Thursday, 11 September 2014

Apple now emailing users when iCloud accessed via Web

It's one of several security improvements expected from the company following its involvement in last week's celebrity photo theft

In the wake of last week’s theft of celebrity photos, Apple has started beefing up security for its iCloud service. The move, part of improvements also promised by Apple CEO Tim Cook last week, comes just a day before one of the company’s biggest events of the year.
icloud security logout

On the Web, iCloud's advanced account settings allow you to log out all currently logged in sessions.

As first reported by MacRumors, Apple will now send iCloud users an email whenever they (or someone purporting to be them) log into iCloud.com via a Web browser. This seems to happen even if the browser and computer in question are ones that a user has previously logged in with. Apple’s email advises users to change their Apple ID password if they believe someone else is accessing their account. (As an additional tool, iCloud’s Web interface does provide the ability to log out every currently logged in browser in its Account Settings > Advanced.)

Granted, in my brief test, the email arrived ten minutes after I logged in, which could still give an interloper plenty of time to do some damage. Currently iCloud’s Web interface does not have the option to require two-step authentication when logging into your account.
icloud security login

Apple now sends you an email, notifying you when someone has logged into your iCloud account via the Web.

Given the broad publicity over this security issue, it seems likely Apple will take at least some time at Tuesday’s event to respond and potentially discuss what measures are being taken to ensure the security of its users. No doubt the company hopes that this incident won’t overshadow what most assume to be the launch of the next iPhone.


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Monday, 1 September 2014

How to Identify Soft Skills in IT Job Candidates

As IT departments are called upon to play larger, more public roles in today's businesses, the skill set of the ideal IT employee has changed. How can companies identify whether a job candidate has the 'soft skills' to bridge the gap between IT and the rest of the business?

IT is out of the backroom and in the front office – so it's time to hire candidates who match that new reality.

This presents a vexing problem for both recruiters and employers alike. In a recent survey, the National Association of Colleges and Employers found that employers look for candidates who are decisive, can solve problems, are good communicators and are analytical.

That need is the same for technology hires. Given how the role of IT has changed, employers see soft skills mattering more than ever.

"IT is no longer in the back room with the lights off writing code," says John Reed, senior executive director at Robert Half Technology, an international technology recruiting and staffing company. "IT is in the room with the business leaders when decisions are made."

It's also important to consider whether your IT people are working directly with customers or internally with other employees, says Tammy Browning, senior vice president of U.S. field operations for Yoh, a consulting organization that provides IT talent.

"The heads-down IT person who's just programming is becoming less and less attractive to employers, because you have to be able to communicate with your business partners or their customers," Browning says.

What Soft Skills Do IT Workers Need?
Reed says you want your IT people, whether they're servicing external customers or employees within the company, to be able to communicate efficiency, understand business issues and offer resolutions, and possess problem-solving skills.

A separate survey conducted by the Workforce Solutions Group at St. Louis Community College found that 60 percent of employers say applicants lack "communication and interpersonal skills." According to the report, this is up 10 percent from two years ago. "Many people tell me they're looking for someone who has almost a customer service mindset," Reed says.

Browning says she looks for candidates who can act almost like consultants – people who "can really coach non-IT people on how to articulate their needs." She wants people who can reverse engineer a solution to a problem for someone, or even change the mindset of a person who says she needs A but would really do better using Z – even if Z hasn't been created yet.

"In IT, it's important to go to the non-IT people who don't understand what technology can actually do," Browning says. That's where soft skills in an IT person come into play.
How to Identify a Candidate's Soft Skills in the Interview?

This isn't always easy. At the recent Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference, Reed says he found that soft skills were a clear differentiator in tech candidates. But soft skills are hard to find.

Beyond asking potential tech hires about their hard skills and abilities, include questions that you'd ask people you're hiring in any other part of the company. "IT should come out of behavioral interviewing," Reed says.

In talking about past work experience, or suggesting hypothetical situations, follow up with questions such as the following:

"What was your approach to resolving that issue?"
"Talk to me about scenarios you've had previously where you've been put in this position."
"How did you use your analytical skills to solve those problems?"

Reed says this is "a very different interview process for a lot of people in tech." While you may ask a candidate to architect a tech infrastructure on a whiteboard, make sure to follow up with questions that will help you see how that person would work with a team or interact with customers. Spend as much time in the interview on both hard and soft skills, he says.
What About People Who Aren't Actively Looking for a Job?

If you're recruiting from a pool of people who aren't active job seekers, you can also look at a possible candidate's interests and activities outside of their work lives, says Pete Kazanjy. He's the co-founder of TalentBin by Monster, a company that recruiters use to find what TalentBin calls "unfindable passive candidates" – people who companies want to hire but who aren't actively looking to change jobs.

"Individuals signify this kind of information naturally by virtue of what they're doing on the Web as opposed to a more artificial approach that's associated with LinkedIn or posting a resume," Kazanjy says.

For example, in addition to being part of an Oracle Database group on MeetUp.com, the person may also be involved in mentoring programs or active in Oracle forums helping other people solve problems. This indicates that he or she would be a good mentor within your company and open to problem-solving activities, he says.

At the same time, someone who picks fights on Twitter or blogs about hating his or her current coworkers may not be the right person to call in for an interview, Kazanjy says. "Those are the sort of things that may fall out in the interview process and reference checking."

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