This audio-only course turns complex cybersecurity objectives into clear, plain-language lessons you can absorb on the go. Each episode builds practical understanding step by step—defining key terms, walking real-world scenarios, and reinforcing concepts so they stick for exam day and on the job. By the end, you’ll have a confident grasp of the core domains, a usable study rhythm, and the mindset to perform under pressure.
Curated by: Bare Metal Cyber (147 videos)
Storage patterns for sensitive media combine physical control with cryptographic safeguards. On the exam, be ready to explain how locked rooms, safes, and controlled racks complement encryption, key management, and access logging for drives and backup sets. Transport patterns define secure movement between locations: tamper-evident packaging, sealed containers, documented couriers, and chain-of-custody forms create assurance that contents were not accessed or altered. For remote or cloud contexts, logical “transport” relies on strong session protections and authenticated endpoints, with tracking that mirrors physical custody records. Destruction patterns ensure data is irrecoverable at end of life or upon compromise, using methods aligned to media type—shredding, degaussing, cryptographic erase, or certified physical destruction—documented with certificates that tie serial numbers to destruction events. Operationalizing these patterns requires planning and verification. Storage locations are inventoried and audited; access is role-bound and time-limited; and exception handling is explicit for emergencies and litigation holds. Transport workflows include pre-transfer reconciliation, sign-off at handoff points, and post-transfer verification that the media arrived intact, with discrepancies triggering investigation. Destruction is never a casual act; it is scheduled, witnessed where required, and logged with evidence sufficient for compliance and legal defense. Metrics such as on-time reconciliation rates, transport incident counts, and destruction backlog age expose weak spots for improvement. By implementing storage, transport, and destruction as disciplined, testable routines, organizations reduce the probability and impact of media-related compromise. Produced by BareMetalCyber.com, where you’ll find more cyber audio courses, books, and information to strengthen your educational path. Also, if you want to stay up to date with the latest news, visit DailyCyber.News for a newsletter you can use, and a daily podcast you can commute with.