*sigh* - I know I'm going to regret this post...but...okay, I'll go play in traffic here...
In the technical education sector, our drive is to ensure students are employable when they hit the workforce. We partner with CompTIA specifically, but teaching Microsoft, a bit of Cisco - the list goes on. But the private sector's employability is what is graded, lest we lose Title IV. The big box colleges don't have those same constraints. So when we teach, we have to teach to certification and employability - it's a matter of survival for our programs. Again, the big box colleges don't have those same issues - and they are far well funded than we are.
Personally, some of this young blood can peel through the layers before politicians and their in-pocket judges can react. The speed of information retrieval is vital in an audit; it keeps the guilty from being able to hide the bodies and finding the fraud. But it wouldn't be the first time the government has had people with sketchy backgrounds in its midst with security clearances.
The doge.gov website went online as of this morning which, we hope, will provide an accounting of, not just the fraud, but the wasted spending in various departments. I personally look forward to shining that big light into the Department of Education. Our school, IntelliTec, is one of those evil for-profit prop/trade schools that get the shade for high tuitions. Thing is, our sector does not have access to government funding, apart from Title IV and VA, where we have much more stringent rules, such as Gainful Employment, 90/10 (85/15) and so on, as well as our accreditors' requirements for graduation and placement. The big State U schools don't have the same rules as we do. The dirty secret is that the cost to educate a student is the same - public or private. Subsidy makes all the difference. And I have personally observed wasted spending on programs that do not result in outcomes.Why have they found none?
In the technical education sector, our drive is to ensure students are employable when they hit the workforce. We partner with CompTIA specifically, but teaching Microsoft, a bit of Cisco - the list goes on. But the private sector's employability is what is graded, lest we lose Title IV. The big box colleges don't have those same constraints. So when we teach, we have to teach to certification and employability - it's a matter of survival for our programs. Again, the big box colleges don't have those same issues - and they are far well funded than we are.
How are we defining 'hacker'? The traditional 'play with technology to see how it works' or what we might define as a 'clandestine penetration specialist'?Why are they using hackers with ties to cybercriminal activity and not forensic auditors?
Personally, some of this young blood can peel through the layers before politicians and their in-pocket judges can react. The speed of information retrieval is vital in an audit; it keeps the guilty from being able to hide the bodies and finding the fraud. But it wouldn't be the first time the government has had people with sketchy backgrounds in its midst with security clearances.