Education Cybersecurity Weekly is a  curated weekly news overview for those who are concerned about the  Education industry. It provides brief summaries and links to articles  and news across a spectrum of cybersecurity and technology topics that  are specific to the industry.
 One hacker. Several months of the undiscovered data exposure. 500,000 students, whose personal information was compromised.   
How the [Grinch] hacker stole the data of 500,000 San Diego Unified students
EdScoop  on December 26, 2018
One hacker. Several months of the undiscovered data exposure. 500,000 students, whose personal information was compromised. 
Don Corleone would look doubtfully at someone telling him this news.  Fortunately, you are not an influential Italian mafioso, so we do not  need to prove that cybercrime nowadays is one of the powerful security  threats. 
The San Diego Unified School District reported the data breach  affecting nearly half a million current and former students and staff.  The methodology of a malefactor was common – the attacker got access to  the sensitive information through a phishing email directed at a  district employee. 
Although district IT staff members were aware of the hack in October,  the victims were informed two months later in order to keep the  investigative efforts in secret from hackers. Actually, this case  illustrates the tendencies we pointed out in “A Brief History of Higher Education Insecurity”.
The Idaho National Laboratory – a space of the national cybersecurity development
Statesman Journal on December 24, 2018
We guess, that place reminds a secret laboratory in a fantastic movie  scene. A darkened space, illuminated by monitor screens, 50 involved in  a cyber research workers and the atmosphere of secrecy that makes you  speak quieter. 
One of the United States’ primary cybersecurity facilities is located  at the Idaho National Laboratory, where the security specialists  protect the state systems, operating energy pipelines, hydroelectric  projects, drinking water systems and nuclear power plants. 
What is interesting, the laboratory is expanding. In the near future  there will be the Cybercore Integration Center, holding 20 laboratories  and 200 workers, and the Collaborative Computing Center, pretending to  be one of the nation’s most powerful supercomputers. That means the  cybersecurity workforce gap, experts frequently told about in 2018, does  not lose its topicality. 
By the way, the Idaho National Laboratory holds competitions among  junior and high school students to nudge tech-savvy youths toward  cybersecurity careers. After all, being a guardian of information  security means to be knighted in the 21st century.