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CISSP Study Group

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12 contributions to CISSP Study Group
Welcome New Members!
A very warm welcome to the new members of our growing community! Watch out for our daily postings on new topics, exam tips and strategies, practice questions, and bi-weekly study groups. Good luck and happy learning! We are looking forward to learn a little about you and your CISSP journey so far in the comments section! 🙂 @Vanessa B., @Jenish James, @Jean-luc Cerdan, @Bhushan Pathak, @Mohammad Rahman, @Anibal Yesid Acosta C, @Blesswin Ebenezer, @P L, @Raven Colbert, @Chris C, @Roshan Laloo, @Afonso Alves, @Joseph Okiro, @Racheal O, @Abdelkoddous Lhajouji, @Punitha M, @Jose Zamorano, @Reji Surendran, @Maxine Andujar, @Ryan Harper, @Waleed Yagoub, @Jay Patel, @Ida Djiguimde, @Vishishta Brahma, @Deleted, @Nithya Nandhini, @Brice Ndanga, @Md. Abdullah Ibne Latif, @Md. Abdul Momin, @Mobin Saeed Syed, @Jon Brown, @Al-Mahmud Hashim, @Riadh Brinsi, @Krishna Sharma, @Deepon Deb Nath, @Neville Daniels, @Patrick Farah, @Awini Assibi, @Willie Washington
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New comment Aug 23
1 like • Aug 23
Welcome
Study Group Recording | CISSP Identity & Access Management Protocols
A huge congratulations to @Will Bad for passing his CISSP!! 🙌 Hear some of his experience in the first few minutes of this session followed by another fantastic presentation by @Josh Botz on Identity & Access Management Protocols crucial for exam success and real-world application. This session covers the ins and outs of SSO, Federated Identity, OAuth, Kerberos, and more, with a focus on scalability and security in modern web applications.
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New comment Aug 23
Study Group Recording |  CISSP Identity & Access Management Protocols
3 likes • Aug 21
Congratilations @Will Bad
CISSP -Passed
Thanks to everyone whonhas supported me with valuabke CISSP information. Now i passed at 100 questions, with 52mins left.
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New comment Jul 22
0 likes • Jul 18
Congratulations @Samuel Agunloye nice
Domain 3 Question
A bad actor discovers that a certain hash gives him access to a couple of user accounts on a platform. The hash was obtained from the dark web. Which of the following is the BEST method to securely protect password hashes from such threats?
Poll
19 members have voted
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New comment Jul 12
0 likes • Jul 11
Hint: The Obvious answer is usually not the BEST answer.
3 likes • Jul 12
Key strecthing algorithm (e.g., bcrypt, scrypt, or Argon2) - Apply a computationally intensive function to the hash process to make brute-force attacks more difficult. These functions also use salts to hash the password, which takes it a step further than using a salt with each hash. The correct answer to this question is option D. I also have attached a page from the OSG as reference.
Passed the CISSP exam at 100 today!!!
I am excited to announce that I passed the exam after answering the 100th question today; I had about 20+ minutes left. My comment on the exam is something like this Today's questions differ from the CISSP “Wiley Exam Learning” test bank and the “Learnzapp” I practiced both extensively but only started using the Learnzapp for about one week before the exam, where I averaged a readiness score of 51% 😅 A couple of questions did seem to come close to it, but not too close—how the questions were structured makes you think more about why and not what per se. Let me put it differently: understand what the topics convey, why and how concepts are related, and the practical implications. I made a couple of educated guesses; some I knew by thinking through the questions, others I started by looking at the options before the questions, and vice-versa. As for the remaining questions that didn’t look like they were from the OSG but still made their way to the exam, it was better to pick an answer than skip 😅😅😅. In all, I was stopped after the 100th question. Study Style: My work schedule made me study only in the evenings for about 3-4 hours per evening; I would take evening naps before waking up to study, an average of 4 days per week. My study was a bit inconsistent as I had to juggle a lot of obstacles to study. I only focused entirely on study from April, while January to March was a bit inconsistent, so I can’t say I had a planned study schedule. I used the Official Study Guide and Pete Zerge CISSP Exam Cram Course on YouTube to study.
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New comment Jul 11
Passed the CISSP exam at 100 today!!!
0 likes • Jul 11
@April Stanford Yes, I did take a four-week boot camp course that was my intro to CISSP, and the knowledge helped set up a domain study plan. One of the recommendations from the boot camp was to follow this Domain progression. Domain 1, 4, 5… Here is the Progression for me; you don’t have to follow this, but I'm putting it here since it was part of my journey. Domain 1, 4, 5, 7, 3, 6, 8, 2 I covered the OSG from start to finish and used a whole month to revise all the chapters with practice questions; I was a bit aggressive in my approach. Each chapter was accompanied with aggressive Domain knowledge practice question, there were times I would go outside of the OSG to read technical blogs on the subject to get a general view of the subject, look for images and diagrams online to attach pictures to words and there were also times I used chatGPT to explain somethings to me like a 5 year old, I would ask chatGPT to break down a scenerio ,to see different usecases. Slow and painful but it opened me up to a style of looking at the questions. Hope this helps.
0 likes • Jul 11
@April Stanford 9th Edition
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@samuel-james-4061
I am a software Engineer by day and a wannabe content creator.

Active 27d ago
Joined May 22, 2024
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