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In episode 51 of The Cyber5, we are joined by Chris Castaldo. Chris is the Chief Information Security Officer for CrossBeam and has been CISO for a number of emerging technology companies.
In this episode, we talk about his newly released book, “Startup Secure” and how different growth companies can implement security at different funding stages. He also talks about the reasons security professionals should want to be a start-up CISO at a growing technology company and how success can be defined as a first time CISO. We also talk about how start up companies can avoid ransomware events in a landscape that is not only constantly changing but also gives little advantage for defenders of small and medium sized enterprises.
Two Topics Covered in this Episode:
When a B2B company is pre-seed or before Series A funding, customers might have leeway for lax cybersecurity controls. However, after an A round, policies, certifications (SOC2 or ISO27001), procedures will be required to ensure customer data is staying safe. A B2C technology company might not be asked by the public for certifications, but auditors and regulators may. Basic policies include:
Blocking and tackling from inside-out to get in front of ransomware is challenging. The simple items to tackle are the following:
At the point when resilience and compliance controls are in place and an organization can bounce back from an incident in a timely manner, adversary insights via threat intelligence is a logical next step.
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In episode 51 of The Cyber5, we are joined by Chris Castaldo. Chris is the Chief Information Security Officer for CrossBeam and has been CISO for a number of emerging technology companies.
In this episode, we talk about his newly released book, “Startup Secure” and how different growth companies can implement security at different funding stages. He also talks about the reasons security professionals should want to be a start-up CISO at a growing technology company and how success can be defined as a first time CISO. We also talk about how start up companies can avoid ransomware events in a landscape that is not only constantly changing but also gives little advantage for defenders of small and medium sized enterprises.
Two Topics Covered in this Episode:
When a B2B company is pre-seed or before Series A funding, customers might have leeway for lax cybersecurity controls. However, after an A round, policies, certifications (SOC2 or ISO27001), procedures will be required to ensure customer data is staying safe. A B2C technology company might not be asked by the public for certifications, but auditors and regulators may. Basic policies include:
Blocking and tackling from inside-out to get in front of ransomware is challenging. The simple items to tackle are the following:
At the point when resilience and compliance controls are in place and an organization can bounce back from an incident in a timely manner, adversary insights via threat intelligence is a logical next step.