aeCERT

aeCERT award 

aeCERT award 

Toady is a very special day , I moved to Dubai exactly one year ago today. (2014)

And today I was awarded by the Arab Emirates Computer Emergency Response Team for my contributions in the UAE Cybersecurity community.

The award was given to me right after my Workshop which was organized by the Telecommunications Regularity Authority (TRA) and the Central Bank of UAE, where I had all bank representatives present. I covered the latest cyber threats on the Financial industry, Below is the screenshot form the TRA web site.

Erdal Ozkaya

aeCERT award
aeCERT arabic 1

aeCERT

Team Information
Team name aeCERT
Official team name The United Arab Emirates – Computer Emergency Response Team
Member since January 29, 2012
Host organization UAE Telecommunications Regulatory Authority
Country of team United Arab Emirates (the)  AE
Date of establishment 2007-08-31
Website http://www.aecert.ae
Team Contact Information
Regular telephone number +971-4-428-88-88
Emergency telephone number +971-50-695-55-88
E-mail address aecert@aecert.ae
Facsimile number +971-4-428-88-44
Postal address aeCERT P.O. Box: 116688, Dubai
Business Hours
Timezone GMT+4
Description of business hours Sunday to Thursday from 7am to 3pm GMT+4
How to contact outside business hours aeCERT can be contacted after hours for Emergencies by telephone and Short Message Service (SMS) using the After Hours Contact Information Shown below: +(971)-50-695-5588 or +(971)-50-6454343
Constituency
Type of Constituency Government, Private and Public sectors
Source of Constituency External to host
Description of Constituency Constituents are divided into four tiers; based on the Criticality of the Constituent’s organization to the UAE Critical National Infrastructure. Tier 1 includes critical government, telecommunications and law enforcements agencies, and Inter-CERTs;
Internet Domain Address http://www.aecert.ae/aboutus.html
Country of Constituency United Arab Emirates (the)  AE
Cryptography
PGP key id 0x02C177A58727402B 
PGP fingerprint 7182BFAECF70589A390C96B102C177A58727402B
Team PGP public key 7182 BFAE CF70 589A 390C 96B1 02C1 77A5 8727 402B  
First Team <first-team@aecert.ae>
Ahmad Hassan <ahmad.hassan@aecert.ae>
Updated on September 17, 2009 07:30 UTC

CISO Insight

Recognition in cybersecurity carries the most weight when it comes from peers and institutions that understand the discipline deeply. The value of any award lies not in the trophy itself but in what it represents — a body of work that has genuinely contributed to advancing security practice, educating the community, or protecting organisations from real threats.

The Role of Industry Recognition in Cybersecurity

Industry awards and recognition serve several important functions in the cybersecurity ecosystem. For individuals, they validate expertise and sustained contribution to the field. For organisations, they signal that their security leadership is respected by the broader community. For the profession as a whole, they highlight the practitioners and organisations whose work others should learn from and emulate.

The cybersecurity awards landscape ranges from highly credible peer-reviewed recognition to pay-to-play marketing exercises. CISOs and security professionals should be discerning about which recognitions they pursue and how they evaluate others. The most meaningful recognitions come from communities of practitioners who evaluate contributions based on impact, technical depth, and sustained engagement rather than marketing spend or self-nomination.

Building a Lasting Professional Reputation

Awards are markers along a career journey, not destinations. The most respected security leaders build their reputation through consistent contribution over years — writing, speaking, mentoring, contributing to open-source projects, and sharing lessons from both successes and failures. Professional recognition follows naturally from this sustained effort. Practitioners who focus on genuine contribution rather than trophy collection build reputations that endure beyond any single award cycle.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a cybersecurity award credible?

Look for awards with transparent evaluation criteria, peer-reviewed selection processes, and a track record of recognising genuine contributors rather than the highest bidders. Awards from established professional communities (like the Microsoft MVP programme, EC-Council Hall of Fame, or ISC2 recognition) carry more weight than vendor-sponsored awards with opaque selection processes.

How important are awards for CISO career progression?

Awards contribute to professional visibility and can open doors to advisory roles, speaking opportunities, and board positions. However, they are supplements to — not substitutes for — demonstrated operational experience, leadership capability, and a track record of building effective security programmes. Hiring managers and boards value what you have built more than what you have been awarded.

Related reading: For career development guidance, visit our CISO Career Hub or explore the Become a CISO roadmap.

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