Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Jay Fohs, the senior customer advocate for financial and healthcare agencies at Veritas, said agencies must focus more heavily on data protection and resiliency as they move into a multi-cloud environment.
Kelsey Monaghan, the lead for federal strategic programs and partnerships for cloud and edge at Dell Technologies, said agencies need the ability to govern and provide workload flexibility across all individual cloud deployments to ensure consistency.
Mike Shortino, a principal digital strategist for federal civilian government at Salesforce, said by taking a platform approach to bring together data to make better decisions is leading to more trust and transparency in government.
Winston Chang, the federal chief technology officer at Snowflake, said the next generation of cloud services are giving agencies the tools to focus on business needs rather than the technology.
Cyber leaders at Customs and Border Protection, Education, FDIC and USCIS along with experts from Crowdstrike, Okta and Zscaler share their thinking on how to layer in security for zero trust while also minimizing friction on users.
Agencies have made their way down the zero trust path, but how are they working through the challenges? Jason Miller gets an industry perspective from Okta, CrowdStrike and Zscaler.
Bill Rowan, the vice president of public sector at Splunk, said agencies must move toward using real-time data to understand their technology environments and make changes to address security and citizens’ needs.
Agencies need to consider how best to use tools like continuous monitoring and how to integrate threat intelligence into their protections. All of these efforts are important to agencies as they digitally transform their services and processes and move more workloads to the cloud.
MK Palmore, the director of the Office of the chief information security officer at Google Cloud, said agencies can increase their cyber visibility through a shared security model.
Agencies have an opportunity to reduce costs and improve citizen services by moving away from paper forms.
Federal IT compliance is only enforced through self-reporting, so tracking action taken on security guidance is hard. Here’s why independent third-party capability is needed to monitor, track and verify compliance across the federal government.
Data is the connective tissue across all agency mission areas. No matter if you are serving citizens at the Social Security Administration or the IRS, or defending the homeland at the departments of Defense or Homeland Security, data will drive decisions. The challenge, of course, is data is always moving and changing.
Can artificial intelligence help agencies stay ahead of cyberthreats, especially as attackers get cleverer and potential attack vectors increase? BlackBerry CTO Charles Egan shares insights on why and how AI tools can help.
Stephen Ellis, the government solutions lead at Zoom, said agencies need to continue to innovate in how employees serve the citizens.