TAMPA 鈥 USF Muma College of Business students have a new tool to become more cybersecurity
                  aware and not get hacked. 
 
In partnership with KnowBe4, a Tampa-based cybersecurity firm, college leaders announced
                  on Tuesday the launch of a free Cyber Resiliency Certificate Program open to all business
                  students at all levels.  
 
The certificate program is a self-paced class that teaches the fundamentals of cyber
                  safety in the workplace. The 15-hour course takes the participant through 10 modules
                  of interactive and immersive training.  
   
鈥淩egardless of your major or the profession you choose, each one of us has a responsibility
                  to protect the data that we are trusted with in our jobs,鈥 said GJ de Vreede, interim dean at the Muma College of Business.

Photo by Ver'Shanti Lamb/USF Muma College of Business
De Vreede said the college鈥檚 partnership with KnowBe4 began nearly five years ago
                  and this certificate program is an example of the continued collaboration between
                  academic research and an industry leader in cybersecurity. 
 
Stu Sjouwerman, founder and CEO of KnowBe4, said USF business students will be the
                  first university students in the nation to go through the training. Content for the
                  program is a combination of webinars from leading experts, content from their training
                  library, and some of the latest student-centric content. 
 
鈥淚t鈥檚 a rigorous curriculum,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t will really benefit students so they are
                  more hirable.鈥 
 
Marcus Green, a visiting assistant professor of instruction who teaches cybersecurity, led the
                  development of the curriculum for USF. 
 
Green said the training offers students critical skills to fight against cyber threats. 
 
鈥淩ansomware attacks continue to occur at an incredible pace,鈥 Green said. 鈥淭hreat
                  actors continue to use this attack vector because social engineering works so well
                  against our weakest link 鈥 the human factor. Increasing the cyber resilience of the
                  human factor is where we must improve if we want to stand a chance.鈥

Marcus Green speaks about the certificate program.
Two USF students, who tested the certificate program, raved about its engaging content.
 
Jacob Hammargren, a cybersecurity major, said he learned about the certificate program
                  from Green, who asked him to take the course and offer feedback. 
 
As a member of USF鈥檚 Whitehatters Computer Security Club, Hammargren said he didn鈥檛
                  expect to learn much from the course. In fact, he went in thinking it was going to
                  be "relatively boring", he said. 
 
鈥淚 was completely wrong,鈥 Hammargren said. 鈥淭he course appeals to both technical people
                  as well as non-technical people, and that鈥檚 very hard to do.鈥 
 
Hammargren said cybersecurity isn鈥檛 only about the technical side, but also the behavioral
                  science and human factor side. And this course bridges that gap well.

Jacob Hammargren speaks about the Cyber Resiliency Certificate Program.
鈥淎s someone who lives and breathes this stuff, seeing the late great Kevin Mitnick
                  show up in one of the course modules and demonstrate how a phishing email can lead
                  to beaconing a command-and-control server was awesome,鈥 he said. 
 
Hammargren鈥檚 friend Brandon Gonzalez, another cybersecurity student, said the course
                  offers a great foundation to understanding the fundamentals of cyber resiliency. 
 
It teaches participants how to recognize phishing scams, understand ransomware attacks,
                  and gives participants the tools to not get hacked. 
 
鈥淚t鈥檚 possible for anyone to be hacked,鈥 Gonzalez said. 鈥淟earning the fundamentals
                  helps protect you, the company, and most important, the customers data.鈥   
