I think social cybersecurity is going to always be an ever changing, constantly evolving subject. It will certainly require more people to strengthen, adapt, and improve our ways of everyday online activities. I believe that countering cyberattacks starts at the intelligence level in the Department of Defense, but I also believe that the public should be made aware when adversaries have hacked into US organizations. This takes a huge team of different agencies working together, and I hope more young, educated people will see value in these types of IT and cyber careers.

 In recent years, the military has been very strict on training members and creating an environment that is focused on operational security and protecting those members from cyberattacks. They have also implemented a no-trust IT policy, which restricts what data and information their members can print, download and share from their personal devices off of sites that contain PII, command information, schedules and other sensitive information.

            All in all, it is going to take more people, more interest, and a continued climate of social cybersecurity for the US to remain the dominant information organization. The government and media will need to work together to release scams, cyberattacks, and adversary cyber activities and educate the public on how they work.