Cyber Security Engineer Interview Questions

644 cyber security engineer interview questions shared by candidates

describe what is the 3 threats for company: answer below. Cybersecurity Threats (e.g., Ransomware, Phishing, Data Breaches): Description: This category encompasses a wide range of malicious activities targeting a company's digital assets. Ransomware: A particularly disruptive form of malware that encrypts a company's data and systems, demanding a ransom payment (often in cryptocurrency) for their release. This can halt operations, cause significant financial losses, and damage reputation. Phishing/Social Engineering: These attacks exploit human psychology rather than technical vulnerabilities. Phishing involves deceptive emails, messages, or websites designed to trick employees into revealing sensitive information (like login credentials) or clicking malicious links that install malware. Social engineering broadly refers to any manipulation of individuals to gain unauthorized access or information. Data Breaches: Unauthorized access to, or acquisition of, sensitive, protected, or confidential data. This can occur due to various reasons, including successful cyberattacks, insider threats, or even accidental exposure. Data breaches lead to significant financial penalties, reputational damage, and loss of customer trust. Impact: Financial losses (due to downtime, recovery costs, legal fees, fines), reputational damage, loss of intellectual property, disruption of operations, and erosion of customer trust. Operational and Insider Threats: Description: These threats originate from within the company's own operations or from individuals who have legitimate access to its systems and data. Insider Threats (Malicious or Negligent): This is one of the most challenging threats to manage because it comes from trusted sources. Malicious Insiders: Employees, former employees, contractors, or business partners who intentionally steal data, sabotage systems, or commit fraud. This could be motivated by financial gain, revenge, or even ideological reasons. Negligent Insiders: Employees who unintentionally create security risks through carelessness, lack of awareness, or human error. Examples include falling for phishing scams, losing company devices, misconfiguring systems, or sharing sensitive information through insecure channels. Operational Failures/IT System Failures: Non-malicious disruptions to operations due to system outages, hardware malfunctions, software bugs, human error in configuration, or lack of proper maintenance. While not a "threat" in the malicious sense, they can have equally devastating impacts on business continuity and data availability. Impact: Data loss, system downtime, financial losses, regulatory non-compliance, reputational damage, and intellectual property theft. External/Environmental Threats (Beyond Cybersecurity and Internal Operations): Description: These are threats that originate from outside the immediate control of the company's internal systems or personnel. Natural Disasters/Extreme Weather: Events like floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, or severe storms can cause physical damage to infrastructure, disrupt supply chains, destroy data centers, and make it impossible for employees to work. Supply Chain Attacks/Third-Party Risk: Companies increasingly rely on a complex web of third-party vendors, suppliers, and partners. A security vulnerability or breach in one of these upstream or downstream partners can directly impact your company's security, data, or operations. Attackers often target smaller, less secure vendors as a stepping stone to reach larger, more secure targets. Economic Downturns/Market Volatility: Broader economic shifts, recessions, inflation, or significant changes in market demand can severely impact a company's financial stability, growth prospects, and ability to operate effectively. Impact: Business interruption, financial losses, supply chain disruption, reputational damage, and potential legal liabilities.
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Cyber Security Engineer

Interviewed at Eqvilent

4.2
Jul 23, 2025

describe what is the 3 threats for company: answer below. Cybersecurity Threats (e.g., Ransomware, Phishing, Data Breaches): Description: This category encompasses a wide range of malicious activities targeting a company's digital assets. Ransomware: A particularly disruptive form of malware that encrypts a company's data and systems, demanding a ransom payment (often in cryptocurrency) for their release. This can halt operations, cause significant financial losses, and damage reputation. Phishing/Social Engineering: These attacks exploit human psychology rather than technical vulnerabilities. Phishing involves deceptive emails, messages, or websites designed to trick employees into revealing sensitive information (like login credentials) or clicking malicious links that install malware. Social engineering broadly refers to any manipulation of individuals to gain unauthorized access or information. Data Breaches: Unauthorized access to, or acquisition of, sensitive, protected, or confidential data. This can occur due to various reasons, including successful cyberattacks, insider threats, or even accidental exposure. Data breaches lead to significant financial penalties, reputational damage, and loss of customer trust. Impact: Financial losses (due to downtime, recovery costs, legal fees, fines), reputational damage, loss of intellectual property, disruption of operations, and erosion of customer trust. Operational and Insider Threats: Description: These threats originate from within the company's own operations or from individuals who have legitimate access to its systems and data. Insider Threats (Malicious or Negligent): This is one of the most challenging threats to manage because it comes from trusted sources. Malicious Insiders: Employees, former employees, contractors, or business partners who intentionally steal data, sabotage systems, or commit fraud. This could be motivated by financial gain, revenge, or even ideological reasons. Negligent Insiders: Employees who unintentionally create security risks through carelessness, lack of awareness, or human error. Examples include falling for phishing scams, losing company devices, misconfiguring systems, or sharing sensitive information through insecure channels. Operational Failures/IT System Failures: Non-malicious disruptions to operations due to system outages, hardware malfunctions, software bugs, human error in configuration, or lack of proper maintenance. While not a "threat" in the malicious sense, they can have equally devastating impacts on business continuity and data availability. Impact: Data loss, system downtime, financial losses, regulatory non-compliance, reputational damage, and intellectual property theft. External/Environmental Threats (Beyond Cybersecurity and Internal Operations): Description: These are threats that originate from outside the immediate control of the company's internal systems or personnel. Natural Disasters/Extreme Weather: Events like floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, or severe storms can cause physical damage to infrastructure, disrupt supply chains, destroy data centers, and make it impossible for employees to work. Supply Chain Attacks/Third-Party Risk: Companies increasingly rely on a complex web of third-party vendors, suppliers, and partners. A security vulnerability or breach in one of these upstream or downstream partners can directly impact your company's security, data, or operations. Attackers often target smaller, less secure vendors as a stepping stone to reach larger, more secure targets. Economic Downturns/Market Volatility: Broader economic shifts, recessions, inflation, or significant changes in market demand can severely impact a company's financial stability, growth prospects, and ability to operate effectively. Impact: Business interruption, financial losses, supply chain disruption, reputational damage, and potential legal liabilities.

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