Coverbild der Sendung Plaintext with Rich

Plaintext with Rich

Podcast von Rich Greene

Englisch

Wissen​schaft & Techno​logie

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Mehr Plaintext with Rich

Cybersecurity is an everyone problem. So why does it always sound like it’s only for IT people?Each week, Rich takes one topic, from phishing to ransomware to how your phone actually tracks you, and explains it in plain language in under ten minutes or less. No buzzwords. No condescension. Just the stuff you need to know to stay safer online, explained like you’re a smart person who never had anyone break it down properly. Because you are!

Alle Folgen

26 Folgen

Episode Cybersecurity Burnout: Not a Character Flaw, a System Problem Cover

Cybersecurity Burnout: Not a Character Flaw, a System Problem

You're reading a breach report. Third one this month. Last year a story like this would have lit something in you. Today you scroll past it. That's not you. That's the bill. Episode 26 of Plaintext with Rich is the fourth installment of the Month of Mindfulness, a five-week series on self-care for people working in security and tech. This week we're talking about burnout, what it actually is and why the cybersecurity industry produces it reliably. We use the World Health Organization's classification of burnout as an occupational phenomenon and Christina Maslach's three dimensions (exhaustion, cynicism, reduced efficacy) to name what most of us feel but can't label. We get into the systemic causes specific to our field: always-on culture, headcount lag, and job designs that treat recovery as a perk instead of infrastructure. The episode lands with a Plaintext Starter Kit split between what the individual can do and what only leadership can fix. If you've ever caught yourself scrolling past a breach report that used to light a fire and realized you don't feel anything, this one is for you. Whether you're the one carrying the load or the one supposed to be protecting the people who are. Ten minutes or less. One topic. No panic. Christina Maslach -> https://www.linkedin.com/in/christinamaslach/ World Health Organization -> https://www.linkedin.com/company/world-health-organization/ Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566974/fan_mail/new] YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube   Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple   Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify   Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog   Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord   Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin   Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene

Gestern - 8 min
Episode Physical Health in Cybersecurity: The Body Keeps the Receipts Cover

Physical Health in Cybersecurity: The Body Keeps the Receipts

It's Friday morning. You stand up to refill your water and your back doesn’t move the way it used to. The systems are up and running smoothly. Your body hasn’t gotten the same memo. Episode 25 of Plaintext with Rich is the third installment of the Month of Mindfulness, a five-week series on self-care for people working in security and tech. This week we’re talking about physical health, the silent receipt your body keeps for the cumulative load of this job. We get into the specific body costs of security work: long incident response shifts, screen time, the cortisol of on-call, sleep disruption from pages, and the war-room conditions that turn your spine into a slow-motion lawsuit. The episode lands with a Plaintext Starter Kit of habits you can start this week, no programs to join and no protocols to memorize. If you’ve ever come off a long incident and felt every hour you spent at the keyboard in your shoulders, this one is for you. Whether you’re an analyst, an engineer, or the one person doing security at a 40-person company, the body keeps the bill. For community around this conversation, find Rich’s LinkedIn group, Desk to Deadlifts. The name is catchy, but it’s not a powerlifting group. It’s a space for professionals trying to fit physical health into busy lives. Ten minutes or less. One topic. No panic. Desk to Deadlift (LinkedIn Group) https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13248033/ Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566974/fan_mail/new] YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube   Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple   Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify   Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog   Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord   Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin   Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene

15. Mai 2026 - 7 min
Episode Spiritual Health in Cybersecurity: The Why Behind the Work Cover

Spiritual Health in Cybersecurity: The Why Behind the Work

Spiritual health on a cybersecurity podcast sounds like a stretch. Stay with us. Because somewhere between the vendor pitches, the patch cycles, and the 3 a.m. page, a lot of us stopped working for the why and started working for the number. Episode 24 of Plaintext with Rich is the second installment of the Month of Mindfulness, a five-week series on self-care for people working in security and tech. This week we define spiritual health as the values that make up who you are, the things you won’t trade even for a raise. We get into mission drift, the quiet trap of lifestyle creep in a high-paying field, and the 3 a.m. test for whether your values are still alive when the paycheck isn’t watching. We acknowledge that for some listeners these values come from a faith tradition and for others they don’t, and both are valid. The episode lands with a Plaintext Starter Kit, including the simple act of writing your values down, asking yourself what ‘enough’ actually looks like, and finding people (including communities like Shield that are built for grounded, sustainable careers in tech and cyber) who remind you who you are before the title does. If you’ve ever wondered why the bigger paycheck stopped making the work feel better, this one is for you. Whether you’re a SOC analyst, an engineer, a CISO, or the one person doing security at a 40-person company, your values have to outrun your comp. Ten minutes or less. One topic. No panic. Shield Community, a wellness program built specifically for technology and cybersecurity professionals. https://www.shield.community/ [https://www.shield.community/] Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566974/fan_mail/new] YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube   Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple   Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify   Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog   Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord   Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin   Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene

