Bob in Scilly

25 Followers
41 Following
56 Posts
Here, nowFormer DNA researcher (when PCR was new).
Recent yearsLiving in the Isles of Scilly since 2012 inc 2 special years on St Agnes
Birds, bugs and butterfliesLove nature, now hard of hearing. Co-authored ‘Butterflies of Cornwall. An Atlas for the 21st Century.
Governments caving to pro-genocide lobbies do nothing to protect Jewish people and risk deepening social division and polarisation.
A return to international legality is the only credible path to protecting all peoples without discrimination.

I've got weirdly specific news for you if you're reading this and:

- work in cybersecurity
- really like birds
- need a job

RSPB is hiring a cybersecurity head , remote UK £70-84k https://app.vacancy-filler.co.uk/salescrm/Careers/CareersPage.aspx?e=LMo8nnTwYNZCHgE1jeAoZx8SUby-hAn47n1u7Im3t2ioMPZvShNFR0zvFASfViC32_La-8eb8wY&iframe=True

#FediHired

Head of Cyber Security | RSPB

We are seeking a proven cyber security leader to take full ownership of the RSPB’s cyber security strategy and operations. This is a critical, strategic role for someone who can make immediate impact, bringing deep technical and practical expertise, to confidently lead the organisation’s cyber security agenda.You will be the go-to authority on cyber security, responsible for safeguarding our digital infrastructure, data, and services. Reporting directly to the Chief Digital Technology Officer, you will shape and deliver a forward-thinking cyber strategy that ensures resilience, compliance, and a strong security culture across the RSPB.This is not a developmental role. We are looking for someone who has already led cyber security at scale, ideally in a complex, multi-stakeholder environment, and who can confidently operate at a senior level from day one.Key ResponsibilitiesLead the development, implementation, and continuous improvement of the RSPB’s cyber security strategy.Act as the senior accountable executive for cyber risk, compliance, and incident response.Provide expert advice to the CDTO, trustees, and executive board on cyber threats, risks, and mitigation strategies.Embed a cyber-aware culture across the organisation through training, awareness campaigns, and policy enforcement.Maintain oversight of cyber KPIs, threat intelligence, and incident response protocols.Ensure compliance with relevant regulatory frameworks (e.g., PCI DSS, NIST, ISO 27001)Build and maintain strategic relationships with external partners, including regulators and the National Cyber Security Centre.Represent cyber security in major organisational change programmes and digital transformation initiatives.Essential Qualifications Professional security certification such as CISSP, CISM, or equivalent.Degree in Cyber Security, Information Security, or Digital Technology, or equivalent professional experience (minimum 10 years in cyber security roles, with at least 5 years in a senior leadership capacity).Membership of a recognised professional body (e.g., (ISC)², ISACA, BCS).Essential Knowledge and ExperienceDemonstrable experience leading cyber security in large, complex organisations.Deep understanding of cyber security frameworks and standards (e.g., NIST, ISO 27001, PCI DSS).Proven track record of developing and delivering cyber strategies and managing risk at an enterprise level.Strong technical knowledge of modern security technologies and principles, including Azure, AWS, and SaaS environments.Experience of governance, risk management, and compliance in regulated environments.Evidence of leading cultural change and embedding cyber awareness across diverse teams.Experience advising executive boards and trustees on cyber risk and resilience.Essential SkillsStrategic leadership and influence at executive and board level.Ability to operate independently and take full ownership of the cyber function.Strong communication skills with the ability to translate technical risk into business impact.Decisive and calm under pressure, particularly in high-risk or incident scenarios.Skilled in building high-trust relationships with internal and external stakeholders.DesirableExperience in cyber leadership within the charity or not-for-profit sector.Evidence of sector-wide advocacy, thought leadership, or contributions to national cyber policy or forums.This is a Full-Time, Permanent role for 37.5 hours per week. RSPB provides a flexible working policy. To complete this application process you will be asked to provide a CV and Covering Letter. For further information please contact [email protected] Please note that we are actively recruiting for this vacancy, and reserve the right to close once sufficient applications have been received.We are seeking to commence interviews from the 17th of November, 2025.We are committed to developing an inclusive and diverse RSPB, in which everyone feels supported, valued, and able to be their full selves. To achieve our vision of creating a world richer in nature, we need more people, and more diverse people, on nature’s side. People of colour and disabled people are currently underrepresented across the environment, climate, sustainability, and conservation sector. If you identify as a person of colour and/or disabled, we are particularly interested in receiving your application. Contact us to discuss any additional support you may need to complete your application. The RSPB is an equal opportunities employer. This role is covered by the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974. The RSPB is also a licenced sponsor. This role is eligible for UK Visa Sponsorship.    

@ianRicketts very nice, Ian
Poplar Hawk Moth
@ChrisMayLA6 @davidallengreen Read DAG’s post earlier and as come to expect, thoroughly yet concisely informative. Had to read up on Newton which no hardship. Don’t know how many of 17 others charged (per BBC report) for similar social media offences have received custodial sentences.

Finally got through the Supreme Court judgement. My lay person take so would welcome legal insight. I found it readable (mostly), exhaustive, technical with narrow terms of reference but wide-ranging implications.

The case is made that the Scottish government’s legislation requires interpretation on a matter (equality) reserved to the UK government. I was able to follow this.

For me, the main point re: the case brought is not the determination of ‘biological sex’ for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010 and following interpretation to implement Parliament’s wishes, but the role played by the EA 2010 with respect to Section 9 of the Gender Recognition Act 2004. Ie whether EA 2010 gives 9(3) effect to disapply 9(1). This bit is unfortunately very hard to follow as a lay person, unlike the rest of the judgement.

Plus, seems that challenges to the European Court of Human Rights can result in valuable improvements to domestic legislation. The Supreme Court judgement addresses submissions of the Equality and Human Rights Commision.

@davidallengreen I fear the humble auto-correct is on the way to going full Skynet with such fake offerings from AI blurring reality. Fascinating post. Disbarring, wasted costs and consequences.
@davidallengreen a beautifully crafted post in the interests of public understanding of the law. It lifted my heart on a January eve. Am simply in awe of your skill. I expect Douglas Adams would have had a field day with the opportunities for quantum or new discipline of physics afforded by the ‘second page’ and its position in so many possible universes.

As I understand it, not everyone celebrates Christmas, so a rousing version of a well known Christmas ditty for governments everywhere and a general reminder for the season of goodwill x

*Spoiler alert, conforms to IHRA working definition and examples*

On the *12th day of Genocide, Israel said to me:

Raze all the buildings
Gaslight all the time
Steal all their land
Kill all the children
Kill all the women
Kill all the journos
Kill all the medics
Kill all aid workers
WE’RE THE VICTIMS
We’re above the law
More bombs, please
They’re only animals
Ethnic cleansing any time we like

*actually 435 days

@openculture gorgeous (shame in some ways it’s a Rook but who cares)