Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

Dinari bridges traditional markets and digital assets - S2E09

In this episode, we're excited to introduce Brandon Ooi, the COO of Dinari, a fintech innovator making compliant tokenized securities accessible to investors. Brandon co-founded Crunchyroll as its CTO and worked at Stripe as an engineer specializing in marketplace enterprises, bringing deep technical expertise and product leadership to the intersection of traditional finance and blockchain technology. Join us as we explore Brandon's journey from building beloved consumer platforms to pioneering the future of securities trading, and how Dinari is bridging the gap between traditional markets and digital assets.

Is your vendor data a source of insight-or just more noise?

For many risk and compliance leaders, the reality of Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) is a mountain of disorganized spreadsheets, overflowing inboxes, and endless PDFs. When an audit is seven days away or the Board asks for a risk posture update, documentation overload becomes a liability. In this video, we explore the transition from vendor chaos to risk clarity. The Challenge.

Mastering Post-Quantum Cryptography and AI-Driven Cyber Threats

The cybersecurity landscape is undergoing a paradigm shift driven by two unstoppable forces: Generative AI and Shor’s Algorithm-capable Quantum Computing. As we approach "Q-Day," the window for organizations to transition to quantum-resistant architectures is closing. Modern threat actors are no longer just using brute force; they are utilizing Quantum-AI convergence to automate vulnerability discovery and bypass legacy encryption. This session provides a roadmap for transitioning from traditional cybersecurity to a Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) framework.

How Whistleblowers and Activists Protect Their Identity When Mailing

When you deal with sensitive information as a whistleblower, activist, or journalist, even sending regular documents can feel risky. Sure, the letter itself can be 100% legal, nothing shady at all, just information. But the stress is still there. The problem isn't really what you're sending. rather it's the trail that leads straight back to you.

What Happens If the At-Fault Driver Was Working at the Time of the Crash?

You got hurt in a crash. The other driver caused it. Then you learn that driver was on the clock for work. That one fact can change everything. It can affect who pays your medical bills. It can affect lost wages. It can affect how you rebuild your life. When a driver works, the employer may share legal responsibility. The company may have insurance with higher limits. Yet the rules are strict. You must show the driver was actually working. You must also act fast. Evidence fades. Memories shift. Companies protect themselves.
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Innovation at Speed: Why Machine Identity Security Is Now a Boardroom Priority

CEOs across the manufacturing sector remain optimistic about the potential of digital transformation to boost productivity, efficiency, and competitiveness. Yes - manufacturers face a double bind - innovate fast (and potentially feel pain) or risk falling behind; but every step forward expands the attack surface. This sits alongside a stark reality: the manufacturing sector now suffers 26% of all cyberattacks, making it one of the most targeted industries globally. However, the most significant emerging threat is not always the one that leaders expect.

Mastering HIPAA compliance in telemedicine: Secure remote healthcare delivery in 2026

Telemedicine has revolutionized healthcare delivery, enabling patients to access medical consultations from the comfort of their homes. However, this shift to virtual care necessitates strict adherence to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) to ensure the protection of patient privacy and the security of electronic health information.

Cybercrime's New Goal: It's Not Your Data, It's Your Time

The economic model of cybercrime is shifting from stealing data to creating time drag on the systems that keep the business running. Loud ransomware taught everyone to expect clear incidents, but quieter attacks now focus on prolonged disruption, where boards pay to restore growth and confidence without ever declaring a cyber event.