Let’s Pretend We’re Getting Hacked. Who Wants to Panic First?

CISO Series Podcast - A podcast by David Spark, Mike Johnson, and Andy Ellis - Marți

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All links and images for this episode can be found on CISO Series. Tabletop exercises are critical procedures to learn how everyone will react during an actual attack. Panic is usually the first response, so why don't we do that when we're playing our pretend game of getting our business compromised by a nefarious hacker? This week's episode of CISO Series Podcast was recorded in front of a live audience in Clearwater, Florida for the Convene conference produced by the National Cybersecurity Alliance (AKA StaySafeOnline.org). Joining me on stage for the recording was my guest co-host, Hadas Cassorla, CISO, M1 and our guest, Kathleen Mullin (@kate944032), CISO, Cancer Treatment Centers of America. Thanks to our podcast sponsors, Cofense, KnowBe4 & Terranova Cofense is the only company to combine a global network of 32 million people reporting phish with advanced AI-based automation to stop phishing attacks. Our global phishing defense centers work 24/7 to support more than 2,000 enterprise customers, providing the technology and insights needed to identify & block threats. KnowBe4 is the world’s largest integrated Security Awareness Training and Simulated Phishing platform. KnowBe4 helps organizations manage the ongoing problem of social engineering through a comprehensive new-school awareness training approach. Tens of thousands of organizations worldwide use KnowBe4’s platform to mobilize their end users as a last line of defense. Get free phishing benchmarking data to drive effective behavior change and grow your organization's security-aware culture with the latest edition of the Phishing Benchmark Global Report! Taken from this year's Gone Phishing Tournament, this report gives security and risk management leaders the insight they need to strengthen data protection. More at terranovasecurity.com. In this episode: Where do you see tabletops coming apart and being ineffective and what are the core elements that truly make them succeed? Have you ever seen a real incident play out where you can point to the tabletop as the reason you were able to handle the incident? Are people the safety net for your security controls OR should security controls the safety net for your people?

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