Cyber Security In Focus

Secon Cyber

Cyber Security in Focus brings together cyber security professionals for open, informed conversations about the challenges shaping the industry today. Each episode explores real-world threats, emerging risks, research and innovation, and the realities of defending organisations in an evolving threat landscape. Through peer-to-peer discussion, guests share practical experience, lessons learned, and honest perspectives. Designed for CISOs, IT and security leaders, and risk and compliance professionals, Cyber Security in Focus is about continuous learning, collaboration, and strengthening cyber defences together.

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  1. From Recon to Ransom: Inside the Attacker's Playbook with Glenn Wilkinson, Ethical Hacker

    2日前

    From Recon to Ransom: Inside the Attacker's Playbook with Glenn Wilkinson, Ethical Hacker

    Most organisations think about cybersecurity in terms of tools and compliance. Attackers think in objectives, timelines, and human behaviour. That gap is exactly where breaches happen. In this episode, Katie speaks with Glenn Wilkinson, CEO of Agger Labs and ethical hacker with 15 years of experience breaking into organisations, legally. Glenn has tested financial institutions, trained law enforcement, and presented at Black Hat and DEF CON. He brings that attacker's perspective directly to the conversations organisations need to be having right now. The episode covers significant ground: the structured methodology that makes hackers effective, why most breaches still start with a person rather than a system, and what it really means that attackers spend an average of 197 days on a network before anyone notices. Glenn also explains why a passed pen test is not the same as being secure, and makes the case for reframing cybersecurity as a business continuity issue, not an IT problem, to get genuine board-level engagement. The conversation closes on ransomware: what it actually is, how to build your defences before it hits, and the decision no organisation properly prepares for until it's too late, pay, or don't pay, including the legal and moral complications most people don't see coming. Practical, direct, and grounded in real-world experience. This is how attackers think. This is what that should change about how you defend.

    34 分鐘
  2. Building Trust In Your Team & Supply Chain with Keith Price Director of Security, National Highways

    4月22日

    Building Trust In Your Team & Supply Chain with Keith Price Director of Security, National Highways

    When a cyber attack hits, most organisations focus on what technology failed. Keith Price focuses on whether the people were ready. As Director of Security at National Highways, Keith leads security for one of the UK's most critical infrastructure operators. Shutting down the motorway network during a cyber attack is not an option, which means resilience has to be built long before an incident occurs, and it starts with the team. In this episode, Keith shares what two decades in the US military, consulting roles across oil, gas, and banking in the UAE, and now leading security at national scale have taught him about what actually keeps organisations safe. His answer, consistently, is people. Keith and Katie cover: Why people, process, technology is not just a phrase but a leadership philosophy, and what it looks like in practiceHow mental health and psychological safety directly affect an organisation's security postureThe difference between security awareness that works and the annual click-through training nobody takes seriouslyHow Keith's finance team at National Highways avoided 2.8 million pounds in fraudulent payments, not through technology, but through engagementWhy building a no-blame culture with your supply chain matters more than a tough security questionnaireAnd why, when the digital infrastructure goes down, the organisations that survive are the ones who planned for analog If you lead a security team, or you're responsible for one, this episode is a practical reminder that your greatest security investment is not a tool. It is your people.

    34 分鐘
  3. Stop, Assess, Act: A Detective's Approach to Incident Response with Stuart Bird, DFIR Leader

    4月8日

    Stop, Assess, Act: A Detective's Approach to Incident Response with Stuart Bird, DFIR Leader

    Stuart Bird has spent nearly four decades dealing with the worst moments organisations, and people, will ever face. Twenty-one years in UK law enforcement, including early high-tech crime work triggered by Operation ORE, gave him an investigative foundation that most in the industry simply don't have. Since moving into the private sector, he's managed over 1,000 cyber incidents globally, from ransomware and data breaches to insider threats and APTs. In this episode, Stuart breaks down what actually happens in the first 24 to 72 hours of a cyber incident, why most organisations are already several steps behind by the time they pick up the phone, and what the detective's mindset, who, what, where, when, why, how, brings to incident response that no tool can replicate. We cover the common mistakes he sees time and again: CEOs pushing to pay the ransom before any proper assessment, teams that try to fix it themselves for five days before calling for help, and playbooks that have never been tested and don't reflect reality. Stuart also makes the case that organisations are thinking about incident response the wrong way, focusing on the end game rather than the six or seven points in the kill chain where an attack could have been stopped before the encryption ever lands. If you're a CISO, IT or security manager, or business owner trying to understand what good incident response actually looks like, this is a conversation worth your time.

