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Technology is evolving faster than ever, and with that acceleration comes the question of whether we’re using it to make the world better or simply faster. As automation, AI, and cybersecurity shape the future of work and life, leaders are reexamining how innovation can drive not just profit, but progress. Michigan, once the cradle of the industrial revolution, is once again emerging as a hub for digital transformation and inclusive growth. It’s a powerful example of how technology for good can align innovation with community impact.
So, what does it really take to build technology that uplifts people, doesn’t replace them, and strengthens the middle class in a rapidly changing world?
In this first installment of a three-part series on DisruptED, host Ron J. Stefanski sits down with Dug Song, co-founder of Duo Security, who now channels his focus into philanthropy and community innovation through his family foundation in Detroit. Together, they explore how Detroit’s innovation legacy and his own unconventional journey from hacker to entrepreneur shape his belief that technology for good can (and must) be a bridge between innovation and impact.
In this episode, Dug and Ron discuss:
Dug Song is a cybersecurity entrepreneur and investor best known as the co-founder and former CEO of Duo Security — Michigan’s first tech unicorn, acquired by Cisco — where he later served as Chief Strategy Officer for Cisco Security. With deep expertise in Zero Trust architecture, SaaS growth, and enterprise security innovation, he has helped shape national strategies for emerging technologies through his work with the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Advisory Council on Innovation & Entrepreneurship. Today, as founder of Song United and co-founder of the Song Foundation and Michigan Founders Fund, he advances inclusive entrepreneurship and “technology for good” initiatives across Michigan and beyond.
By MarketScale5
33 ratings
Technology is evolving faster than ever, and with that acceleration comes the question of whether we’re using it to make the world better or simply faster. As automation, AI, and cybersecurity shape the future of work and life, leaders are reexamining how innovation can drive not just profit, but progress. Michigan, once the cradle of the industrial revolution, is once again emerging as a hub for digital transformation and inclusive growth. It’s a powerful example of how technology for good can align innovation with community impact.
So, what does it really take to build technology that uplifts people, doesn’t replace them, and strengthens the middle class in a rapidly changing world?
In this first installment of a three-part series on DisruptED, host Ron J. Stefanski sits down with Dug Song, co-founder of Duo Security, who now channels his focus into philanthropy and community innovation through his family foundation in Detroit. Together, they explore how Detroit’s innovation legacy and his own unconventional journey from hacker to entrepreneur shape his belief that technology for good can (and must) be a bridge between innovation and impact.
In this episode, Dug and Ron discuss:
Dug Song is a cybersecurity entrepreneur and investor best known as the co-founder and former CEO of Duo Security — Michigan’s first tech unicorn, acquired by Cisco — where he later served as Chief Strategy Officer for Cisco Security. With deep expertise in Zero Trust architecture, SaaS growth, and enterprise security innovation, he has helped shape national strategies for emerging technologies through his work with the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Advisory Council on Innovation & Entrepreneurship. Today, as founder of Song United and co-founder of the Song Foundation and Michigan Founders Fund, he advances inclusive entrepreneurship and “technology for good” initiatives across Michigan and beyond.