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WiCyS
Women in CyberSecurity

Advancing

Women in CyberSecurity

A community of women, men, allies, and advocates that support the WiCyS mission to recruit, retain and advance women in cybersecurity as part of a workforce solution.

WiCyS 2026
Conference

Members Register Here

Join thousands of women in cybersecurity for our flagship annual conference.

Non-Members
Welcome

Non-Members Register Here

Not yet a member? You can still register for WiCyS 2026.

Learn More

Learn More Here

Explore the full agenda, speakers, workshops, and career fair details.

What You Can Do

Join us to build a strong cybersecurity workforce! Explore our Membership Benefits page to determine if WiCyS is your community. We have professional and student communities, professional development programs, mentor/mentee programs, virtual and in-person conferences/career fairs, Job Board++, resources and events for women in cybersecurity and their supporters.

Join Us

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Stay in touch with WiCyS activities and news by subscribing to our emails.

Want to Do More?

Want to drive the change needed in the cybersecurity workforce? Check out our Support WiCyS page to see all of the ways you can sponsor, partner or donate to help us shift the paradigm.

Support

Already Involved?

Connect with others by logging into the WiCyS Member Community Portal. Network with your peers. Join a special interest group such as neurodiversity, data privacy, research or start your own interest group!

Community Portal

Special Thanks to Our Founding & Strategic Partners

⚠️

You've Been Phished

Don't worry — this was a simulated phishing exercise for CS 6035 Information Security Policies at Georgia Tech. No data was stolen, but here's what you should know.

📧 What Just Happened?

You received an email that appeared to come from WiCyS Georgia Tech inviting you to an event. The email asked you to scan a QR code or click a link to "RSVP." That link brought you to what looked like the real WiCyS website — but it was a clone hosted on wicys.dev instead of wicys.org.

In a real attack, that fake site could have presented a login page to steal your credentials, silently installed malware, or harvested your personal information while you browsed what looked like a legitimate page.

🏳 Red Flags You Should Have Noticed

  • The sender domain was wrong. The email came from @wicys.dev, not @gatech.edu. Always check the full sender address, not just the display name.
  • The website URL was wrong. You landed on wicys.dev, not wicys.org. Always check the address bar before interacting with any site.
  • QR codes hide the destination. Unlike a visible URL, a QR code obscures where you're actually going. Treat QR codes in emails with the same suspicion as shortened URLs.

🛡️ How to Protect Yourself

  • Always verify the sender domain. Hover over or tap the "From" address. @gatech.edu@wicys.dev.
  • Check the URL bar. Before entering any information, confirm you're on the real site. Bookmark important sites.
  • Don't scan QR codes from emails. Preview the URL before opening it.
  • Verify out-of-band. Got a suspicious email? Check the official website or message the sender on a trusted platform.
  • Report phishing to GT. Forward suspicious emails to phishing@gatech.edu.
  • Use 2FA everywhere. Even if your password is compromised, 2FA prevents account takeover.