hacking the recruiting pipeline. https://t.co/Hi6ORlCMtZ (from X)

Harden your business against internal and external cybersecurity threats with a single accessible resource. In 8 Steps to Better Security: A Simple Cyber Resilience Guide for Business, cybersecurity researcher and writer Kim Crawley delivers a grounded and practical roadmap to cyber resilience in any organization. Offering you the lessons she learned while working for major tech companies like Sophos, AT&T, BlackBerry Cylance, Tripwire, and Venafi, Crawley condenses the essence of business cybersecurity into eight steps. Written to be accessible to non-technical businesspeople as well as security professionals, and with insights from other security industry leaders, this important book will walk you through how to: Foster a strong security culture that extends from the custodial team to the C-suiteBuild an effective security team, regardless of the size or nature of your businessComply with regulatory requirements, including general data privacy rules and industry-specific legislationTest your cybersecurity, including third-party penetration testing and internal red team specialistsPerfect for CISOs, security leaders, non-technical businesspeople, and managers at any level, 8 Steps to Better Security is also a must-have resource for companies of all sizes, and in all industries.

JW

Recommended by J Wolfgang Goerlich

@BradRubenstein @IanColdwater @sedward5 But what is gossip if not secrets management failing? Btw, how did I miss you wrote a book? Brilliant. I’ve added it to my reading backlog. (from X)

The ability to relentlessly identify and mitigate risk. That is the key to high-performance project teams.Successful projects depend more on your team’s behavior than on their project tools. This book focuses on the fundamentals: simple structures and practices, applied with rigor. These are the tools you need to avoid the late changes that kill project schedules. Underlying all of them are four principles: accountability, transparency, integrity and commitment. Risk Up Front is designed to turn these principles into practice. Murphy’s Law tells us, “If anything can go wrong, it will.” With Risk Up Front, even risks hiding in your team’s blind spot can be discovered and handled, before Murphy has a chance.

JW

Recommended by J Wolfgang Goerlich

@APhoenixinflame User Friendly, Cliff Kuang, is my favorite Audible book I’ve read this year. Very applicable to tech. (from X)

AMAZON BEST BOOKS OF 2019 PICK FORTUNE WRITERS AND EDITORS' RECOMMENDED BOOKS OF 2019 PICK "User Friendly is a tour de force, an engrossing fusion of scholarly research, professional experience and revelations from intrepid firsthand reporting." ―EDWARD TENNER, The New York Times Book Review In User Friendly, Cliff Kuang and Robert Fabricant reveal the untold story of a paradigm that quietly rules our modern lives: the assumption that machines should anticipate what we need. Spanning over a century of sweeping changes, from women’s rights to the Great Depression to World War II to the rise of the digital era, this book unpacks the ways in which the world has been―and continues to be―remade according to the principles of the once-obscure discipline of user-experience design. In this essential text, Kuang and Fabricant map the hidden rules of the designed world and shed light on how those rules have caused our world to change―an underappreciated but essential history that’s pieced together for the first time. Combining the expertise and insight of a leading journalist and a pioneering designer, User Friendly provides a definitive, thoughtful, and practical perspective on a topic that has rapidly gone from arcane to urgent to inescapable. In User Friendly, Kuang and Fabricant tell the whole story for the first time―and you’ll never interact with technology the same way again.

JW

Recommended by J Wolfgang Goerlich

@PhantomSpaceCop @seanfsez Nice! I’m in. If you’re on a history kick, might I recommend a book? “Barefoot Into Cyberspace: Adventures in Search of Techno-Utopia” does a great job of framing the early activist and counter-culture aspects of hacker culture. (from X)

Barefoot Into Cyberspace: Adventures in Search of Techno-Utopia book cover
Becky Hogge, Damien Morris, Christopher Scally

Barefoot into Cyberspace is an inside account of radical hacker culture and the forces that shape it, told in the year WikiLeaks took subversive geek politics into the mainstream. Including some of the earliest on-record material with Julian Assange you are likely to read, Barefoot Into Cyberspace is the ultimate guided tour of the hopes and ideals that are increasingly shaping world events. Beginning at the Chaos Communications Congress of December 2009, where WikiLeaks' Julian Assange and Daniel Domscheit-Berg first presented their world-changing plans to a select audience of the planet's most skilful and motivated hackers, Barefoot Into Cyberspace interweaves an insider's take on the drama that ensued with a thoughtful mix of personal reflections and conversations with key figures in the community aimed at testing the hopes and dreams of the early internet pioneers against the realities of the web today. Will the internet make us more free? Or will the flood of information that courses across its networks only serve to enslave us to powerful interests that are emerging online? How will the institutions of the old world - politics, the media, corporations - affect the hackers' dream for a new world populated not by passive consumers but by active participants? And can we ever live up to their vision of technology's, and its users', potential?