Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Fireside Chat with Aon CSO Joe Martinez

In this fireside chat, Chief Security Officer Joe Martinez shares insights on how Aon approaches various technical and business issues in protecting the company’s business-critical assets. Salt Security executives Michael Nicosia, co-founder and COO, and Michelle McLean, VP of Marketing, ask Joe about far-ranging topics including: This webinar first aired on December 15, 2022.

Best Practices for Your First 30 Days with Snyk, January 2023 - Snyk Customer Office Hours

As a new Snyk customer, do you want to get started with Snyk while following best practices? Or are you interested in learning about: Account set up strategies SSO and user provisioning Notification and automation settings and more...

Newsworthy Data Leaks | Cybersecurity Sessions #15 with Jurgita Lapienytė

Not a week goes by without a massive data leak being reported in the news – both in tech publications and across mainstream media. According to Atlas VPN, 5.9 billion credentials were leaked in 2021 alone. But it’s not just credentials under attack; personal data, payment information, sensitive corporate data, and even source code are all at risk of being leaked. But how is so much data leaked so often? What do criminals do with this data once they have it? How much risk does this pose to the public, and what can be done about it?

App Security & Compliance for SaaS Companies in the Saudi & MEA | Sangmesh (Founder, Marmin.ai)

In this session, Sangmesh Hiremath (Founder Marmin.AI) talks to Venky about how cybersecurity is a crucial driver for their business to expand and grow in Saudi Arabia, the Middle East, and the European markets. He also shares in detail about how meeting cybersecurity compliance enables them to stay on top of customer needs and serve them in the long run.

Is Network Evidence Really Needed for Security Operations?

Networks are the transport fabric for all IT however in the modern world they have become harder to access and monitor. Attackers inevitably leave traces on the network, and for this reason defenders understand the value of high-quality network evidence. But given the rise of encryption, digital transformation, Zero Trust architectures, and SASE… is it even feasible to collect network evidence anymore? Maybe we should throw in the towel and do without it?