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July 31, 2023

Should you disclose your cyber attack?

This week the SEC has made a new rule that publicly traded companies must disclose any cyber attacks within four days.  What if you're not a publicly traded company in the US?  Should you reveal what happened to you?  We bring in a wireless cyber security expert, Scott Schober of Berkeley Varitronics Systems, to talk about this topic.  Closely related is also what should you do when you personally make a big mistake.  Should you tell your boss?  What if you're a boss and someone makes a mistake?  How should you respond?  We get into all of this and more in the week's exciting episode.

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Transcript

Speaker:

how open should you be when things go wrong?

 

Speaker:

Should you tell your boss, you made a huge mistake.

 

Speaker:

Should your company tell everyone they got hacked this week?

 

Speaker:

We talk with a wireless cybersecurity expert about this really important topic.

 

Speaker:

I hope you enjoy it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Hi, and welcome to Backup Central's Restore it all podcast.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm your host, w Curtis Preston, a k a, Mr.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Backup.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And I have with me, I think might be the only thing between me and a little

 

W. Curtis Preston:

dog Prasanna Malaiyandi that's it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

How's it going Prasanna?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I am good and I hope the dog wins out.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Oh.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

What happened?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

What happened to

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I mean, you, you, you have, you have a little dog, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I, I, I technically don't, I, I have, I, you know, I have a grand

 

W. Curtis Preston:

dog who ha has been living with us.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, you know, my, my daughter and her husband live here with their dog,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

um, for a little bit, and I'm not used to having a dog around, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So there are things that if you're used to having a dog around you just.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Don't do.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, one of those would be if per chance, I don't know, you've got a podcast

 

W. Curtis Preston:

recording coming up at say, I don't know, one o'clock, and perhaps you realize that

 

W. Curtis Preston:

say 1240, that you haven't eaten anything and you're gonna starve to death by two.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And so you just go heat up some enchiladas and you put them on

 

W. Curtis Preston:

a plate on your desk inside your office where you close the door.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, except for like one minute, you go to get your AirPods

 

W. Curtis Preston:

because you forgot your AirPod.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Just, just theoretically speaking, you go to get your AirPods and you leave the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

door cracked, not wide open, but cracked, and you say to yourself as you're walking

 

W. Curtis Preston:

away, BREW is not going to like open the door, go into the office, climb up

 

W. Curtis Preston:

onto my chair, and then attempt to eat.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

My enchiladas, she wouldn't do that in the

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Oh no.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm away from my desk.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I come back and my enchiladas are upside

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

floor.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

on the floor with the plate on top of them and bru just

 

W. Curtis Preston:

sitting there on my chair, like, um,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

on her face?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

uh, she didn't actually get, get too much apparently,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

uh, because the, the, but she, yeah.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

so, but maybe that should tell you that if she's not

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

going to eat your enchiladas, maybe you shouldn't eat your enchiladas.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I'm just saying Curtis,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

No, I think she just didn't have enough time.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

She just didn't have enough time.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

So basically this

 

W. Curtis Preston:

to remember to like close the doors, you know, at all times.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It's just not something I'm used to doing, especially since we became

 

W. Curtis Preston:

empty nesters a little while ago.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, so I'm just sort of, everything's open all the time.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and, uh, but yeah, so that dog,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Well, whose fault is it for leaving the chair next

 

W. Curtis Preston:

hey, hey, hey.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Don't blame the victim.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Don't blame the victim.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I am defending the dog who does not

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

have a voice on this podcast.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Your Honor, I present the, the case of the, the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Preston household versus Brule.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, I submit the plate on the floor.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, I could just see, I could just see, you know, a brew on the stand of

 

W. Curtis Preston:

like the little, the puppy dog eyes.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

She's gonna give

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you the

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

see.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

what was going through my head was like Snoopy.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

That's what was going through my head.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It was like brew being Snoopy, being like it wasn't me.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It was me.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It was totally her.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

She was caught white handed, um,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

this means is after the podcast is done, when

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

you go get some lunch, you should just grab her a snack as well.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Okay.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm prohibited from giving her food.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I, I, I have

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Even her food, even her snack food.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Well, she has a set snack time and, and this isn't it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So, um, I, I don't want to get in trouble with my daughter, um, or the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

way, the way my son-in-law, uh, says it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

He's like, it's fine, Curtis.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

If you want her to live like three years less, it's fine.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That's the way he says, you know,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Hey, so my parents, so growing up I am sure our

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

guest is like, what is going on here?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

So growing up, my parents had a dog and we had a vet who was Indian,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

and the vet would always be like, look, I know you guys are Indian.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I know you love to feed your dog Indian food.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Don't do it.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's unhealthy.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

My parents ve everything like Indian Sweetss, Indian food,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

like for his birthday, they would make him special Indian food.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

He lived till he was 17 and a half, so, so there you go.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

So exactly.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm, I'm not having that argument with my daughter.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um,

 

Scott Schober:

Hm.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Anyway.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Well, uh, it's time to bring our guest on, uh, if he, is he still, is he still here?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

He's still here.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

He's still here.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Don't worry.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

in wireless and cybersecurity, and since 1990 has

 

W. Curtis Preston:

been the c e O of Berkeley Veratronic Systems, a wireless detection,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

manufacturing, and production company.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

He is also the host of the What Keeps You Up At Night

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Podcast, which is how I met him.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Welcome to the pod, Scott Schober.

 

Scott Schober:

Hey, great to be with you.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Do you have a pet Scott?

 

Scott Schober:

I, I do.

 

Scott Schober:

And as you guys were talking about some of these things, I was thinking of my dog.

 

Scott Schober:

We have a dog, Daisy, she just turned four years old.

 

Scott Schober:

Mini golden doodle, lot of fun, high maintenance, but a lot of fun.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, this is, this particular dog is a cockapoo.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and so it, it, you know, she would've had to literally jump up on my chair and

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I was, you know, I was just thinking, she's not gonna do that in the little

 

W. Curtis Preston:

time I have, in the little time I'm gone.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Not so much.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The, the, the smell of the food was just too, you know, too.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Too enticing.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, if you wanna find brew, all you gotta do is start cooking something

 

W. Curtis Preston:

and she'll just magically show up.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, so I, Scott, I gotta, I gotta say, so it looks like the company

 

W. Curtis Preston:

that you're at has been around longer than you've been there.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

'cause you, you were saying that it has 50 years of experience.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The company has been around for 50 years, but you've been there 30 years.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, 'cause normally when I see somebody who's been somewhere for a really long

 

W. Curtis Preston:

time, it's like a company they started.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And so of course they're there, but in your case, they brought you in

 

W. Curtis Preston:

after they'd already been going for.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Close to 20 years or something in that neighborhood,

 

Scott Schober:

yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

The interesting story is that it's a family business, so it's

 

Scott Schober:

actually founded by my father.

 

Scott Schober:

Still our c t o.

 

Scott Schober:

He actually happens to be here today, uh, just checking in.

 

Scott Schober:

But he, he's since retired and, uh, he founded the business.

 

Scott Schober:

So it's really what I grew up with.

 

Scott Schober:

I did actually start technically working for the company when I was in sixth grade.

 

Scott Schober:

Uh, he, he challenged me.

 

Scott Schober:

We had a number of, uh, keypads.

 

Scott Schober:

These were wired keypads, old school keypads way, way back in the day.

 

Scott Schober:

And he said, for every keypad that you fix, you'll get a dollar.

 

Scott Schober:

And he showed me how to solder.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and make measurements on a resistor and iOS and things like that.

 

Scott Schober:

And I spent the day going through hundreds and hundreds of, of these

 

Scott Schober:

keypads and realized, wow, I can make a lot of money fixing these things.

