Best bet is to look at the ISC2 member area where the chapter directory is located, https://www.isc2.org/chapters/chapter-directory
This lists the public San Diego Google forum as :
You can find find any chapters near you by searching here:
https://www.isc2.org/Chapters/Chapter-Directory
(If you cannot find one, maybe you could start one!)
Which quickly shows:
Replied whilst I was typing mine (below) - but you win! 🙂
Certified Information Systems Security Professional is an independent information security certification granted by the International Information System Security Certification Consortium, also known as (ISC)².
@crystal_waston wrote:Certified Information Systems Security Professional is an independent information security certification granted by the International Information System Security Certification Consortium, also known as (ISC)².
This is really getting funny. Crystal is now plagiarizing from Nancy @nancy_perez who used that statement in two separate Community threads:
https://community.isc2.org/t5/Certifications/Passed-CISSP-08-10-18/td-p/13494
https://community.isc2.org/t5/Certifications/CISSP-Passed-Sharing/td-p/12965
Whereas Nancy plagiarized the sentence from the LinkedIn page for an Indian company, Codec Networks:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/codec-networks/
Time to start cross-linking these posts into Outing Nancy Perez and Crystal Waston.
I hope Grandpa Rob @rslade and Amanda @amandavanceISC2 are watching the trend.
> CraginS (Contributor III) mentioned you in a post! Join the conversation below:
> I hope Grandpa Rob @rslade and Amanda @amandavanceISC2 are watching
> the trend.
If they are both bots from the same herd, plagiarising from each other is pretty much guaranteed. (I used to use that to my advantage teaching at unis and college: I told my classes that if I got duplicate papers/projects, that I'd mark them--and divide the mark by the number of people turning in the same thing. Once had a student get all the way to "But I didn't know ..." before realizing that it wasn't going to work finishing off with "... they were going to copy the same paper I did.")
@rslade wrote:> CraginS (Contributor III) mentioned you in a post! Join the conversation below:
I told my classes that if I got duplicate papers/projects, that I'd mark them--and divide the mark by the number of people turning in the same thing.
Back when I was in education, we went one step further. We let the submitters tell us how to divide the mark.