Joe Partlow, CTO, ReliaQuest Not only have enterprises accelerated their shift to the cloud in 2020, but they have also leapfrogged into multi-cloud environments. With this transition comes the top challenge: Maintaining appropriate visibility. Joe Partlow, CTO of ReliaQuest discusses how to tackle this challenge. p>In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Partlow discusses:
Why visibility is such a persistent challenge;
How the issue can be addressed up front in configuration;
Ways to increase visibility across cloud and on-premise environments for more efficient detection and response. Partlow, ReliaQuest CTO, currently oversees all new research and development efforts and new product initiatives. He has been involved with Infosec in some capacity or role for over 20 years, mostly on the defensive side but always impressed by offensive tactics. Current projects and interests include data analytics at scale, forensics, threat, security metrics and a
Improve Visibility Across Multi-Cloud Environments govinfosecurity.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from govinfosecurity.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Securing Super Bowl LV
A peek at open XDR technology and defense that held up better than the Kansas City Chiefs.
(image by detakstudio, via Adobe Stock)
Protecting the Super Bowl from cyberattackers is no small task. In fact, it s a sprawling, messy mass of challenges converging on a day when (almost) 100 million people are watching.
This year, much of the job fell to ReliaQuest, the official cybersecurity partner for both the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the NFL Super Bowl LV Host Committee. ReliaQuest CEO Brian Murphy and CTO Joe Partlow lay out the tasks:
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Protecting the stadium s wireless access points and payment systems. Defending the scoreboard from vandalism and sad fans hoping to change the score. Locking down the volunteer staff s background checks and COVID screening info. Securing coaches tablets and comms so their playbooks and play-calling are kept confidential. Making sure injury reports, starting lineups, and other valuable data aren t leaked to
A
s we close out the year, we asked several healthcare executives to share their predictions and trends for 2021.
Kimberly Powell, Vice President & General Manager, NVIDIA Healthcare
Federated Learning: The clinical community will increase their use of federated learning approaches to build robust AI models across various institutions, geographies, patient demographics, and medical scanners. The sensitivity and selectivity of these models are outperforming AI models built at a single institution, even when there is copious data to train with. As an added bonus, researchers can collaborate on AI model creation without sharing confidential patient information. Federated learning is also beneficial for building AI models for areas where data is scarce, such as for pediatrics and rare diseases.