 

Scott Schober:

And eventually I kind of got into the business and, and doing everything.

 

Scott Schober:

So, um, it's kind of cool growing up in the family business.

 

Scott Schober:

'cause I did everything from, you know, cleaning, cutting

 

Scott Schober:

a lawn, painting, soldering.

 

Scott Schober:

I went to school formally.

 

Scott Schober:

And for, um, computer software development and telecommunications.

 

Scott Schober:

I went to Kane University for undergraduate stuff and graduate

 

Scott Schober:

stuff at, at New York University.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, and it's kind of cool because it gets me to cross different things.

 

Scott Schober:

You know, you talk about it in your daily life as a family, but

 

Scott Schober:

it's also part of your business.

 

Scott Schober:

And then also, I, I like to, you know, I'm, I was a gamer growing up.

 

Scott Schober:

My father worked for a number of years at Atari.

 

Scott Schober:

So he brought home all the latest and greatest games.

 

Scott Schober:

My brother and I, we were game testers and we'd stay up to the wee hours

 

Scott Schober:

of the night testing games, finding the bugs, documenting them, and then

 

Scott Schober:

feeding it back to the programmers.

 

Scott Schober:

So it, it's kind of neat 'cause you're around the culture growing up in it.

 

Scott Schober:

It's part of your life.

 

Scott Schober:

It's part of your D n a.

 

Scott Schober:

So it's kind of exciting and that to me keeps me going from a

 

Scott Schober:

standpoint of innovating products and ideas within the company.

 

Scott Schober:

And I have people here that are actually implementing and doing it, that have

 

Scott Schober:

PhDs and far smarter than I am that can actually make the technology work.

 

Scott Schober:

So I'm kind of the the guy that's in between and gets my hands

 

Scott Schober:

in a little bit of everything.

 

Scott Schober:

I know enough about everything to be dangerous.

 

Scott Schober:

So it's kind of a fun business and it's niche, very niche cybersecurity.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and hardcore design.

 

Scott Schober:

We're really hardware designers, which is a little bit different

 

Scott Schober:

than most companies out there.

 

Scott Schober:

It seems like everybody does software, be it apps or, or high

 

Scott Schober:

level programming or whatever.

 

Scott Schober:

And yeah, we do that too.

 

Scott Schober:

We do program, but our expertise is really at the core, the, the hardware

 

Scott Schober:

and understanding radio frequency, uh, be it the wireless I always like

 

Scott Schober:

in our company is where we're at.

 

Scott Schober:

The intersection of wireless and cybersecurity is kind of where

 

Scott Schober:

we fit, which is kind of cool.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Nice.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

So you shifted then, I'm guessing you talked about keypads early on, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And so at what point were you like, okay, keypads are great and

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

now let's shift into this wireless cybersecurity aspect of things.

 

Scott Schober:

Good.

 

Scott Schober:

Good question.

 

Scott Schober:

The shift into the first part of your, your question, wireless

 

Scott Schober:

really happened about mid 1980s.

 

Scott Schober:

We actually got a call as a company.

 

Scott Schober:

Again, being a hardcore hardware company, design company, people come

 

Scott Schober:

to us with problems and we provide solutions hopefully that, that solve

 

Scott Schober:

their problems and are affordable.

 

Scott Schober:

And, uh, we were approached by a company down in Washington, DC and said, Hey,

 

Scott Schober:

we've got an idea for developing some test equipment, but we don't know how to do it.

 

Scott Schober:

You guys might know how to.

 

Scott Schober:

We said, okay.

 

Scott Schober:

We, we, we were hired for it took on the assignment and we

 

Scott Schober:

developed actually the first test tools to test out the cell towers.

 

Scott Schober:

And this was, um, very interesting because nobody knew at the time that

 

Scott Schober:

wireless cell phones would take off.

 

Scott Schober:

So we were in the early days of amps phones and we developed the actual test

 

Scott Schober:

receivers and transmitters, and worked on some of the propagation analysis software

 

Scott Schober:

so you could see what the coverage was.

 

Scott Schober:

And we started work with this company.

 

Scott Schober:

We worked for them for well over 10 years, developing test tools, which

 

Scott Schober:

really took our business, allowed us to grow, and we're still doing it today.

 

Scott Schober:

We're still developing test receivers and transmitters that we sell globally,

 

Scott Schober:

but we're not selling it for the old school e amps and things like that.

 

Scott Schober:

It went from second generation, third, fourth.

 

Scott Schober:

Now we're into the five G technologies that we always hear about, that

 

Scott Schober:

our smartphones work about.

 

Scott Schober:

Well, a number of years into that, what I started to notice was.

 

Scott Schober:

Business has changed and the way propagation analysis done, it's

 

Scott Schober:

more done predictive analysis.

 

Scott Schober:

In other words, you can use advanced algorithms to actually

 

Scott Schober:

figure out how well signals propagate at different frequencies.

 

Scott Schober:

So you don't need to do the hardcore drive studies where you're manually driving

 

Scott Schober:

around collecting this data, spending thousands of hours and so on and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

So we, I said, let's shift the business a little bit and focus on

 

Scott Schober:

the security since we understand.

 

Scott Schober:

Smartphones and we know their vulnerabilities and we work

 

Scott Schober:

with a lot of the companies.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's analyze that space and see if there's some tools and

 

Scott Schober:

technology we could develop.

 

Scott Schober:

We started to do that and it really took off and, and the short of the story is the

 

Scott Schober:

more we started doing it, I was brought in to, to share some expertise and things.

 

Scott Schober:

We knew how to keep your company safe and so and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

Well, the more I did that, the more I got a target on my back and the

 

Scott Schober:

company's back and hackers went after us, and now it started with.

 

Scott Schober:

Credit card compromise, debit card compromise, Twitter account compromise,

 

Scott Schober:

repeated DDoS attacks to our online store, so we couldn't do commerce, and finally

 

Scott Schober:

we had $65,000 stolen out of our checking account, became a federal investigation,

 

Scott Schober:

paperwork, email, so and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

The story goes on and on in the process.

 

Scott Schober:

I thought it was kind of interesting because what do you do here you are as a

 

Scott Schober:

wireless cybersecurity company, sharing expertise and advice, and you're a victim.

 

Scott Schober:

And you made mistakes.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and I, ironically, I came, I was doing an interview at the time, it was in

 

Scott Schober:

New York City, Bloomberg, uh, TV stopped to get a bite to eat, and I got a phone

 

Scott Schober:

call mysteriously from Associated Press.

 

Scott Schober:

Don't know how they got my number or how they heard about it, but they

 

Scott Schober:

said, we heard from reliable sources.

 

Scott Schober:

Your company was hacked and you were the victim of a cyber attack.

 

Scott Schober:

Would you be willing to go on the record and share this?

 

Scott Schober:

And I said, yikes.

 

Scott Schober:

And I said, okay, I'll, I'll, I'll be willing to share it.

 

Scott Schober:

A, a allowing that I share maybe my misfortunes and my mistakes and

 

Scott Schober:

hopefully some of the things I've learned so other business owners don't

 

Scott Schober:

go down the same path that I've done.

 

Scott Schober:

And they agreed, I agreed, turned out to be a great story.

 

Scott Schober:

It it, it ended up getting me more interviews and more interest and I ended

 

Scott Schober:

up being, um, talked into writing a book.

 

Scott Schober:

Again, I'm, I'm not a writer.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, I agreed to it.

 

Scott Schober:

I said, let me try it and see.

 

Scott Schober:

Uh, so I did self-publishing.

 

Scott Schober:

It took me a little more than two years to write it.

 

Scott Schober:

It was my first book called Hacked Again, because of the, the story of basically

 

Scott Schober:

being hacked as a, a cybersecurity expert.

