Chevron Left
Back to Introduction to Cybersecurity Tools & Cyberattacks

Learner Reviews & Feedback for Introduction to Cybersecurity Tools & Cyberattacks by IBM

4.6
stars
15,195 ratings

About the Course

According to a recent IBM report, cyberattacks have surged 71%! This alarming statistic highlights a huge demand for cybersecurity professionals. This IBM course will introduce you to fundamental cybersecurity concepts, threats, and preventive measures to start your cybersecurity journey. In this course, you’ll explore the evolution of cybersecurity and discover the critical thinking model. You’ll also cover threat actors, malware, ransomware, and defenses against social engineering. Additionally, you’ll learn about internet security threats and security controls. You’ll explore the fundamentals of identity and access management (IAM), authentication, and access control. You’ll also look at the physical threats organizations encounter and consider effective security measures. Throughout, you’ll build practical knowledge through hands-on labs and gain technical expertise through insights from industry experts. Your final project will enable you to effectively demonstrate your understanding of cybersecurity principles. This course is for anyone who wants a basic understanding of cybersecurity and is part of a series designed to help you start a career as a Cybersecurity Analyst....

Top reviews

RV

Dec 24, 2020

If you want to learn cybersecurity and you have no idea about that. Then this is the best course which covers all the basic topics and provide you a best knowledge about cybersecurity and their tools.

VS

Feb 25, 2023

Being An IT Person I learned alot from this course and hope ill get more from this till now whatever i learned from this i got enough good experience and knowledge of ethical hacking and cybersecurity

Filter by:

3626 - 3650 of 3,941 Reviews for Introduction to Cybersecurity Tools & Cyberattacks

By Adeel A

Jun 11, 2023

Its good course

By Muhammad S A

Nov 11, 2021

Voice not clear

By Alexandra P

Apr 9, 2022

Informational.

By JANHVI S

Mar 5, 2024

good learner

By SANDHIYA R

Dec 21, 2021

Useful to us

By jeswin D

Jun 23, 2020

Theory based

By Jejhar S

May 1, 2020

informartove

By AMANSRIVASTAVA R

Sep 4, 2020

not so good

By prasad d

Sep 20, 2022

good one

By Ritwik M

Apr 17, 2022

Too vague

By Pratima R

Sep 23, 2020

GOOD...

By fredy a

Apr 27, 2024

great

By Birhanu A (

Mar 21, 2022

Nice

By marco c

Feb 16, 2022

Good

By ANGEL B A

May 15, 2023

good

By Kanwaldeep K

Mar 15, 2022

fine

By Teklemariam G

Jan 27, 2022

nice

By hansa p

Nov 27, 2020

NIce

By Mamadiyev S

Jan 20, 2024

bad

By Dhruv R G

May 8, 2020

ok

By Sobirjonov E R o

May 23, 2024

.

By Ashish s p

Mar 24, 2022

x

By Helen B

Jul 2, 2020

I was disappointed to see how little effort was put in to design this course. I was expecting more since this course seemed to get a decent rating based on Coursera user feedback. The course provides some very helpful resources to go back to later when learning more about cybersecurity and keeping up with the most up to date news and research. The course attempts to teach important concepts, but the lecture delivery method is just poor.

For starters, the video lecture designs were just sloppy -- poor audio recordings, typos on the slides and in the written transcripts, slide graphics were not visible most of the time (even when viewing in full-screen mode). Many acronyms and terms were not clearly defined or defined at all. This should be a number 1 priority for a beginners' course. The written transcripts for each of the lecture slide simply just transcribed the audio and did not correct any transcription mistakes when they appeared. There should also be helpful written guides creating outlines for each of the units and the terms/concepts presented.

This course has a 7-day free trial, but I canceled before the trial was over. It is not worth paying for something where there is clearly very little effort put into making the course.

Overall disappointed because I expected more from IBM since they have top experts in this field.

By Andrew F

Jun 28, 2021

I am always grateful for free access to learning, but this was not amazing.

The course seems like it was patched together from disconnected fragments of old IBM training sessions. The audio quality is often poor. The subtitles are full of errors and [inaudible] tags. The presenters are doubtless knowledgeable, but often do not teach very well. For a beginner course, acronyms and technical language appear frequently without explanation. The explanations are sometimes good, but only sometimes. At other times, I found myself losing the thread of the lecture repeatedly.

The quiz questions are sometimes badly written and force you to guess what they mean. Others simply do not support the learning well. For example, instead of asking you about the concepts, they might test you on exactly what wording was used on a particular slide.

The quality of the slides is also highly variable. Some are fine. Others are garbled acronym salads with incomprehensible diagrams and ancient clip-art, featuring text that is multicoloured for no obvious reason and entirely in Comic Sans. I swear this is true.

It is still great to have free access to information. If you are interested, then it might be worth your time. But personally I could not recommend that anybody pays the monthly subscription fee for this.

By Heather

Feb 17, 2023

I will say that there is a lot of great information in this course but it is like taking a history class, they tell you information, you take notes and do some reading, then you take a test based off of what they went over in the course. There was no real information that you could actively take and use, at least not right away. You will need to continue taking more and more courses/certificates before you can gain the knowledge and wherewithal for the actually used tools to obtain a job in this field.

I huge downside to this course is this was recorded as if you were in a meeting with someone and I felt like there was a lot of stumbling, stuttering, mumbling, coughing, pauses and more that they could have gone back and re-recorded or something so that you could fully understand and get what they were trying to say. There were even parts of the transcription and closed captioning of the audio didn't even pick up on and had to put "in-audible".

For such a huge company I feel as if the quality of the audio and even the videos provided could have been better.