Been thinking a lot lately about how many fresh college grads are probably going to wind up joining the cybercrime community thanks to AI's impact to entry-level jobs, particularly in IT.
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Been thinking a lot lately about how many fresh college grads are probably going to wind up joining the cybercrime community thanks to AI's impact to entry-level jobs, particularly in IT. We've spent years telling everyone we had this huge shortage of qualified IT workers, and that those who pursue a career in cyber have a promising future. Whoops.
And then I was tagged in this LinkedIn post, which seems to agree.
Financial Times recently had a good video story on how AI is affecting the job market
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeTFpsuCor8NPR's Planet Money on which jobs are least threatened by AI
https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2025/09/30/jobs-ai -
Been thinking a lot lately about how many fresh college grads are probably going to wind up joining the cybercrime community thanks to AI's impact to entry-level jobs, particularly in IT. We've spent years telling everyone we had this huge shortage of qualified IT workers, and that those who pursue a career in cyber have a promising future. Whoops.
And then I was tagged in this LinkedIn post, which seems to agree.
Financial Times recently had a good video story on how AI is affecting the job market
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeTFpsuCor8NPR's Planet Money on which jobs are least threatened by AI
https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2025/09/30/jobs-ai@briankrebs call me old fashioned, but not being stuck in a layer cake plot is one of my favorite perks of traditional employment