 

Scott Schober:

And, uh, it kind of opened my eyes up to thing and it opened

 

Scott Schober:

the doors up to many other things.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I probably wouldn't be talking to the two of you right now if

 

Scott Schober:

those chain of events didn't happen.

 

Scott Schober:

And then subsequently I put out a second book, cybersecurity's

 

Scott Schober:

Everybody's Business where it went more mainstream to other businesses.

 

Scott Schober:

And then finally, Another project I had was I, I saw that seniors

 

Scott Schober:

were being targeted and it really bothered me, so I wrote a book,

 

Scott Schober:

senior Cyber and so on and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

Now thinking about book number four and getting that, the wheels in

 

Scott Schober:

motion for that, when I find time.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, that's the, that's the problem with once you,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

once you get over that, uh, that initial hurdle of writing that first

 

W. Curtis Preston:

book, uh, you know, I, my first book.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Took me three years to write.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and it, and, and I, I thought I was, I thought I was gonna die.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The, but like the first, the, the first thing I wrote was actually

 

W. Curtis Preston:

an article for Unix Review Magazine back in 1990 something.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And I remember being terrified about, You know, the whole, like, I'm gonna

 

W. Curtis Preston:

have a mistake in this article, which for the record I did, I had a

 

W. Curtis Preston:

mistake, I had a misunderstanding of the way Oracle hot backups worked.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And uh, and I published that and I'm like, oh, I'm gonna be found,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm gonna, I'm, you know, you know, imposter syndrome, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, uh, but from that, uh, I basically, you know, did the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

proposal to write my book.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And it took about three years to, to write it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and then the, you know, the next one that I wrote was much smaller and

 

W. Curtis Preston:

easier to digest and, you know, and so I had a running joke that like, 'cause

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the first one was like 700 pages, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The, the next one was like 350 pages.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And I said, I, I found out the formula.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

My next book's gonna be 30 pages.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right.

 

Scott Schober:

Short little

 

Scott Schober:

ebook.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

less time and sulfur around the same price.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, but yeah, once you, once you've got that process down, uh, it's,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

it's, um, so you, you, you don't have to reveal it here, but you have,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you have an idea for your next book.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah, actually, I, I, it's actually, uh, three or four different ideas I

 

Scott Schober:

have and, and the, the hardest part is focusing on what do I wanna write about?

 

Scott Schober:

And I'm starting to write about each one, which is probably not a good way to do it.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, I get distracted, I get, I get, I lose focus.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, but, but sometimes writing, I think, and, and maybe it's partly me and maybe

 

Scott Schober:

it's other people find this, or I'm curious, maybe even you find this Curtis,

 

Scott Schober:

it's almost therapeutic sometimes.

 

Scott Schober:

You get a lot of stuff up here as you kind of put pen to paper.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I've, I've kind of switched over actually doing, uh, speech to text.

 

Scott Schober:

Somebody showed me that it's much faster by the time I got to the third book.

 

Scott Schober:

I was like, wow, six months.

 

Scott Schober:

Bam.

 

Scott Schober:

Knock it out.

 

Scott Schober:

This is great.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, and, and you understand also the process.

 

Scott Schober:

The first book I wrote this much and then trim, trim, trim, trim, lose

 

Scott Schober:

this chapter, reorganize and, and you find you wasted a lot of time.

 

Scott Schober:

If I spend more time up front and I think about it up here and

 

Scott Schober:

organize kind of, kind of the flow.

 

Scott Schober:

Get the thesis and here are the chapters and then I stick to it.

 

Scott Schober:

I can, I can get through it quickly.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think once you commit to it and then you stick with it, and I did, I

 

Scott Schober:

do tend to, to write at weird hours.

 

Scott Schober:

My family might go to sleep, my kids and the dog at 11 o'clock at night and I'll

 

Scott Schober:

say, okay, I'm gonna put three hours in and just get this outta my head.

 

Scott Schober:

And then I'll be thinking about it more.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm on a plane ride for a couple hours.

 

Scott Schober:

I'll get this part of it outta the head.

 

Scott Schober:

And I have a story I wanna share here.

 

Scott Schober:

Now I'm gonna go back.

 

Scott Schober:

So you, you tend to do this a little bit.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, it's a good process though.

 

Scott Schober:

I learned a lot and I did it self-publishing.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm not sure how you did it if, if you went that way, but I, I knew zero and

 

Scott Schober:

I had to learn it all from scratch.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and I, I also did soft cover, hard cover ebook, um, did

 

Scott Schober:

the whole, uh, audible as well.

 

Scott Schober:

So going through all of that, those processes with three books, it kind of

 

Scott Schober:

scares me to go to book number four, but I know, I know all the difficult

 

Scott Schober:

things that I have to overcome, the objectives and how to get through it.

 

Scott Schober:

But, uh, but I agree with you.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I used to get caught up on, oh, I'm gonna spell this wrong, or the

 

Scott Schober:

sentence structure or whatever.

 

Scott Schober:

'cause I'm not a writer per se.

 

Scott Schober:

And, uh, I think I took one class in college, creative writing.

 

Scott Schober:

It goes back a long time ago.

 

Scott Schober:

And when I got to the class, I said to the professor, I said,

 

Scott Schober:

I don't know how to write.

 

Scott Schober:

I wanna learn how to write.

 

Scott Schober:

He goes, don't worry.

 

Scott Schober:

This year we switched to computers, and I know nothing about computers.

 

Scott Schober:

I heard you're a computer science major.

 

Scott Schober:

If you help me and all the girls in the class computers, you'll get an A in

 

Scott Schober:

this course and I'll teach you to write.

 

Scott Schober:

I said, fair Deal.

 

Scott Schober:

And I got an A in the course.

 

Scott Schober:

Uh, so I, I, I kind of give him some credit.

 

Scott Schober:

I learned some bit of writing from him, but I was more of a writer for,

 

Scott Schober:

you know, an article for Forbes or doing blogs and things like that.

 

Scott Schober:

All short, short stuff.

 

Scott Schober:

But it, it does help you, I think, because it forces you to do research.

 

Scott Schober:

It, it forces you to think I.

 

Scott Schober:

And not be too quick to put everything down on paper, but make, make sure you're

 

Scott Schober:

doing the fact checking and you understand what you're explaining and you can

 

Scott Schober:

break it down so the reader can get it.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's an important part of it.

 

Scott Schober:

So I kind of had to teach myself a lot of those steps and I, and I a

 

Scott Schober:

lot of help from others, honestly.

 

Scott Schober:

Talking to others, what are the techniques they use?

 

Scott Schober:

I talked to one gentleman, he wrote 185 books

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Wow.

 

Scott Schober:

How did you write 185 books and going strong?

 

Scott Schober:

And he shared a few tips with me that I applied and I said, wow, this does work.

 

Scott Schober:

And it really helps keep you focused and allows you to progress.

 

Scott Schober:

And I mean, after that I actually got asked to do to, to

 

Scott Schober:

go to two different book shows.

 

Scott Schober:

One at Jacob Javit Center, I think one in Chicago.

 

Scott Schober:

And explain the process of not knowing how to write to being a self-published author

 

Scott Schober:

and, and some different things that you can do in the process to make it easier.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and to me it's been a wonderful blessing that, that I've been able

 

Scott Schober:

to do it and learn from so many great people and, and be on great shows like

 

Scott Schober:

this and, and share different stories.

