> The concept itself doesn’t even make sense if you fully understand the intersectional scope of technology and society
Societies demands are the things that are unsafe not the technologies themselves
Always look at conferences and associated workshops. You can start with NeurIPs and ICML. From there, you will figure out some papers on safety. Then, you can see some patterns of labs which work on it full time.
It's a good test, however, I wouldn't ask it in a public setting lol, you have to ask them in a more private chat - at least for me, I'm not gonna talk bad about a massive org (ISC2) knowing that tons of managers and execs swear by them, but if you ask for my personal opinion in a more relaxed setting (and I do trust you to some extent), then you'll get a more nuanced and different answer.
Same test works for CEH. If they felt insulted and angry, they get an A+ (joking...?).
A bit crude, maybe a bit hurt and angry, but has some truth in it.
A few things help a lot (for BOTH sides - which is weird to say as the two sides should be US vs Threat Actors, but anyway):
1. Detach your identity from your ideas or work. You're not your work. An idea is just a passerby thought that you grabbed out of thin air, you can let it go the same way you grabbed it.
2. Always look for opportunities to create a dialogue. Learn from anyone and anything. Elevate everyone around you.
3. Instead of constantly looking for reasons why you're right, go with "why am I wrong?", It breaks tunnel vision faster than anything else.
Asking questions isn't an attack. Criticizing a design or implementation isn't criticizing you.
RIP dude, we’d continue the jokes, may your soul laughs as hard as we do.
Chuck Norris once bet 42 is a prime. He won.