Veterans to guard against welfare hackers

Dozens of former armed forces officers are being retrained as cyber security officers in the human services department.

Dozens of veterans are being enlisted to help protect Australia's welfare system against online attacks.

Up to 36 former army, navy and air force personnel will be re-skilled as cyber security officers within the Department of Human Services.

"It's hard to translate military talk into the civilian world," air force veteran Anton Tereykovskyy told AAP in Canberra on Monday.

"Recognising the skills that veterans bring to the community and translating those skills is quite difficult."

Mr Tereykovskyy spent close to a decade in the RAAF as a ground security specialist, finishing work last Friday to start his new job in Canberra on Monday.

He will work as a cyber security analyst.

"Unfortunately, we know in the world we live in today those threats are not decreasing, they continue to increase," Human Services Minister Michael Keenan said.

The government has teamed up with veteran employment agency WithYouWithMe to retrain the former service members.

"Veterans make ideal employees. They have leadership skills. They have the ability to work as a team. They know how to work hard," the minister said.

Four of the hand-picked recruits, including Mr Tereykovskyy, started work on Monday, with more to follow in their footsteps over the next three years.

The department sits on what Mr Keenan described as a "treasure trove" of confidential, personal information.

It was cleared by the national audit office as "cyber resilient" last year, meeting the top four mitigation strategies of Australian spy experts.

"I've seen up close the professionalism, the dedication, the leadership and teamwork of our highly skilled ADF personnel," Veterans Affairs Minister Darren Chester said.


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Published 13 August 2018 12:36pm
Source: AAP


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