    33 分鐘
  4. Being An Effective Leader & Building Mental Resilience with Jeremy Clipstone, ICT Manager at SCPHA

    4月1日

    Being An Effective Leader & Building Mental Resilience with Jeremy Clipstone, ICT Manager at SCPHA

    What do biological threat response, GB triathlon racing, and cyber incident management have in common? More than you'd think. In this episode, Katie sits down with Jeremy Clipstone, ICT Manager at Suffolk Coastal Port Health Authority, the UK's largest container port. Jeremey spent 22 years in the Royal Air Force Regiment, including leading specialist teams dealing with chemical, biological, and radiological threats. Today, he applies those same instincts to protecting critical infrastructure from cyber attack. This conversation is direct, practical, and full of hard-won lessons. Jeremey breaks down how he runs tabletop exercises to build a team that can handle a P1 incident without him, why shouting is a sign you've lost control, and what triathlon training has taught him about planning for a cyber attack. In this episode: Why you should observe for at least a month before changing anything as a new leaderHow to build a no-blame culture that makes your team stronger, not weakerWhat "calm under pressure" actually looks like and how to practise itThe link between physical training and mental resilience in high-pressure roles Whether you're leading a cyber team, transitioning from the military into tech, or just trying to build something that holds up under pressure, this episode is for you. 🔗 Jeremey is also racing for Great Britain this year. Support his GoFundMe here: https://gofund.me/a05d30025

    28 分鐘
  5. 1 in 10 Will Be a Victim of Cybercrime with Rory Innes, CEO of the Cyber Helpline

    3月18日

    1 in 10 Will Be a Victim of Cybercrime with Rory Innes, CEO of the Cyber Helpline

    58% of crime in England and Wales is now cyber-enabled. Yet when individuals are targeted, most don't know where to turn. The police are overstretched, social media platforms don't pick up the phone, and the support just isn't there. In this episode, Katie Watson sits down with Rory Innes, Founder and CEO of The Cyber Helpline, a charity built by the cybersecurity community to provide free, expert support to individuals and sole traders affected by cybercrime, digital fraud, and online harm. Rory talks through what real cybercrime looks like for everyday people, why organisations need to think beyond the breach and consider the people behind the data, and why changing a password isn't always the right first move. If you work in security, IT, or risk. This episode will change how you think about your responsibilities to the people around you. Support The Cyber Helpline The Cyber Helpline is a free service that relies entirely on the support of the cybersecurity community to keep running. Here's how you can help: Volunteer — Use your skills on the frontline supporting victims, open source investigations, or building out threat advice.Donate — Every contribution helps keep the service free for those who need it most.Fundraise — Running a 10k or planning a challenge? Choose The Cyber Helpline as your charity.Spread the word — Share their work. The more people who know they exist, the more victims they can reach.Partner — Organisations can support through sponsorship, donations, or donating expertise and tools. Visit www.thecyberhelpline.com to get involved or refer someone who needs help.

    36 分鐘

關於

Cyber Security in Focus brings together cyber security professionals for open, informed conversations about the challenges shaping the industry today. Each episode explores real-world threats, emerging risks, research and innovation, and the realities of defending organisations in an evolving threat landscape. Through peer-to-peer discussion, guests share practical experience, lessons learned, and honest perspectives. Designed for CISOs, IT and security leaders, and risk and compliance professionals, Cyber Security in Focus is about continuous learning, collaboration, and strengthening cyber defences together.