4. I think most of the people now doing any sort of education, the job they will do in the future potentially doesn’t even exist, it will only be created in the future. @dws_ch
3. If you really care about the topic, you’ll go far with lots of opportunities for you. And there are a lot of opportunities for women too. Long before I was doing cybersecurity issues as a prosecutor at the WH or the State Department, I had a passion for it. @C_Painter
2. By exposing yourself to it, that’s how you become involved. It is now mainstream, so you don’t have to become a specialist in the sense of “I won’t be able to do anything else.” You’ll still be around, it will be general skills for everybody. @DSMeu
1. I’m pretty atypical because cyber came into my life unexpectedly. I was a diplomat, I was the Estonian Ambassador to Russia during the cyber attacks of 2007. So in 15 minutes I just had to learn what DDoS attacks mean and start explaining. @MarinaKaljurand
1/1: Hello, my name is Anna and my question is the following. I would like to know whether it’s possible for those people who don’t possess some specific technical skills to still become aspecialist in cybersecurity. Thank you. @krupnik_anna
1/2: You need that combination, particularly as we need to convince our ministers, our CEOs and others. This is not a scary topic. You don’t need to be a coder to understand the importance and the innovative importance of cybersecurity. We need those people. @C_Painter