 

Scott Schober:

So it's a lot of fun.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, you and I are gonna have to have a

 

W. Curtis Preston:

longer conversation about that.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

'cause it sounds like we could swap some stories.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

By the way, just real quick, I will say I'm a huge fan of

 

W. Curtis Preston:

voice to text, so I use Dragon.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, my last three books have been written entirely in voice.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, basically my, my key is that I, I'm a storyteller and I'm.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You know, and what's funny is people like Prasannawho know me personally, and then

 

W. Curtis Preston:

they're, uh, they're a, they're a text, they're a, a technical editor for me.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

They tell me that when they read it, they hear it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

In my voice.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

hear Curtis's voice.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I mean?

 

Scott Schober:

I hear it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Because, because that's the way I write.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I write the way I talk.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, I, I agree with you, you, you need to spend more time upfront.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, in, in fact, the last book, not on purpose, but the last

 

W. Curtis Preston:

book, it took me 10 years to agree on what I was gonna write on,

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

and then three months I think to, to write it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, but yeah, it took, it, it, I just, I just kept, it was one of those, you know,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you know what, get off the pot finally.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and, uh, was able to get, and I, I am, I am working on book four as well,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

but, uh, anyway, enough of what's that?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

the.

 

Scott Schober:

I was just gonna share one thing, 'cause you, you hit the nail on

 

Scott Schober:

the head on one thing just to expound on.

 

Scott Schober:

People always ask me, what do you need to do to write a book?

 

Scott Schober:

And people think time and money, and da, da, da, all that stuff.

 

Scott Schober:

I always say that the most important ingredient I feel

 

Scott Schober:

is being a good storyteller.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think if you could be a good storyteller, you can learn how to write,

 

Scott Schober:

you can learn how to spell check and edit, and you can get help with the graphics

 

Scott Schober:

and the cover and the distribution, all the other things you can get help with.

 

Scott Schober:

But if you can't tell a good story, nobody wants to read your book and, and

 

Scott Schober:

you don't write a book to make a lot of money or to retire as a millionaire,

 

Scott Schober:

anybody that thinks those type of things shouldn't be writing a book.

 

Scott Schober:

If you have a story up here that you can get in the book, you, you got it.

 

Scott Schober:

That's success right there.

 

Scott Schober:

I feel.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

absolutely.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

So I'm not a published author like both of you.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Um, but uh, just sort of going back to your first book, right, Scott,

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

it's, and or the situation you were talking about when you got hit

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

with cyber, uh, by a cyber attack.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's, it come up on the podcast a lot of times where many organizations get hit by.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Criminals, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And have these cyber incidences, but they don't say anything.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And that's just such a huge disservice to the public and other

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

people who want to learn about, okay, how do I protect myself?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I'm glad to hear that your first book was like, Hey, here's what I could do to

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

sort of prevent and help other companies prevent these from happening to them.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Have you seen that?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

That still continues to be.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Beneficial or that more people are opening up, or is it sort of one

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

of those closely guarded secrets?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I don't want to air my dirty laundry.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I see a mix a lot.

 

Scott Schober:

A lot of the close colleagues that I think I've, I've gotten to know over the years,

 

Scott Schober:

have shared their horror stories, their, their mistakes, their misfortunes, and

 

Scott Schober:

that that granted them a level of success.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I think of, um, Some of the things that happened to Brian Krebs, he

 

Scott Schober:

a former Washington Post reporter.

 

Scott Schober:

And now he focuses on, on cyber crime and reporting that he's got

 

Scott Schober:

some incredible stories, how he's was and continued to be targeted

 

Scott Schober:

and how it had to change his life.

 

Scott Schober:

And I, I, I could certainly relate to that.

 

Scott Schober:

I could feel that way.

 

Scott Schober:

Talking to Kevin Mitnick, getting closer to him and interviewing

 

Scott Schober:

him and talking to him.

 

Scott Schober:

He's had some cool background stuff and, and he, he, he has a, a flare for, for

 

Scott Schober:

magic and, and hacking and phone freaking, and all these other type of things.

 

Scott Schober:

And I can relate to a lot of that.

 

Scott Schober:

But hearing again, he was targeted and constantly people go after him.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's a common theme that I'm seeing.

 

Scott Schober:

And most of these people that I, I deal with these other, um, I guess

 

Scott Schober:

cybersecurity people, they end up writing books and sharing their

 

Scott Schober:

story and sharing their misfortunes and problems that they have.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think in some ways, maybe that's how we help ourselves.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and, and learn from our own mistakes by feeling like, you know, if I share

 

Scott Schober:

some of the, the stupid things I did, other people won't make these same

 

Scott Schober:

mistakes and they'll be better than me.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's important.

 

Scott Schober:

It, it's, it, part of it's, I feel like it's teaching and sharing knowledge.

 

Scott Schober:

And I often learn from people, not just the things they tell you, Hey, you know,

 

Scott Schober:

create a long password, but you also learn when, when you hear somebody, well, I

 

Scott Schober:

created a weak password and I used it on 20 counts, and now look what happened.

 

Scott Schober:

And it, it really.

 

Scott Schober:

Puts up in your head, geez, I'm never gonna do that.

 

Scott Schober:

That was really stupid.

 

Scott Schober:

But at a teaching moment.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's, that's one thing that I, I've had the gift to be, the

 

Scott Schober:

ability to try to share these things.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think writing a book leads to so many more things, and that's

 

Scott Schober:

what most people don't realize.

 

Scott Schober:

It leads to a podcast show.

 

Scott Schober:

So I do two podcast shows.

 

Scott Schober:

It leads to.

 

Scott Schober:

TV and radio interviews, uh, uh, public speaking.

 

Scott Schober:

I enjoy that.

 

Scott Schober:

I get to travel and speak to audiences, and I'm hired to go in and, and speak

 

Scott Schober:

about different topics and things.

 

Scott Schober:

So sometimes don't look at just the book or the story.

 

Scott Schober:

Look at the big picture, how it helps.

 

Scott Schober:

I.

 

Scott Schober:

You grow as a person, helps your business grow, helps other people learn

 

Scott Schober:

and, and make practical application to some of the things that you've done.

 

Scott Schober:

So to me, it's, it's kind of, I don't know if I, it, it, it's a little extreme thing.

 

Scott Schober:

This, but it kind of changed my life, honestly.

 

Scott Schober:

It

 

Scott Schober:

changed the the daily routine, you know.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, the same.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The same as it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It's exactly the same.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Hap.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

English.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, exactly the same thing happened to me, Scott.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So my career was absolutely launched by a failed restore.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, uh, you know, I was at a, at a $35 billion bank.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And we lost our purchasing database.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And I didn't have a backup of it because I, because I didn't understand what

 

W. Curtis Preston:

it was, I was backing up and I didn't understand what I needed to do, et cetera.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, you know, we, at the time we blamed it on, um, training because

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I was relatively new in the job.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

But the reality was is I was using an untested backup and, um, the,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the, and, and so I learned, you know, an incredibly valuable thing.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, and in my very first book, which was published in, in Christmas of 99, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It was, it was my Y two K present.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, it was, it was, uh, basically like page two or three of the book.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

There's a sidebar and it says the one that got away and it's basically about

 

W. Curtis Preston:

this restore that absolutely failed.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And the only reason that, you know, the company didn't lose its entire

 

W. Curtis Preston:

purchasing database was a guy by the name of Joe Fitzpatrick that

 

W. Curtis Preston:

went in and did some magic stuff.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

On the hard drive to this day, I don't know what he did, and honestly, he

 

W. Curtis Preston:

doesn't even remember the event, so he doesn't know what he did, but he

 

W. Curtis Preston:

did some stuff and brought it back.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So at least it was, it was a near disaster and wasn't a complete disaster.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

But I, I think that's a real lesson for all of us, that when you screw

 

W. Curtis Preston:

up, well, let's say two things.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

If you're, if you, if you have people that work for you,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, let them screw up, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Like if they, if they, if they screw up, they own up to their mistakes

