Cyber Security Awareness Training, Page 376 Reviews
We ask our users to rate and review our Cyber Security Awareness Training course immediately after they've completed their training. Here's what people are saying...
Average score 4.7
9820 reviews
No summary provided
Useful information
I full overview of all the different cyber threats and what to look out for to mitigate the attacks.
I enjoyed the experienced and learned from it, I just didn't agree with the wording on one of the test questions that I got incorrect. I can't remember the exact question but it was something to do with 10% of cyber attacks are down to 'deliberate human error'. As the definition of deliberate it 'done consciously and intentionally', 'careful and unhurried' I wouldn't say it's deliberate, it's more 'accidental'. This lead me to get an answer wrong.
As above - simple clear overview. If longer could have examples of attacks and how to distinguish legitimate from illegitimate messages for example.But clearly presented!
I can apply the cyber security protocols not only to my work but my personal data security, on line banking and social media privacy etc
I thought that it was very focused upon organisations and that a lot of the information provided was just common sense that has been covered by the workplace and one's own security arrangements. That made it tedious. Not much added since the one I took in May 2020. The more interesting and advanced parts were treated just the same as the basic components. I understand you provided links to learn about other materials in more depth. The problem was that it lasted so long and one had to take it, that the main goal was to go through and pass the quiz asap. Learning --Not really beneficial in respect of development.
No summary provided
Presenter was engaging, content was relevant. I think there should be more focus on prevention. Updating software promptly, windows in particular, should be emphasised; especially the practical issue of windows updates, that could be running for more than 15 minutes, not to run it before a meeting, but schedule it to a more suitable time.
The content of the course is good and does provide a high level of awareness about cyber threats, potential vulnerabilities (including human error), and guidance around mitigating or minimising these through good practices. However, it may be more useful to re-structure training to enable those who are already knowledgeable about some / all areas to be able to skip content. Should they then fail aspects of the Test at the end, *then* these subject areas should be made mandatorily watchable, so that they can then complete the quiz successfully. Multiple failures of the quiz should then generate an alert to highlight a user who is likely higher risk or needs more awareness training in a different format. If the above had been the case, I could get at least 35 minutes of my day back.