Loistava Information Security
CASTALOT® Dice | Cybersecurity Training Tool
CASTALOT® Dice | Cybersecurity Training Tool
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A Highly Effective Cybersecurity Training Tool
Fun, Kinetic, Colorful: a matching set of 14 large dice. When rolled together, they create modern passwords composed of uppercase letters, lower case letters, numbers, and special characters.
Teaching end users how to create strong passwords to protect your organization online is as easy as rolling the dice.
Just Roll To Make A Secure Password
You don’t have to be a cybersecurity expert to use these dice. Simply roll the dice together to generate a secure password — it’s that easy!
No guesswork is needed regarding special characters — if the characters appear on the dice, simply use them in your password.
Make Cybersecurity Fun
CASTALOT® Dice make generating secure passwords fun. Plus, the color and design will look great on any home or office desk.
They’re the perfect gift for dice collectors, or anyone interested in computer science, cryptocurrency or the challenges of our modern digital life.
The Perfect Gift For…
IT Professionals
Gain some peace of mind knowing your accounts and networks are safer and less vulnerable. Share these fun dice with your colleagues and workshop attendees.
Dice Hobbyists
Feed your passion for dice collecting with a practical purpose. Your interest in dice helps to solve a really big problem!
Cryptocurrency
You’re a savvy cryptocurrency supporter. Use these colorful dice to protect your gains by adding an additional layer of security.
A Highly Effective Cybersecurity Training Tool
All over the world, every day, we use physical teaching tools to help learners grasp unfamiliar concepts. All day long — from kindergarten, through grade school, high school, at the university level and medical school — physical teaching tools help learners understand new concepts and ideas.
Think back to your own experience:
In geography class, learning about continents, countries, mountain ranges — your instructor likely provided a globe and some maps.
Your geology instructor might have provided mineral samples, geodes or exotic fossils of trilobites, dinosaur parts, or petrified wood.
In your biology class, digging into the mysteries of life, you probably had the chance to explore a DNA model.
In medical school you’ll find numerous examples of models of human bones, organs and other structures.
We use physical teaching models — every day, all day long, all over the world — for one simple reason.
It works.
Why should cybersecurity concepts be any different?
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