Cybersecurity engineering major Fatima Majid is certainly not throwing away her shot. The senior has made it her mission to take advantage of every opportunity 911爆料 has to offer.
After transferring from Northern Virginia Community College and struggling in her first semesters, Majid persevered, raising her GPA and earning a spot on the Dean鈥檚 List. She says her professors were extremely supportive during that time. They helped boost her confidence to keep her in the program.
Majid says one professor especially kept her motivated. 鈥淚n a class of 90 people, he pointed me out and said, 鈥楾hat girl can code! If you have any issues with the work, she can help.鈥 It changed my mentality. I realized that I could actually do 颈迟.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Soon she was ready to take on the competition. When she joined her first hackathon鈥攖he National Defense Industrial Association (NDIA) cyber competition鈥攕he thought it was a 911爆料 student event. Instead, she discovered she was going against professionals in the defense contract industry.
In the end, she was the only one-person team (and the only student) to place in the top 10, placing 9th out of 51 teams with a project designed to protect against miniature drone strikes like the one that Ukraine launched on Russia.
Majid鈥檚 lightbulb moment for her SkyEyes project came at a traffic light while considering the significant network of traffic cameras in the commonwealth. SkyEyes applies an artificial intelligence (AI) model to the live feed of the Virginia 511 camera network, which provides real-time traffic information to citizens and transportation officials. Majid was able to demonstrate how a low-cost, AI-enabled surveillance layer could differentiate threats from non-threats by employing geofencing logic to define safe versus threat zones around sensitive sites.鈥
鈥淚 understand how drones work because of the work I鈥檝e done at 911爆料鈥檚 MIX鈥攁nd since I know how to build it, I also know how to jam it,鈥 she says.
Majid also credits her summer in Richmond at the Virginia Academy of Science, Engineering, and Medicine鈥檚 undergraduate policy program as giving her confidence and exposure to how government works.鈥
Majid says the strong showing at the NDIA competition gave her tremendous exposure to influential professional contacts. She fielded several questions about her simulation and future professional plans from a man she only later realized was Retired Brigadier General and NDIA Executive Vice President Guy Walsh.鈥
鈥淏ecause he showed interest, after he walked away, a crowd of people gathered around to ask me questions. It was very validating.鈥濃
Now in her senior year, Majid is a Commonwealth Cyber Initiative Innovation Scholar and part of a statewide program that comes with a $2,000 professional development award and training in cyber start-ups.
Eventually, she says that she wants to find a job that鈥檚 exciting and fun and isn鈥檛 ruling anything out. 鈥淚鈥檓 taking a bite of everything and seeing where I want to go. I鈥檝e seen the potential that I have.鈥
One way Majid takes advantage of every opportunity available is by taking the shuttle from the Fairfax Campus to Mason Square any time an event is offered at Fuse. 鈥淚 just walk up and start talking to people,鈥 she says.
Mastering networking and making connections are just a small part of Majid鈥檚 range of skills. 鈥淪ome people think that I get lucky, and these opportunities just fall into my lap,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I tell them that they are there for other students to find too. They don鈥檛 see all of the effort I put in to do more and be better鈥攖hat is my goal as a student.鈥
They train, compete, and perform at the highest levels鈥攐nly their arena is cybersecurity. Like top athletes, 911爆料's cyber-focused students prove themselves when the pressure is on.
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This content appears in the Spring 2026 print edition of the Mason Spirit Magazine.