8. Mai 2026 - 8 min
Episode Mental Health in Cybersecurity: The Weight of Vigilance Cover

Mental Health in Cybersecurity: The Weight of Vigilance

It's 6:47 a.m. The incident was contained hours ago. The systems are fine. You're the one still running hot. This episode opens the Month of Mindfulness, a five-week Plaintext with Rich series on mental health, spiritual health, physical health, burnout, and work-life balance for people working in cybersecurity and tech. May 1 happens to fall during Mental Health Awareness Month, which makes it the right time to start. We're talking about the mental load that comes with vigilance work: on-call rotations, alert fatigue, incident response, and the cost of being the person who carries worst-case scenarios in your head all day. Plus a Plaintext Starter Kit with five practical moves, including how to actually use your Employee Assistance Program (EAP) and where to find Mental Health Hackers at the next conference you attend. And three programs worth bookmarking: Pacific Mindful's CyberReset, The Zensory, and Shield Community, each built for the nervous system demands of technology and cybersecurity work. If you've ever come off an incident and wondered why your body is still running an alert two days later, this is for you. Whether you're an analyst, an engineer, a CISO, or the one person doing security at a 40-person company, the load is real and so is the recovery. Ten minutes or less. One topic. No panic.  Pacific Mindful's CyberReset, a precision nervous system training tool built for high-exposure roles. https://www.pacificmndfl.com/reset [https://www.pacificmndfl.com/reset] The Zensory, a science-backed wellbeing platform with a dedicated Cyber Mindfulness Campaign. https://thezensory.com [https://thezensory.com] Shield Community, a wellness program built specifically for technology and cybersecurity professionals. https://www.shield.community/ [https://www.shield.community/] Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566974/fan_mail/new] YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube   Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple   Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify   Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog   Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord   Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin   Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene

1. Mai 2026 - 7 min
Episode Threat Intelligence: Why Most Organizations Get It Backwards Cover

Threat Intelligence: Why Most Organizations Get It Backwards

A dashboard lights up with indicators of compromise. The analyst copies the top five into a ticket, tags it "actionable," and sends it to the SOC. Nobody reads it not because they don't care, but because it didn't tell them what to do or why it mattered. That's not an intelligence failure. That's a confusion about what intelligence actually is. This episode breaks down threat intelligence from the ground up, drawing on Rich's military experience as a case officer in special operations. It separates data, information, and intelligence into three distinct layers, explains why most CTI programs skip the step that actually matters. Connecting analysis to a specific decision and introduces the concept of Priority Intelligence Requirements as the questions that should drive everything a security team collects and analyzes. The episode covers the intelligence cycle, why feeds alone aren't intelligence, and why organizations that never close the loop are publishing, not protecting. It closes with a five-step starter kit for building a threat intelligence function that actually changes decisions. Whether you're standing up a CTI program, evaluating one that isn't delivering, or just trying to understand what threat intelligence should look like, Plaintext with Rich cuts through the noise. Is there a topic/term you want me to discuss next? Text me!! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2566974/fan_mail/new] YouTube more your speed? → https://links.sith2.com/YouTube   Apple Podcasts your usual stop? → https://links.sith2.com/Apple   Neither of those? Spotify’s over here → https://links.sith2.com/Spotify   Prefer reading quietly at your own pace? → https://links.sith2.com/Blog   Join us in The Cyber Sanctuary (no robes required) → https://links.sith2.com/Discord   Follow the human behind the microphone → https://links.sith2.com/linkedin   Need another way to reach me? That’s here → https://linktr.ee/rich.greene

24. Apr. 2026 - 9 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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