 

W. Curtis Preston:

and they can, um, you know, learn what, what can they, and you and

 

W. Curtis Preston:

others learn from what happened?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And they share that and they become a better person and an better, better

 

W. Curtis Preston:

employee, a better colleague as a result.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Then encouraging your, your employee through that.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You know, I go back to my boss, Susan Davidson, who did not fire me.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, you know, I, uh, to this day, if she had fired me, I might

 

W. Curtis Preston:

have had a very different career.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

But she, she stood by her employee who had made an honest mistake that just

 

W. Curtis Preston:

happened to have grave consequences.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, um, you know, you don't, you don't, well, it's just my opinion.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You don't fire somebody because something horrible happened.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You fire them.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Because you know, it's about, like to me it's about attitude and you know,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

was it that you just didn't care?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Or did you make a mistake?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, did you willfully do something wrong?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and then the other thing is for those people that are the, the ones making

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the mistake, um, please, for the love of everything, don't try to hide the mistake.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, uh, you know, I can think back to.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I was, uh, on site at a very large, I think the general way to say it is a

 

W. Curtis Preston:

data warehouse company is one of these companies that other companies use, um,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

for loyalty like, um, you know, frequent flyer programs at like your grocery store.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, um, I worked with a guy who this was, um, It was a sun E 10 K Prasanna.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You remember?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You remember those.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And it was, uh, think of it as like a virtual machine thing, and

 

W. Curtis Preston:

he took a backup of the dev of the test system and restored it onto

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the production system accidentally.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And it was, it was a true accident.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Okay.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, but what got him fired was that he tried to cover it up.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And like, so, so don't do that, right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Don't, don't try to cover up your mistake, uh, cover, you know, it's,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

it's, it's never the thing you do, it's always the coverup that gets

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you, that gets you fired, right.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So, so share, please share.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

This is, you know, we, the, the episode that we just published this week was

 

W. Curtis Preston:

about that, that he, he, it was a, you know, another cybersecurity guy.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And what he was upset was that, that he believed that the LA Unified School

 

W. Curtis Preston:

District District was literally told that they weren't allowed to share, uh, what,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you know, how and why they got hacked.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And so I, I think the more of us that do this, Uh, the better it is for everything.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And I apologize.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I, I think I stepped up on the soapbox for 20 minutes there, but

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Scott, what, you know, what would

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I, I agree.

 

Scott Schober:

I think if, if we can really be transparent and, and

 

Scott Schober:

share, we're all imperfect.

 

Scott Schober:

I think a lot of people in the industry, I'll just say it in a general statement,

 

Scott Schober:

do have, tend to have big egos of themselves and they make no mistakes.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think if they.

 

Scott Schober:

Share their misfortunes and mistakes.

 

Scott Schober:

They've made it, it shows their true self.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and it becomes a learning moment.

 

Scott Schober:

I always tell my kids this is a life lesson.

 

Scott Schober:

I always stop them during different things and say, remember this.

 

Scott Schober:

'cause throughout your life you're gonna remember this moment.

 

Scott Schober:

And, and it's those type of things.

 

Scott Schober:

I think when companies make big mistakes, it's how you handle 'em.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, and I look back at even a lot of the breaches, one of the first

 

Scott Schober:

ones that stands out in my mind.

 

Scott Schober:

I'll never forget because, um, I remember sitting there on

 

Scott Schober:

tv, it was the target breach.

 

Scott Schober:

And I'm looking at it, I'm going, oh man, I can't believe those poor people.

 

Scott Schober:

And my wife looks over at me and she says, you know, we have a Target card.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm like, what?

 

Scott Schober:

And, and that night I got six different phone calls for interviews for the next

 

Scott Schober:

day on the target breach, and I was just running the entire day going from

 

Scott Schober:

studio to studio to weigh in on it.

 

Scott Schober:

So I'm doing research, staying up all night.

 

Scott Schober:

And I went through the whole rounds doing C n N and, and Fox and Bloomberg

 

Scott Schober:

and A, B, C, and so on and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

And just sharing what happened and what I learned and how could

 

Scott Schober:

this have happened and stuff.

 

Scott Schober:

But that moment really got me excited when you, when you hear about something

 

Scott Schober:

that is such a big data breach and how many lives it affected, and

 

Scott Schober:

most importantly, How is it handled?

 

Scott Schober:

How do you disseminate what happened to to this many customers when it's millions of

 

Scott Schober:

customers that are so loyal to your brand?

 

Scott Schober:

What happens to the brand?

 

Scott Schober:

What happens to the shareholders?

 

Scott Schober:

What happens to the customers?

 

Scott Schober:

What happens to the the security side?

 

Scott Schober:

Who dropped the ball?

 

Scott Schober:

How did this happen?

 

Scott Schober:

All those questions go through my mind, and to me that's kind of exciting so

 

Scott Schober:

that it kind of backed me into this part of the industry doing the research.

 

Scott Schober:

When things happen makes you wonder and when you hear the stories like you were

 

Scott Schober:

telling a great story about the mistakes of not having backed up data at the bank

 

Scott Schober:

you were working at and, and as I hear that, It helps me appreciate if I want

 

Scott Schober:

to go to an expert about backups, I'm gonna talk to Curtis before anyone else.

 

Scott Schober:

'cause he's lived through it.

 

Scott Schober:

He understands it, he gets it.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's what's kind of cool about this industry

 

Scott Schober:

if you really dive into it.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah, it's about technology and this and that, but ultimately it's about people and

 

Scott Schober:

the mistakes that people make and how you could protect yourself from bad people.

 

Scott Schober:

And if you do do that well, Then you can make a great career and

 

Scott Schober:

you can also make a difference.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's, that's an important thing.

 

Scott Schober:

I look at people that are doctors and I, I see the amazing things they do.

 

Scott Schober:

I faint at the sight of blood.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm not the guy for that job, but I appreciate what they can do or a

 

Scott Schober:

nurse, how they can be patient and put up with so many things and help

 

Scott Schober:

people and make them feel good.

 

Scott Schober:

That's important.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, hopefully what we're doing in the world of cyber is making

 

Scott Schober:

a difference in helping people.

 

Scott Schober:

Whether or not they appreciate it or not.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I don't know fully, but I think some people do.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, I, I was laughing.

 

Scott Schober:

I was at our R s A show recently.

 

Scott Schober:

I had somebody that I never met.

 

Scott Schober:

I happened to be speaking at the same show.

 

Scott Schober:

I later found out with this individual and he came up to me

 

Scott Schober:

and he says, are you Scott Schober?

 

Scott Schober:

I said, yeah, I want to shake your hand.

 

Scott Schober:

And he said, I said, okay.

 

Scott Schober:

What's your name and how do I know you?

 

Scott Schober:

He goes, oh, you don't know me?

 

Scott Schober:

He goes, but I bought your book and I read your book 20 times.

 

Scott Schober:

I said, that's more times than I read it.

 

Scott Schober:

That's pretty amazing.

 

Scott Schober:

He said, but I learned things and he started sharing all the things he learned.

 

Scott Schober:

He was very excited.

 

Scott Schober:

Individual was great, but I made a connection and it helped him solve a

 

Scott Schober:

few problems that he had in his company.

 

Scott Schober:

But more importantly, we made a connection and we became

 

Scott Schober:

friends, and that's kind of cool.

 

Scott Schober:

When you're in this industry, there's a lot of great people.

 

Scott Schober:

That you're surrounded by a lot of people that are a lot smarter than me.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm learning from them.

