This is the 4th part of the podcast's return after a brief hiatus.
Daniel Ayala continues his interview of me. In this fourth part, we will discuss my first forensic litigation case, the importance of data governance, the myth of cyber, why I am tired of cybersecurity conferences, and so much more!
#047 – Cody Cornell: Allow People to Focus on Interesting Things
#046 – Bret Fund: Trying To Solve the Talent Gap Problem
#045 – Kristinn Gudjonsson: You Don’t Want Analysts Spending All Their Time Extracting Data
#044 – James Carder: Automate As Much As You Can
#043 – David Navetta: The Year Of the Phishing Attack
#042 – Jared Coseglia: Those Numbers Are Real
#041 – Andrew Hay: Creative Solutions to Hard Problems
#040 – Michelangelo Sidagni: One Size Doesn’t Fit All
#039 – James Tarala: What Does the Risk Really Look Like
#038 – Eric Conrad: You Need To Be Interested Beyond 9 to 5
#037 – Johannes Ullrich: Solving That Puzzle In Your Network
#036 – Jorge Orchilles: Offense Informs Defense
#035 – David Kovar: Where Is the Best Application of Your Skill Set
#034 – Harlan Carvey: You Have To Apply the Data To Your Theory
#033 – Perry Carpenter: Security Culture Management
#032 – Ryan Kalember: We’ve Moved From Mass Surveillance to Targeted Attacks
#031 – Jobert Abma: All Bugs Are Shallow
#030 – Joseph Carson: We Need a People-Centric Approach
#029 – Don’t Hire Security Consultants
#028 – Brett Shavers: It’s Not the Machine, But the Examiner
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