CISOs are facing an increasingly complex, dangerous, and difficult digital landscape. Software supply chain attacks have increased an average 742% each year since 2019. The average cost of a data breach is an astounding $4.35 million–not to mention the potential shareholder lawsuits, loss of customers, and damage to brand reputation. And earlier this month, The White House released a new cybersecurity strategy that calls for greater cybersecurity liability and holding software providers responsible for insecure products released to consumers. Meaning, it’s now an organizational imperative at the highest level to get serious about securing your software supply chain.
The Future of IT & Cybersecurity
CIO & CISO Luncheon
Visionaries
Matt Stamper
CEO
Executive Advisor Group
About Me
Chris Simpson
Director of the National University Center for Cybersecurity
National University
Billy Norwood
CISO
FFF Enterprises
James Covington
VP Information Security & Privacy
SomaLogic
About Me
Steve Woodward
VP IT
Mission Healthcare
About Me
Stephen Alford
CIO
Worldwide Environmental Products
About Me
Sheela Kinhal
VP, Technology Risk
Green Dot Bank
Dane VandenBerg
Sr. Director, SecOps
Circle
About Me
Greg Bellasis
Director of Cyber Security
Altium
Michelle Moore
Director, Graduate Cyber Security Operations and Leadership
University of San Diego
About Me
Danny Nunez
Director, IT Infrastructure
Abzena
About Me
Austin Steffes
Sales Engineer
Sonatype
About Me
Ran Nahmias
CBO
Tamnoon
About Me
David Jayanathan
Field Technical Director
Cohesity
About Me
EVENT DETAILS
September 14, 2023
Agenda
2:30 PM-3:15 PM
Panel
Whitehouse Cybersecurity Strategy - Software Liability and a Path Forward
Panelists
Chair
Matt Stamper
CEO
Executive Advisor Group
Speaker
Sheela Kinhal
VP, Technology Risk
Green Dot Bank
Speaker
Austin Steffes
Sales Engineer
Sonatype
Speaker
Dane VandenBerg
Sr. Director, SecOps
Circle
Speaker
Greg Bellasis
Director of Cyber Security
Altium
3:20 PM-3:55 PM
Fireside Chat
Digital Transformation
CIOs play a crucial role in driving their organization's digital transformation efforts. The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the adoption of digital technologies, and CIOs must continue to lead the way to stay competitive and meet the evolving needs of customers and employees. This requires a deep understanding of the organization's goals, processes, and IT infrastructure, as well as collaboration with other business leaders. By successfully leading digital transformation, CIOs can position their company for long-term success in a digital world.
Panelists
Chair
Matt Stamper
CEO
Executive Advisor Group
Speaker
Chris Simpson
Director of the National University Center for Cybersecurity
National University
Speaker
Michelle Moore
Director, Graduate Cyber Security Operations and Leadership
University of San Diego