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MVP

A 15-post collection

Lucky MVP 13

Each year since 2011, Microsoft has sent me a lovely email around this time: I've been fortunate enough to find a passion in life that has allowed me to do what I love and make a great living out of it all whilst contributing to the community in a meaningful and impactful way. In last year's MVP announcement blog post, I talked about one of my favourite contributions of all that year being the Pwned Passwords ingestion pipeline for the FBI. This year, they sent me something nice in return: Thi...

MVP Award 12

11 years now, wow 😲 It's actually 11 and a bit because it was April Fool's Day in 2011 that my first MVP award came through [https://www.troyhunt.com/accidental-mvp/]. At the time, I referred to myself as "The Accidental MVP" as I'd no expectation of an award, it just came from me being me. It's the same again today, and the last year has been full of just doing the stuff I love; loads of talks (which, like the one above at AusCERT, are actually starting to happen in front of real live humans a...

MVP 11

A little over a decade ago now, I awoke from a long haul flight to find an email I never expected to see: my first Microsoft MVP award [https://www.troyhunt.com/accidental-mvp/]. I earned the award by doing something many people couldn't understand, namely devoting a bunch of my time to creating things for the community. Not for money, not for glory, but for the love of technology and for the joy of seeing it make a difference to people. All this time later and in a fundamentally different world...

A Decade of Microsoft Most Valuable Professional

Last week, I received my 10th Microsoft Most Valuable Professional award. Being recognised as an MVP was a pivotal moment in my career and to continue receiving the award all these years later is an honour. Particularly given recent events that have made it exceptionally difficult to sustain community contributions [https://www.troyhunt.com/sustaining-performance-under-extreme-stress/], the recognition is particularly significant this year. Thank you to everyone who reads what I write, listens...

Microsoft MVP Award, Year 9

I've become especially reflective of my career this year, especially as Project Svalbard [https://www.troyhunt.com/project-svalbard-the-future-of-have-i-been-pwned/] marches forward and I look back on what it's taken to get here. Especially as I have more discussions around the various turning points in my professional life, there's one that stands out above most others: my first MVP award. This is not a path I planned, in fact when I originally got that award I referred to myself as The Accid...

Microsoft MVP Award, Year 8

Back in 2011, Microsoft gave me the rather awesome (IMHO) Most Valuable Professional Award [https://www.troyhunt.com/accidental-mvp/] for the first time. This is Microsoft's award for community leadership within a technology discipline which for me at the time, was developer security. I'm confident that award came largely due to the work I did on the OWASP Top 10 for .NET Developers series [https://www.troyhunt.com/owasp-top-10-for-net-developers-part-1/], a 10-part epic blog series that set me...

MVP, year 7

Just over 6 years ago, I received my first Microsoft MVP award [https://www.troyhunt.com/accidental-mvp/]. It was unexpected, in part because I'd only started doing anything community facing 18 months earlier. But it rated - people were finding what I was doing genuinely useful and that award was an absolutely pivotal moment which helped define what I do today. This weekend, I got the (still) eagerly awaited email for the seventh time: > Giddy up! 7 years running ? pic.twitter.com/okTP6GTk5n [...

MVP, round 6!

Each year since 2011, on April first (yeah, I know…), I’ve looked for one of these to land in my inbox and fortunately, this year didn’t disappoint: The MVP program has been an enormously fulfilling thing to be a part of these last five years. It’s been great for the connections I’ve made, the access to folks in Microsoft and the community engagements it’s lead to, particularly in my post-corporate life as an independent. Now yes, I’ve been misquoted as “Troy Hunt from Microsoft” many, many t...

Microsoft MVP again, year five!

Last year was rather busy. I pushed out 78 blog posts. I had lots of millions of page views with over half a million on the Shellshock bug post [https://www.troyhunt.com/2014/09/everything-you-need-to-know-about.html] alone (and mostly just in September). There were a bunch of conferences both down here in Australia and overseas, a few national TV spots and another 5 Pluralsight courses. And the ultimate endorsement of online success, abusive trolls. It was a very good year :) So per the title...

Microsoft MVP again for 2014! (and what it doesn’t mean)

So here’s how it works, for those who are curious: every year on one of four quarterly intervals, Microsoft chooses a bunch of people to give a shiny award to, some of for the first time, some of them who are backing up from previous awards. Much discussion and analysis goes into who should get these (as far as I understand it), but in a nutshell, this is what it’s all about [http://mvp.microsoft.com/en-us/overview.aspx]: > The Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) Award is our way of say...