Monday, April 6, 2020

The Fundamentals comptia a+

I think it’s a safe bet that folks around the world have already heard about the Iowa caucuses meltdown. We’ve often worried about some sort of perceived enemy. But in the case of Iowa, we have met the enemy – and in this case, the enemy appears to be us. And I mean us, here. Not just the organizers of the Iowa caucuses, Shadow (the company that created the app everyone is talking about), or tech professionals. I mean everyone involved.

What we witnessed wasn’t a technical meltdown, per se. We witnessed an organizational meltdown, with tech, apparently, only at the core. I say “apparently,” because once you deconstruct this meltdown, we’re seeing an organizational issue, where the tech folks usually become the scapegoat. Like the Fukushima nuclear meltdown, we witnessed the acute technical moment where the technology exploded. But trust me, this issue was a slow-motion meltdown that was months in the offing.

This event is especially interesting to me personally, and not because my mom was born in Iowa (Des Moines). It’s because I had a chance to discuss the “root causes” of the Iowa caucuses meltdown about two weeks before it happened. Let me explain.

About two weeks ago, Adam Powell at the University of Southern California invited me to represent CompTIA at their Election Cybersecurity Initiative Roundtable. It was quite the crowd: Vint Cerf, co-creator of TCP, Clifford Neuman, a creator of the Kerberos authentication protocol, and representatives from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the Associated Press, and many others were there. And, little old me. We discussed organization and technical issues surrounding this year’s elections.
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