I work with a lot of customers discussing how they can reduce their cyber risk and increase resiliency with an effective security strategy. It's easy to talk about leading practices for security, but figuring out how to put them into practice can be a whole other story.
As I mentioned in a recent post, the Security and Trust team is headed to CiscoLive Berlin with the goal of sharing real and actionable security practices that are designed to be taken home and put into practice straight away.
For several years, Cisco has been building new capabilities for providing secure and trustworthy foundations across our product portfolio. By methodically reviewing each element of the infrastructure and removing elements that place the company at greater risk, you can protect your customers and employees, as well as your core business.
On Monday, February 15 at CiscoLive Berlin, we are going take a deep dive in a day-long seminar that breaks out the process, policy and technologies we deploy across all aspects of our business. You will learn how we develop software and hardware with security in mind, comprehensibly protect our supply chain, secure the data customers entrust to us, defend our enterprise, secure our cloud offers and usage, and keep privacy top of mind.
We have a lot to share and are bringing a world class team of experts in each area to help our customers both understand Cisco's practices as well as jumpstart their own activities to protect their business.
Ed Paradise, Cisco VP of Trustworthy Engineering, is leading a session at the seminar that aims to boost participants' knowledge in the following key focus areas:
In addition, this session includes demonstrations of a number of Cisco's trust-related tools, such as threat modeling and integrity verification. To learn more about how these practices and procedures will benefit your business -and how you can put them to work on day one, register today to attend theTECSEC-4000 technical seminar on Monday, February 15, 2016 at CiscoLive Berlin.
For more information on trustworthy systems, visit the Cisco Trust and Transparency Center.