참고 답변
Cyber security changes fast. New vulnerabilities are discovered daily, attackers constantly evolve their tactics, and tools you learned a few months ago might already be outdated, so it's vital to stay current.
A strong answer here isn't about listing every blog you follow, but showing that you treat staying informed as an active habit, not a one-off task.
Here's how many analysts do it:
Security news sources. Sites like Krebs on Security, The Hacker News, and Dark Reading offer daily updates on breaches, threat actor activity, and major vulnerabilities.
Threat intelligence feeds. Free or commercial feeds (like AlienVault OTX, Recorded Future, or CISA advisories) help you track active IOCs and attack patterns.
Podcasts and YouTube channels. For passive learning during a commute or downtime. Examples include Malicious Life, CyberWire Daily, or John Hammond for hands-on content.
Twitter/X and LinkedIn. Many researchers and vendors post zero-day alerts or PoCs here before they make it into official channels.
Hands-on platforms. Labs and CTFs (like TryHackMe, Hack The Box, or Immersive Labs) often tie exercises to recent attacks, letting you learn by doing.
More important than the sources themselves, is showing how you use them.
What do I mean? Well, reading about a CVE is one thing but pulling it into your lab, trying to exploit it safely, and understanding how to detect or block it in your environment is what sets professionals apart.