New ask Hacker News story: Ask HN: Transitioning from game development to cybersecurity. Tips or advice?
Ask HN: Transitioning from game development to cybersecurity. Tips or advice?
2 by poutinepapi | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hello HN! I was let go from my gaming job a couple of months ago, and unfortunately nothing has come up yet. Thankfully, I was thinking of moving away from the industry anyway, so this is a great opportunity to do so. I've got some savings and have given myself a year to set-up a cybersecurity consultancy business. My main target will be start-ups, and small to medium tech companies, particularly gaming ones that don't yet have a cybersecurity division, but nonetheless need one, and don't see the point of hiring a full time cybersecurity professional. The field has always interested me, and most of my games experience is doing server side development, alongside DevOps, and then straight game dev. But server work has been the bulk, so at least I'm familiar with the basics of hardening a system against interference, mostly by players trying to cheat, and every now and again against criminal interests who have targeted our games. I've got around 15+ years of experience as a software engineer, around half of that in plain server development, and the other half specialized in server dev for games. I've got a bachelor's degree in software engineering, and an MSc in Computer Games Technology. I'm taking a short postgrad course in Cybersecurity at my local university, but that takes 8 months. In the meantime, I'm studying to get Security+ certified so I can start bidding for jobs and have something more backing me apart from my CV. My question is the following, what am I missing? What else can I get or do to give myself more credibility? Does anyone have any tips on getting clients? I'm planning on running promotions for start-ups and going to several meet-ups to distribute coupons, some booklets with free information on personal cybersecurity, and just to network. Cheers in advance for the advice! p.s.: I'm also setting a sister company for game dev consulting, but I'm much more familiar with that and feel much more comfortable with it, but tips for that are also welcome.
2 by poutinepapi | 0 comments on Hacker News.
Hello HN! I was let go from my gaming job a couple of months ago, and unfortunately nothing has come up yet. Thankfully, I was thinking of moving away from the industry anyway, so this is a great opportunity to do so. I've got some savings and have given myself a year to set-up a cybersecurity consultancy business. My main target will be start-ups, and small to medium tech companies, particularly gaming ones that don't yet have a cybersecurity division, but nonetheless need one, and don't see the point of hiring a full time cybersecurity professional. The field has always interested me, and most of my games experience is doing server side development, alongside DevOps, and then straight game dev. But server work has been the bulk, so at least I'm familiar with the basics of hardening a system against interference, mostly by players trying to cheat, and every now and again against criminal interests who have targeted our games. I've got around 15+ years of experience as a software engineer, around half of that in plain server development, and the other half specialized in server dev for games. I've got a bachelor's degree in software engineering, and an MSc in Computer Games Technology. I'm taking a short postgrad course in Cybersecurity at my local university, but that takes 8 months. In the meantime, I'm studying to get Security+ certified so I can start bidding for jobs and have something more backing me apart from my CV. My question is the following, what am I missing? What else can I get or do to give myself more credibility? Does anyone have any tips on getting clients? I'm planning on running promotions for start-ups and going to several meet-ups to distribute coupons, some booklets with free information on personal cybersecurity, and just to network. Cheers in advance for the advice! p.s.: I'm also setting a sister company for game dev consulting, but I'm much more familiar with that and feel much more comfortable with it, but tips for that are also welcome.
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