 

Scott Schober:

Hopefully a little bit of the stuff I've learned I could share

 

Scott Schober:

with them too, and, and it, and it just makes for a great community.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

As you're.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Are talking Scott, through sort of like backup, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

As being one place that you might like go talk to someone.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I think when it comes to cybersecurity, at many companies it gets very

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

difficult because it's not always like one person you can talk to, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

You might have the backup guy, you might have the security guy, you might

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

have the applications guy, the database guy, the virtual machine admin, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And there's so many people involved in order to keep an organization secure.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Right.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And I think making sure everyone is coordinated is a difficult task, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Everyone has their own priorities, their own mandates coming from above.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Sometimes they're not even in the same organization.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And I think that's another aspect that makes cybersecurity so interesting.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Not like you could say, okay, everyone do this one thing.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's that coordination, that team building, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's like everyone needs to be a well-oiled machine for the security of

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

the organization to be functional even.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah, I, I think that's a brilliant point, and I always talk.

 

Scott Schober:

About cybersecurity.

 

Scott Schober:

I've been brought into companies to educate, and I say, you know what?

 

Scott Schober:

This spans the entire employee spectrum from janitor to c e o,

 

Scott Schober:

and people are looking at me.

 

Scott Schober:

No, no, we're talking about the IT team.

 

Scott Schober:

And I'm like, no, no, no.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm talking about the janitor, the ceo, e o.

 

Scott Schober:

Everybody has a responsibility.

 

Scott Schober:

It doesn't mean you have to be an expert in cybersecurity, but when

 

Scott Schober:

you get onto a computer, you have to use some basic common sense

 

Scott Schober:

and have some cyber awareness.

 

Scott Schober:

So you don't just quickly click on things and, you know, write a sticky

 

Scott Schober:

note with your passwords and all, all the silly things that we always hear

 

Scott Schober:

about, but people do it every day.

 

Scott Schober:

And that's the part that I kind of back up from and I look at and I'm saying,

 

Scott Schober:

how could these companies and, and, and I've been to many large companies and

 

Scott Schober:

some of the largest organizations, and I see sticky notes with their password.

 

Scott Schober:

I see the, the passcode on their credit card machine to issue a

 

Scott Schober:

refund that I'm sitting there going.

 

Scott Schober:

I hide this, that code with my life so nobody could ever steal money, and yet

 

Scott Schober:

they have it out there, broad daylight.

 

Scott Schober:

So these things still happen.

 

Scott Schober:

And something, uh, some of the basic techniques and things that I've

 

Scott Schober:

learned and I try to share in the books and when I talk are things

 

Scott Schober:

that people just don't think about.

 

Scott Schober:

But when you share it with them, they go, oh, I didn't think about that.

 

Scott Schober:

That's interesting.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I, I'll give you a typical example.

 

Scott Schober:

I always think about security challenge questions, right?

 

Scott Schober:

What Curtis, what high school did you attend?

 

Scott Schober:

That might be one of your, your answers might be blah, blah, blah, high school.

 

Scott Schober:

And I always say don't answer it honestly.

 

Scott Schober:

There you get a pass, you can answer it dishonestly and

 

Scott Schober:

use a unique password there.

 

Scott Schober:

And it could be password 1, 2, 3 is actually a hundred times

 

Scott Schober:

more secure than putting the actual high school that you have.

 

Scott Schober:

'cause anybody can go on Google and search and see what high

 

Scott Schober:

school that Curtis attended, but nobody's gonna put in password.

 

Scott Schober:

1, 2, 3, there.

 

Scott Schober:

So like even the most basic common sense, almost stupid things that

 

Scott Schober:

you could do, help people back up and say, oh yeah, wait a minute.

 

Scott Schober:

I don't have to be honest.

 

Scott Schober:

I can just create a single password that only I know in my head that I'll

 

Scott Schober:

remember forever and use it there.

 

Scott Schober:

Problem solved.

 

Scott Schober:

Wow, that's great.

 

Scott Schober:

Sounds too good to be true, but it worked.

 

Scott Schober:

I did those things.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You know, when you were, when you were talking earlier,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

um, you know, I was, you know, thinking about that we, that we should

 

W. Curtis Preston:

value, we should value people who've, um, had bad things happen to them.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That, that, that perhaps I, 'cause you know, as we're talking, I, I never know

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the way a particular podcast is gonna go.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I, I, I think this is.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

This is the purpose of this particular episode is to get,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

is to encourage people to share.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, uh, you know, I think that we, we, um, uh, we value a little bit too

 

W. Curtis Preston:

much, you know, our little pride and our little whatever, and we think that

 

W. Curtis Preston:

that sharing is gonna get us in trouble.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, and I will say that if sharing a, a, a mistake gets you fired.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, maybe you didn't need to be working at that company anyway.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That, that's one idea.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

But, but I was, I found myself, and this is gonna sound really

 

W. Curtis Preston:

weird, no matter how many times I explain it, but I found myself

 

W. Curtis Preston:

thinking about Platoon, the movie I.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and so my question is, who do you want to be in battle with?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Do you wanna be in battle with Willem Defoe, this like battle

 

W. Curtis Preston:

hardened guy, although he turns out to be a bad guy, I think in

 

W. Curtis Preston:

the later, so we'll set that aside.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

But the battle hardened guy who's been shot at 4,000 times,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

or the brand new officer.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Just outta college, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The officer's, you know, super smart, super educated.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

He's been trained on all the ways that battle works, but

 

W. Curtis Preston:

he's never been shot at, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, we use the term he's never, he's, he's never fired in anger, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, you know, I think that the person who has been around a while,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

um, and has, has made mistakes because honestly, if you're not.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

If you're not making any mistakes, you're probably not, you're not innovating, uh,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

would definitely, I would say you're not innovating and, um, And if you're, if you

 

W. Curtis Preston:

say you've never missed, if you say you've

 

W. Curtis Preston:

never made a mistake, you're, yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I, I liked, I really liked that idea that you, um, You know that

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you, that you were saying that, let's go to the person for advice

 

W. Curtis Preston:

who's actually been through things.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I like that a lot.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Can you think of any other ways that we can encourage those who,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

uh, both the company, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So we're multiple levels here.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We want to encourage the company to understand that sharing.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Well, let, actually I have a thought, I'm gonna answer my own question.

 

Scott Schober:

sure.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

In.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I'm, my brain's just going a million miles.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

'cause I really like this discussion point and that is that we live in a world where

 

W. Curtis Preston:

we're almost, we, we become immune to the daily hacks that we see on the news,

 

Scott Schober:

Mm-hmm.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We see 'em all the time.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We're like, oh, we got, you know, Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The, the, you know, the cyber of the day, right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and so we, we don't, we don't think too much about it.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and so I think too many times the companies, they just try to, you know,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

like you, when back when you talked about your thing, you know, maybe they

 

W. Curtis Preston:

try to stay under the radar and they don't want to get that, they do not want

 

W. Curtis Preston:

to get that call from the ap, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, but I'm thinking that, um, When I know when we Prasannayou and I, when

 

W. Curtis Preston:

we've evaluated sort of incidents, the thing that we value, Is how the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

company responds, how open they are, about how soon they announced it, how

 

W. Curtis Preston:

open they were about what happened.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The fact that right now, like it just happened.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

It just happened two hours ago.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We don't know squat, right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

All we know is that something happens.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Here's A U R L.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Follow this U R L.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

This is my particular favorite way.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Here's A U R L.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You know, go to curtis preston.com/.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

2023.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right, and, and

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

That website does not work for our listeners,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

What's that?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

that website does not work for our listeners on

 

W. Curtis Preston:

that, that website, they'll find out exactly.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, that was a, that was the equivalent of a five, five,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

five phone number in the movies.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, and, and just follow that and just, you know, get, like, it's, it's one nice

 

