Many instructors simply copy commands from English forums, paste them into a Bangla video, and don't explain the logic. Students learn to run tools but never learn to think . When the tool fails, they are useless.
The Bangla language has democratized cybersecurity. A student from Mymensingh without expensive English coaching can now learn how to secure a digital Bangladesh. That is powerful.
A shocking number of YouTube videos titled "Ethical Hacking" end with the instructor saying, "Disclaimer: This is for educational purposes only," followed by a demonstration of how to steal someone's WhatsApp backup. This is hypocritical.
But what lies behind this search query? Is it a genuine pathway to a lucrative cybersecurity career, or a dangerous flirtation with cybercrime disguised in noble language?
Stay curious. Stay legal. Stay ethical.
| Red Flag (Danger) | Green Flag (Safe & Ethical) | | :--- | :--- | | Promises "Hack any WiFi/ID in 5 mins" | Teaches you to set up your own lab environment. | | No discussion of legal permission. | Starts every demo with "Written permission from the owner." | | Only teaches destruction (Deleting files). | Teaches discovery and how to patch the vulnerability. | | Instructor hides their face/identity. | Instructor is transparent and often works in IT security. |
Without proper ethics training, many students graduate from these courses as "Script Kiddies"—people who use pre-made software to deface websites or harass girls on social media, thinking they are hackers. They aren't. They are criminals with a download button. Part 4: The Reality Check – Can You Get a Job? You completed a 10-hour Bangla course on YouTube. Can you now work for a bank in Gulshan?
This piece is written as a feature article/analysis, suitable for a blog, magazine, or educational portal. By: Cyber Desk Correspondent