
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Dr. Alissa Johnson, aka Dr. Jay, is the Chief Information Security Officer for Xerox Corporation. She is also the former Deputy Chief Information Officer of the Executive Office of the President. Dr. Jay is an IT strategist and visionary with experience in government and private industry.
As the world goes to a paper-less society, Xerox Corporation is focusing on companies’ document workflow. They work to ensure that all of these assets are protected, crossing many boundaries. Dr. Jay’s department looks at both the offensive and defensive aspects of cyber security in order to anticipate all of the things that ‘might happen tomorrow and five years from now’. She describes how organizations get billions of attempts of hacking a month.
Due to the constant onslaught of potential hacking, it has required companies to collaborate and share information to work to offset the threats. The hackers are automated so this has required companies to think along the same lines. Her advice is to ‘protect the crown jewels’ – the critical information in an organization, for example intellectual property and passwords. Security Tips for Individuals:
Security Tips for Organizations:
What you will learn in this episode:
4.8
239239 ratings
Dr. Alissa Johnson, aka Dr. Jay, is the Chief Information Security Officer for Xerox Corporation. She is also the former Deputy Chief Information Officer of the Executive Office of the President. Dr. Jay is an IT strategist and visionary with experience in government and private industry.
As the world goes to a paper-less society, Xerox Corporation is focusing on companies’ document workflow. They work to ensure that all of these assets are protected, crossing many boundaries. Dr. Jay’s department looks at both the offensive and defensive aspects of cyber security in order to anticipate all of the things that ‘might happen tomorrow and five years from now’. She describes how organizations get billions of attempts of hacking a month.
Due to the constant onslaught of potential hacking, it has required companies to collaborate and share information to work to offset the threats. The hackers are automated so this has required companies to think along the same lines. Her advice is to ‘protect the crown jewels’ – the critical information in an organization, for example intellectual property and passwords. Security Tips for Individuals:
Security Tips for Organizations:
What you will learn in this episode:
1,855 Listeners
1,162 Listeners
1,462 Listeners
1,291 Listeners
81 Listeners
382 Listeners
183 Listeners
220 Listeners
106 Listeners
119 Listeners
560 Listeners
57 Listeners
649 Listeners
72 Listeners
155 Listeners