Former intelligence CIO Dale Meyerrose discusses the top cyber stories of the year.
wfedstaff | June 3, 2015 6:18 pm
Four big cyber stories in 2011 will continue to have a lasting impact in the years to come, said Dale Meyerrose, former CIO for the intelligence community and the current vice president and general manager of Cyber Integrated Solutions at the Harris Corporation.
The incident shows the globalization of cyber space, Meyerrose said. It also highlights that the future of the cyber markets may not be U.S.-driven and the possibility that the cyber talent will not be from the United States, he said.
This was also a “monumental story” because Google disclosed information about its vulnerabilities, something that always causes “trepidation” among companies for fear of market share impact, Meyerrose said.
The demand for the iPad demonstrates the mobility of the workforce, Meyerrose said.
As new legislation gives federal employees more telework opportunities, Meyerrose said, “We’ve got to figure out how to move our comfort zone outside of networks into cyberspace.”
The acquisition “jolted the market into the thinking and idea of embedding hardware and security and reaching out to different markets than we previously thought,” Meyerrose said.
“Guess who’s going to be given the responsibility to come up with some fixes?” he said.
The Wall Street Journal reports on the potential fallout of WikiLeaks on companies’ use of the cloud.
Meyerrose said cyber professionals will have to develop a “new language” in this new environment. He said “trusted platforms” — not simply secure platforms — must emerge in the cloud.
In the age of austerity, organizations can turn to the cloud as a way to stay modern while cutting costs, he said.
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Click here to see all the stories in the ‘2010 and Beyond’ series.
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