W. Curtis Preston:

way of saying leave us alone while we think, just go over there and don't,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

don't call us 8,000 times everything we know, we will put there and then do that.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Follow up.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, you know, a a along that, uh, the, the more you can share about

 

W. Curtis Preston:

what happened, when it happened, how it happened, what lessons you learned

 

W. Curtis Preston:

as a result, uh, I think it's better.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I think it's better both for everybody, obviously, but also for you.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm, I'm basically applying your, um, your statement about that.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You want to go to the battle hardened person, and I'm applying this to a company

 

W. Curtis Preston:

that it's also good for the company.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

What?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

What happened?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Are you doing a bump up butt Prasanna?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

yes, I am doing a, but, but, but I think though I agree

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

with everything you say, Curtis, but then I also look at the flip side, which is

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

we're a very, lawsuit, happy country.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

And I think corporations worry about how much information they can publish.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I agree that they need some amount of transparency and creating

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

the website and putting the links that people can go follow.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I a hundred percent agree with it.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I think there's that risk balance that corporations struggle with because like

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Scott had mentioned, right, you do take a hit from a brand perspective, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

You might open yourself up to lawsuits, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Or regulatory scrutiny or other aspects that once it's out

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

there, it becomes hard to undo.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I think the other thing to also mention is, There's also

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

the public perception, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Because when you publish something on a website, right, they assume, oh, this

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

is a hundred percent the truth versus when you're, I'm sure, Scott, you

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

could talk about this as well, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

When you're doing a cyber investigation, right, you don't

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

always know like what it is really until you're sort of done, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yes, you might have know some aspects along the way, but you may

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

not be a hundred percent confident the entire time because you're

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

working off of partial information.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, I, I, um, I'll, I'll finish my comment.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That was so rudely interrupted by Prasanna.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I agree.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I agree with what you're saying.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Prasanna, which is why any, uh, incident response plan has legal as

 

W. Curtis Preston:

part of the response plan, right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm not giving legal advice here.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'm just giving sort of my opinion that the more you can share confidently, I

 

W. Curtis Preston:

think you're better off as a company.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yes, I understand the.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

The legal thing, but I also know that unders sharing can also be

 

W. Curtis Preston:

illegal, um, you know, liability.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

So I don't know.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, I, I, I never actually came up with a question there, Scott, but

 

Scott Schober:

I, I, I'll, I'll answer, I'll answer, the question even with,

 

Scott Schober:

though, with two more questions.

 

Scott Schober:

No, or two more statements.

 

Scott Schober:

Let me give you maybe a, a case scenario that's in my mind.

 

Scott Schober:

Think about Uber.

 

Scott Schober:

A couple years ago, got, uh, breached, uh, interesting how they handled it.

 

Scott Schober:

The president at the time, uh, they kind of covered it up.

 

Scott Schober:

They kind of muddied the waters a little bit.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, at one point they paid, I guess it was a ransom, but covered it as a

 

Scott Schober:

bug bounty, dishonest, uh, misleading to shareholders, so on and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

I think they got their, their hands slapped a few times.

 

Scott Schober:

Their brand got hurt.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, they were struggling making money.

 

Scott Schober:

I think they still are to some extent.

 

Scott Schober:

So they kind of bumped along through different leadership and making mistake

 

Scott Schober:

after mistake after mistake, and were breached many times and again.

 

Scott Schober:

It's to the point they weren't really transparent about everything going on.

 

Scott Schober:

They kind of did this and Don don't get anybody upset 'cause the money's

 

Scott Schober:

coming in the front door and we need more investors and so on and so forth.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, contrast that with JP Morgan.

 

Scott Schober:

Uh, they had a major breach and now you're talking about at

 

Scott Schober:

the time, the largest financial institution headed by Jamie Diamond.

 

Scott Schober:

Um, they were transparent.

 

Scott Schober:

Hey, it, it was a third party access, didn't have multifactor

 

Scott Schober:

authentication in place.

 

Scott Schober:

We didn't do this, this, and this.

 

Scott Schober:

We made the mistakes.

 

Scott Schober:

We're sorry.

 

Scott Schober:

Here's what we're gonna do about it.

 

Scott Schober:

Oh, by the way, going forward, we're gonna commit a half a billion

 

Scott Schober:

dollars to improve our security.

 

Scott Schober:

So these things don't happen again.

 

Scott Schober:

Uh, which brand survived?

 

Scott Schober:

I think I think you could look at and say, wow, you know what?

 

Scott Schober:

JP Morgan Chase, their brand really thrived and continues to thrive.

 

Scott Schober:

Uber is still kind of a struggling rideshare company,

 

Scott Schober:

even though it's everywhere.

 

Scott Schober:

You don't believe everything you hear, you talk to the the drivers

 

Scott Schober:

and they're a little bit bitter.

 

Scott Schober:

You talk to the shareholders, they're bitter.

 

Scott Schober:

You talk to the employees, they're bitter.

 

Scott Schober:

So I think a lot of it has to do with how you run an organization and

 

Scott Schober:

when you deal with a cyber incident.

 

Scott Schober:

To your point, how do you respond?

 

Scott Schober:

It's gotta be a company wide and it's gotta come in a sense

 

Scott Schober:

from the top down as far as.

 

Scott Schober:

Hey guys, we screwed up.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's own it.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's inform everyone.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's take care of it so it doesn't happen again, and let's, let's follow through

 

Scott Schober:

this with our whole team and our employees and our shareholders and our customers.

 

Scott Schober:

So I think that's kind of important.

 

Scott Schober:

Being honesty, honest, and having integrity when there's a cyber

 

Scott Schober:

situation really makes a difference in the long run at the moment.

 

Scott Schober:

You probably look like an idiot in front of most people.

 

Scott Schober:

But in the long run, in hindsight, I think you look back and you say, you know what?

 

Scott Schober:

I'm glad I came clean.

 

Scott Schober:

I have a clean conscience.

 

Scott Schober:

I did it right, and it's not gonna happen again.

 

Scott Schober:

And that's, that's probably one of the most important lessons

 

Scott Schober:

I've learned is I'm paranoid.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm paranoid and to, to the stuff that you have expertise backing up data.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm always going around, we gotta get a backup of this.

 

Scott Schober:

And they're like, Scott, you backed this up last week.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I know, but just in case we changed the code, we updated the system.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's back it up.

 

Scott Schober:

I'll, I'll put it in the safe on a remote site.

 

Scott Schober:

And, but, but you start to think like a cyber thief.

 

Scott Schober:

Would you see the value in something and how easy it is to get it?

 

Scott Schober:

Because I've learned one thing.

 

Scott Schober:

Nothing's a hundred percent secure.

 

Scott Schober:

And if somebody wants something bad enough, they're

 

Scott Schober:

gonna find a way to get it.

 

Scott Schober:

So you just have to do everything you can to make it difficult for them

 

Scott Schober:

so they move on to the next target.

 

Scott Schober:

That's gonna be much easier.

 

Scott Schober:

That's all it's about.

 

Scott Schober:

It's a, there's a cat and mouse game, or a whack the mo game, or

 

Scott Schober:

whatever you want to call it, but that, that's oversimplifying it.

 

Scott Schober:

I know, but I, I think that's important to, to just kind

 

Scott Schober:

of think about those things.

 

Scott Schober:

If you're running a company or part of an organization, You have to weave

 

Scott Schober:

cybersecurity into the fabric of your organization so that you don't just do it

 

Scott Schober:

once a year and do a quick phishing test.

 

Scott Schober:

Pass.

 

Scott Schober:

We move on.

 

Scott Schober:

Let's get back to business guys.

 

Scott Schober:

That doesn't work.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yeah, I like that.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

I think going back to Uber, I think recently their CISO had some, uh, legal.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Case proceedings against him and I think was found.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Because, because of that incident, right?

