Cyber Compliance & Beyond
CMMC’s security requirements are not new. What is new about CMMC is the level of rigor. With the recent publication of the CMMC rule, DoD is ever closer to requiring contractors to comply with CMMC security requirements and back them up with an assessment. The CMMC Rule, like any new regulation, is packed with details. Details that have been rumored, speculated, and drafted. Now that they’re known and final, we’re here to help you see clearer. In today’s episode, our host, Cole French becomes the expert guest. As Director of Cybersecurity Services and CMMC Capability Lead at Kratos,...
info_outline 7 - AI and Cyber ComplianceCyber Compliance & Beyond
AI is bringing speed and velocity never seen before. Some studies show that the output is the equivalent to what 35-40 humans can produce. This speed and velocity is applied to countless use cases across just about every economic sector. Cybersecurity compliance is laden with repetitive, redundant, and time-consuming manual tasks. While humans bring nuanced ingenuity and problem-solving capabilities, we are prone to errors, especially across such repetitive, redundant, and time-consuming tasks. Worse, cybersecurity compliance requirements are far from standardized, though there is a tremendous...
info_outline 6 - Supply Chain SecurityCyber Compliance & Beyond
Supply chain security is not new, though it certainly feels as though it is. Thanks to globalization, supply chains are ever growing in their depth, complexity, and interconnectedness. Unfortunately, like so many other systems, security of supply chains hasn’t been at the top of the list of things to consider when evaluating supply chains. Understandably, economics led the way. A supply chain exists to foster economic growth and profit-making. None of these are bad but there’s a painful irony: the less security is considered, the greater the costs, which drives down growth and...
info_outline 5 - The Market for LemonsCyber Compliance & Beyond
IT support is tricky for most businesses, especially for those not in the IT business. Thus, IT is a cost of doing business and a high cost at that. High costs drive down profits. Less profit makes it harder for businesses to invest in the products or services that they’re making and selling. Retaining IT staff is even more difficult. This is due to the extremely low unemployment rate and the higher-than-average annual salary. These two factors almost guarantee that IT staff hired by non-IT businesses will eventually get a better offer some place else. To mitigate the problem with IT staff,...
info_outline 4 - Vulnerability ManagementCyber Compliance & Beyond
Vulnerabilities are everywhere and on every IT asset within an organization. This makes vulnerability management one of the most important – if not the most important – risk mitigation activities an organization undertakes. But, the complexities inherent in many organizations combined with the sheer number of vulnerabilities leaves many not knowing where to even begin when it comes to vulnerability management. On today’s episode, we’ll demystify vulnerability management by defining some context, outlining an effective vulnerabilities management program, discussing potential challenges,...
info_outline 3 - Export Compliance OverlapCyber Compliance & Beyond
The number of compliance frameworks is seemingly endless. The lack of standards is problematic enough. Even more problematic, however, is how the compliance frameworks overlaps with one another. When it comes to International Trade and Export Compliance, the problem is overlap is accentuated by the fact that there is not a definitive ‘framework’ for export compliance. Nearly everything is determined on a case-by-case basis. Today’s guest is Sara Hougland, Director of Trade Compliance here at Kratos. During our conversation, we cover export compliance at a high level, discuss the concept...
info_outline 2 - Encryption, FIPS 140, and ComplianceCyber Compliance & Beyond
Some recent estimates have postulated that data is now the world’s most valuable asset. Unlike other assets, like oil, for example, data proliferates on a staggering scale. In other words, it doesn’t seem to be finite, subject the law of scarcity. This hammers home the importance of answering the question that each of you are wrestling with: how do I protect all this data? A simple answer to this question is encryption. But any simple answer has you immediately asking more questions: what encryption should I use? How should I configure it? How can I be sure it is adequate? And, perhaps...
info_outline 1 - FedRAMP Exception CasesCyber Compliance & Beyond
info_outlineSome recent estimates have postulated that data is now the world’s most valuable asset. Unlike other assets, like oil, for example, data proliferates on a staggering scale. In other words, it doesn’t seem to be finite, subject the law of scarcity. This hammers home the importance of answering the question that each of you are wrestling with: how do I protect all this data? A simple answer to this question is encryption. But any simple answer has you immediately asking more questions: what encryption should I use? How should I configure it? How can I be sure it is adequate? And, perhaps most interestingly, is it possible to future proof my data protection techniques?
Today’s guest is Evgeny Gervis, CEO of SafeLogic. SafeLogic, founded in 2012, is a leading cryptographic solutions provider. Their validated, holistic, and interoperable cryptographic solutions enable enduring privacy and trust in the ever-changing digital world. Used by many of the world’s top technology firms, SafeLogic expedites and streamlines the adoption of FIPS 140-validated classical and post-quantum cryptography.
Beyond simply using encryption to protect data, we dive into the intersection of compliance and encryption, specifically the role of the FIPS standard for encryption. While Evgeny provides technical expertise, I share some important compliance guidance and nuance we’ve learned from years of supporting our clients in evaluating FIPS 140 implementations. To close, Evgeny and I discuss the future of encryption, standards, and the likely effect of quantum computing.