----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tom Limoncelli" <[email protected]>
[...]
> IMHO there are 3 levels of problems: personal, organizational, as a
> profession. The biggest problem
[...]
> Invisibility and lack of credibility in the press
> and in 
[...]
> it requires community action.
[...]

As I said before, I'm doing some rereading and catch up on this whole topic and 
when I reread this message from Tom, a thought occurred to me. I don't know if 
it has merit but I present it for others to consider.

Has anyone considered the "value" of getting involved with the law enforcement 
groups who deal with cyber crime? We have a unique position in that we are at a 
key point in any chain of custody and/or investigation.

What if we offered cyber crime protection groups a chance to see what we do, 
what our systems look like (bring them into our data centers to see 500+ 
servers humming away at any moment, 30,000 bazillion byte storage, etc. and 
help educate them in ways of combating cyber crime from a different perspective.

In return for all this, we can learn some of the critical things that LEO 
requires us to do to protect the integrity of a cyber crime scene.

We get positive press.
We get positive "neighborhood relations".
We get important education that maybe one of ${us} can turn into a LOPSA 
published document that helps other SAs learn how to protect crime scenes.
We can put it on our webpages and tell our congress folks "See what we've 
done!" giving them/us a chance to show some of our value.
_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.lopsa.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/discuss
This list provided by the League of Professional System Administrators
 http://lopsa.org/

Reply via email to