Computer science, Data science and Analytics, IT, and cybercrime are all closely related to cybersecurity in their own unique way. Computer science more shows the coding and software side of cybersecurity. Knowing how to code and what codes to use and how to counteract a code is what a cybersecurity specialist must know how to do in order to achieve their goal of stopping cybercrime. It also helps them to build and run programs that allow them to detect and stop criminal activity before it even begins. This is why the knowledge of computer science is important to a cybersecurity specialist. Data science and Analytics plays the role of reading the data and analyzing what happened. This can be beneficial by allowing the cybersecurity specialist to understand and read the data to get a better understanding of what happened and how it happened to prevent it from happening again. IT (Information and Technology systems) often gets confused with cybersecurity by the public because they are relatively similar, while one side protects you from criminal activity the other helps people better understand technology and how to not be viable to cybercrime. This gives the public more knowledge on how to better protect themselves and not allow themselves to fall victim to whatever cybercrime that may be lurking around the corner. Finally, we have cybercrime, which sounds a lot like cybersecurity but they both have their different tasks. Cybercrime is more of the legal handling of the criminal activity, kind of like a lawyer who studies criminal justice. It is a person who studies cybercrime and the different ways of enforcing the law in a criminal cyber-attack. This allows for repercussions in the real world and has the perpetrator in court to answer for their crimes after the cybersecurity side of things has been handled.