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah, yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

I avoid the legal side of things, but you're, you're absolutely right because

 

Scott Schober:

the, the implications of getting caught and misleading shareholders and the public

 

Scott Schober:

and covering it up or doing the bait and switch, it's not good for business

 

Scott Schober:

in the long run when you get caught.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that was the mistake at the moment.

 

Scott Schober:

It seemed like, yay, this is a win.

 

Scott Schober:

Now we don't have to go through the pain of everybody else, but.

 

Scott Schober:

It caught up with them, unfortunately, and sometimes people make say a little

 

Scott Schober:

white lie and they get away with it, and then it leads to more things that they

 

Scott Schober:

get implicated on and and legal mess.

 

Scott Schober:

And the cost for legal things these days in this society is just astronomical and

 

Scott Schober:

it distracts you again from the course.

 

Scott Schober:

So sometimes the legal matter outweighs the actual cyber incident.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yeah,

 

Scott Schober:

And, and that's often how cybersecurity works.

 

Scott Schober:

I found interestingly enough, they, if they can settle it quickly, and sometimes

 

Scott Schober:

that's what a lot of these ransomware pay payments are about, uh, cybersecurity, uh,

 

Scott Schober:

insurance and the legal team get there and they look at it and say, you know what?

 

Scott Schober:

Pay this many bitcoins quickly, make this problem go away so we don't have to

 

Scott Schober:

pay this much over the next six months.

 

Scott Schober:

So,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And Prasanna.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I I think, um, going back to what you said, the, so somewhere on the, on the,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

on the, the, uh, the pendulum of don't say anything and make up stuff, right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Somewhere in there is where we're I, I, I think I'm, you know, I'm, I'm.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Wow.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I don't know if I like that pendulum I just created, 'cause I, I wanna

 

W. Curtis Preston:

be closer to the making up stuff.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Meaning I, I, I, I don't wanna

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

sharing too much.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Don't

 

Scott Schober:

overshare.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

we need to be right in the middle.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Right?

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We don't wanna not say anything and we, we definitely don't wanna make up stuff.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We can all agree.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And that's why Prasanna, that, that there was a part in your

 

W. Curtis Preston:

answer where you talked about.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That sometimes you just don't know.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Well, if you don't know, don't say, right.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You will, you will get in the, in the heat of the, of the

 

W. Curtis Preston:

event, you will get pressure.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

What happened.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

If you don't know what happened, you can say, we still don't know what happened.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, I, I guess, and, and

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Speaker:

Perfectly acceptable answer.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Speaker:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Yeah.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

acceptable answer.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I don't know yet.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We are, you know, we are investigating and we will investigate until

 

W. Curtis Preston:

we find out the root cause.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Um, yeah,

 

Scott Schober:

think that's human nature too.

 

Scott Schober:

You as a human.

 

Scott Schober:

Another person.

 

Scott Schober:

It's okay to hear something, even if it's a little bit disappointing.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I think about it directly with we're, we're late on a lot of

 

Scott Schober:

our deliveries to our customers.

 

Scott Schober:

Here I am, uh, going on the, on the record.

 

Scott Schober:

I'm apologizing here.

 

Scott Schober:

Please forgive us.

 

Scott Schober:

But I think communicating that with a customer is imperative.

 

Scott Schober:

Hey, we're late on delivery.

 

Scott Schober:

We told you it would take this long.

 

Scott Schober:

We were wrong.

 

Scott Schober:

There are reasons, and we don't want to stand here and reiterate all the reasons,

 

Scott Schober:

but here's a couple of the reasons why.

 

Scott Schober:

We're sorry, but here's what we're gonna do about it.

 

Scott Schober:

Whether it's you give him something or free chipping or whatever,

 

Scott Schober:

or or more importantly, when we do have the date, it will ship.

 

Scott Schober:

I will get back to you, I will send you the tracking number and the most important

 

Scott Schober:

thing is the follow through on it.

 

Scott Schober:

And it's funny, somebody that hates you or is very upset with you, 'cause they're

 

Scott Schober:

frustrated, they can't do their job, and when you give 'em the tracking number

 

Scott Schober:

and the follow through, they thank you.

 

Scott Schober:

They say Wow.

 

Scott Schober:

You got back to me.

 

Scott Schober:

You must care about me as a customer.

 

Scott Schober:

Thank you.

 

Scott Schober:

And to me, I've learned that's really important.

 

Scott Schober:

It doesn't matter what role you are in the company, and I'll often get that.

 

Scott Schober:

Sometimes I'll even get a, a thi.

 

Scott Schober:

Aren't you the c e o of the company?

 

Scott Schober:

Why are you saying sorry to me that you guys were late?

 

Scott Schober:

It's probably not your fault.

 

Scott Schober:

I said, no, it's all of our fault.

 

Scott Schober:

It's the company's fault, so I am sorry.

 

Scott Schober:

The company's sorry.

 

Scott Schober:

And just being able to express that I think helps them see you're real, your

 

Scott Schober:

honest, you're transparent, and you want what's best for them no matter what it is.

 

Scott Schober:

And I think that's important to develop relationships, business relationships.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Yeah, I like that.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And by the way, I, uh, the word legal came up.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I thought I forgot to throw out our usual disclaimer, uh, that, um, that this is an

 

W. Curtis Preston:

independent podcast and you're hearing, uh, opinions of people and not companies.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, uh, if you'd like to, Join the conversation I'd,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'd love to hear from you.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

W Curtis Preston at gmail, or at WC preston on Twitter or linkedin.com/in/mr.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Backup.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, and we, you know, we'll get you, you know, we love to hear from people

 

W. Curtis Preston:

and, um, so, and, and also, please rate us, uh, go to your favorite pod

 

W. Curtis Preston:

catcher and give us all the stars.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And send us comments.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

We'd love to see comments as well.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, Scott, I, I want to thank you for, for coming on.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Uh, it's been a great, like I said, I never know exactly where a given

 

W. Curtis Preston:

recording is gonna go, but I really like the, you know, our encouraging

 

W. Curtis Preston:

people to share and, and how to share.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

Yeah.

 

Scott Schober:

No, thank you guys for taking the time and having me on as a guest.

 

Scott Schober:

I, I was, uh, approached by somebody before coming on and they said, you're

 

Scott Schober:

going on a podcast and what's it about?

 

Scott Schober:

I said, well, he is Mr.

 

Scott Schober:

Backup, this and that.

 

Scott Schober:

Well, whatcha gonna talk about?

 

Scott Schober:

I said, I have no idea, but probably something related to cybersecurity.

 

Scott Schober:

And if so, it'll be fun.

 

Scott Schober:

And then I said, that's all I need to know.

 

Scott Schober:

That was a great, great conversation.

 

Scott Schober:

That's what's important.

 

Scott Schober:

Thank you guys.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

Absolutely.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And Prasanna, you know, thanks for interrupting me.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That was a,

 

W. Curtis Preston:

that was a good point.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

That was a good point you

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

it.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It's okay though, Curtis, in post-processing.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

You can just cut it all out and then you can just continue the conversation.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

You'll be fine.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

I'll, I'll, I, I might cut it to make it look like you really

 

W. Curtis Preston:

stomped on my, on what I was saying.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

You know, the, the, the ultimate

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It was nice chatting.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Exactly.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

It was nice to chat with you, Scott.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Thanks for sharing.

 

Prasanna Malaiyandi:

Oh,

 

Scott Schober:

Thank you guys.

 

Scott Schober:

Stay safe, everyone.

 

W. Curtis Preston:

And, uh, thanks to our listeners and remember to

 

W. Curtis Preston:

subscribe so that you can restore it all

 

W. Curtis Preston:

you could restore it.