Core Sample
I started this episode differently as yesterday (5/14/2026) I gave a talk to ISACA Phoenix and I wanted to make the presentation available to this audience. The link to the PDF presentation with the worksheets is on page 5 and 17. The worksheets help guide a career pivot and this may be relevant if you listened to Episode 3 and are interested in how Cybersecurity connects with mining, resources and defense. The link can be found in the middle of the page - https://myrtushq.com/resources. I recently came across some numbers that showed women represent 8-17% of the global mining workforce don’t quote me but I think it came from a study by McKinsey in 2021. But some studies suggest that women lack specialized financial education to take on the investment risk but what I’ve seen recently is that women want to get involved. That tells you everything you need to know about where we are right now. Women in mining and critical minerals are ready. They have the industry knowledge, the operational instincts, the sector fluency. What they’re looking for is the language and the tools to connect all of that to their financial decisions. This episode is one piece of that puzzle. And I want to start somewhere that costs nothing, requires no license, and is available to anyone with an internet connection. EDGAR. And its Canadian counterpart, SEDAR+. These are the public filing databases where companies disclose what they are required to tell investors — and a lot of what they’d probably prefer you didn’t read too carefully. In this episode I’m walking you through what these databases are, how to find a company’s filings, and specifically what to look for in the cybersecurity disclosure sections that the SEC now requires every public company to file. Here’s why that matters as an investor: since December 2023, every U.S.-listed public company has been required to describe in their annual report exactly how they assess, identify, and manage cybersecurity risk — and how their board oversees it. That’s Regulation S-K Item 106. If a material cyber incident occurs, they have four business days to disclose it publicly under Form 8-K Item 1.05. I am starting with that as we have been discussing it on previous podcasts. What those filings say — and how they say it — tells you something real about a company. Is the disclosure specific and detailed, or is it boilerplate? Does the board have actual cyber expertise, or are they checking a box? Has the company disclosed a prior incident, and if so, how did they handle it? Is there a pattern? You don’t need to be a cybersecurity professional to start reading these. You need to know where to look and what questions to ask. That’s what this episode is about. We’re starting simple. We’re starting free. And we’re building from here. In this episode: * Women are increasingly showing up to learn more about investing and what it signals about this moment * What EDGAR is, what SEDAR+ is, and how to find any public company’s filings in under five minutes * The specific cybersecurity sections now required in every U.S. public company annual report * What strong cyber disclosure looks like versus boilerplate box-checking * The questions to ask when you’re reading a filing as a potential investor * Why reputational and operational cyber risk is a valuation question, not just a technical one * How to use this as one lens in your broader due diligence — not a replacement for professional advice Resources mentioned: * EDGAR: https://www.sec.gov/search-filings * SEDAR+: sedarplus.ca * SEC Cybersecurity Disclosure Rules overview: sec.gov * Sturnella Signals Newsletter: news.sturnellahq.com Find Sturnella: sturnellahq.com Disclaimer: Before I let you go — a quick word on something important. Everything I share on Core Sample is for informational and educational purposes only. I’m here to talk about ideas, share what I’ve learned, and give you tools to ask better questions. But I don’t know your specific situation — your finances, your risk profile, your legal circumstances — and nothing on this show should be taken as investment advice, financial advice, legal advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or financial instrument. Sturnella is a capital markets cybersecurity and governance advisory firm. We are not a registered investment adviser, broker-dealer, or financial institution. Women seeking investment decisions should work with licensed professionals to understand their risk profile and receive qualified advice. The information I share is based on publicly available sources and my own experience and perspective. I believe it’s accurate — but I’m not guaranteeing it, and things change. Now — with that said — I’m really glad you’re here. Pull up a chair. See you next time. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sturnellahq.substack.com [https://sturnellahq.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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