I read this article looking for some tidbits but didn't find any.
I do not necessarily agree with the author about why Security sucks. Does Security suck? Maybe but then working in almost any industry can have the same three pitfalls whether a doctor, nurse, accountant, etc.
Do I believe "The cyber adversary is a human on the other end of the keyboard that is incentivized by a return on investment (ROI)." Maybe but not adversaries are after money, some do it for the glory or revenge or just because they can.
As to Budgets, all departments in an organisation need to "fight" for budget and depending on the organization, Security might be at the top of the pile but in others, it is not as important (think here Heavy Manufacturing).
In security, we know we cannot sit back on our laurels and wait for something to happen, we always need to be thinking about "what next".
One thing that we need to be concerned about is the Burnout dues to trying to stay on our toes and handling emergencies as they happen.
These are my thoughts only and would others opine..
d
@dcontestiWhat the author forgets is that the person at the other end will not be a person, either "it" will have no morals, no ethics and will be following pre-programmed instructions or as per Chat-bot fame or mad LLMs, having self delusions of grandeur and superiority in the wrong hands.
In terms of burns out, automation, orchestration and AI is already amongst us, whether we decide to take it and augment our employees is another matter altogether. Burn out is prevalent, amongst those who still act in an reactive manner vs those organisation who adopted a proactive manner to tackling the problem.
The author appears to be wanting some five minute fame, but without much experience of reality.
Yes, humans are at fault for allowing such complex architecture and systems to be constructed, making it vastly more expensive, more complex than it needs to be. Given Cloud environments for instance, the complexity and so many levels of abstraction which are assumed in many cases to be secure, but in fact are not, because everyone else assumed it would be secure.
Regards
Caute_Cautim