Tech Transforms

Carolyn Ford

Global technology is changing the way we live. Critical government decisions affect the intersection of technology advancement and human needs. This podcast talks to some of the most prominent influencers shaping the landscape to understand how they are leveraging technology to solve complex challenges while also meeting the needs of today's modern world.

  1. Episode 118: Zero Trust ≠ Zero Risk: Debunking the Myths and Building Real Resilience

    -20 Ч

    Episode 118: Zero Trust ≠ Zero Risk: Debunking the Myths and Building Real Resilience

    In this episode of Tech Transforms, Carolyn Ford sits down with Michael Blake of Owl Cyber Defense and Chris Rule of GME to unpack one of cybersecurity’s most misunderstood concepts: Zero Trust. What begins as a discussion of architecture quickly evolves into something broader, an exploration of mindset, modernization, and the reality that today’s networks must operate under the assumption that a breach has already occurred. The conversation breaks down the core principle behind Zero Trust: minimizing the “blast radius” of a breach. Instead of assuming everything inside a network is safe, Zero Trust requires constant authentication, strict access controls, and segmentation so that even if an attacker gains entry, they cannot move freely across systems. We explore common misconceptions, especially the idea that Zero Trust is a product that can simply be purchased and installed. In reality, it’s a whole-of-organization approach involving people, processes, infrastructure modernization, and ongoing monitoring. Legacy systems, skill shortages, and the sheer complexity of modern networks make implementation a long-term journey rather than a quick fix. The discussion highlights why segmentation, boundary management, and cross-domain inspection remain critical even in a Zero Trust architecture—particularly in environments with legacy infrastructure, international partnerships, and tactical edge deployments. As AI systems and autonomous technologies increasingly interact with sensitive networks, the need to treat AI as another “actor” with controlled privileges becomes essential. The episode concludes with practical guidance for leaders beginning their Zero Trust journey—from inventorying everything on their network and planning segmentation, to implementing role-based access controls, budgeting for modernization, and ensuring organizations have the skilled personnel required to sustain the architecture. Ultimately, the takeaway is clear: Zero Trust isn’t a tool—it’s a strategy for operating in a world where persistent threats are the norm. Show notes: GME - www.gme.net.au Owl Cyber Defense - www.owlcyberdefense.com Modern Defense Architecture (Australia) - https://www.cyber.gov.au/business-government/secure-design/secure-by-design/modern-defensible-architecture Chris Rule - https://www.linkedin.com/in/christopher-rule-fieaust-cpeng-gaicd-05600b30/ Michael Blake - https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-blake-734b0a21/

    59 мин.
  2. Episode 117: 2026 Predictions.  What's Now. What's Next. What's Urgent.

    27 ФЕВР.

    Episode 117: 2026 Predictions. What's Now. What's Next. What's Urgent.

    In this special 2026 Predictions episode of Tech Transforms, Carolyn Ford is joined by Brian Carter, Scott Orton, Ralph Spa, and Michael Blake from Owl Cyber Defense for a no-crystal-ball conversation about the signals already flashing across cybersecurity, defense, and digital trust. This isn’t speculation. It’s trajectory. The group tackles the accelerating collapse of content trust in a world of deepfakes, AI-generated media, and short-form misinformation. As generative tools become indistinguishable from reality, they predict a sharp shift toward deep identity assurance—powered by behavioral biometrics, cryptographic validation, and provable content provenance. In a future where “guaranteed human” becomes a competitive advantage, digital identity won’t be optional—it will be foundational. From there, the conversation moves into AI containment. The panel argues that we must stop treating AI like helpful software and start treating it like a privileged insider—with unpredictable outputs and real liability attached. The solution? Deterministic boundaries enforced in hardware. As Scott puts it: if you want to confine a tiger, you don’t build the cage out of meat. The episode also explores: The federal government’s accelerating shift from legacy primes to agile, non-incumbent innovators delivering 80% solutions faster Why battlefield communications must evolve beyond encryption to real-time, hardware-enforced trust How AI-powered offensive attacks are shrinking from teams to individuals—sometimes in Power Ranger suits The limits of Zero Trust when complexity, cost, and talent gaps collide Why cross-domain solutions and data diodes may be the real fail-safes in an increasingly networked world Throughout the discussion, a clear thread emerges: software alone won’t save us. As systems grow more interconnected, autonomous, and AI-driven, trust must be anchored in hardware—simple, enforceable, and resistant to both human error and machine-scale attack. The takeaway for 2026? Security leaders won’t lose because they lacked tools. They’ll lose because they trusted the wrong ones. This episode challenges listeners to rethink modernization, containment, and what real trust looks like when machines are making decisions at machine speed. Stay curious. The future isn’t waiting. Shownotes Scott Orton: LinkedIn | Email: sorton@owlcyberdefense.com Brian Carter: LinkedIn | Email:bcarter@owlcyberdefense.com Ralph Spada: LinkedIn | Email: rspada@owlcyberdefense.com Michael Blake: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-blake-734b0a21/ | Email: mblake@owlcyberdefense.com Owl Cyber Defense: owlcyberdefense.com Download the 2026 Predictions Report: https://owlcyberdefense.com/resource/decision-advantage-forecast-five-security-shifts-in-2026/ Story - Power Ranger Hacker: https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/tinder-for-nazis-hacked

    58 мин.
  3. Episode 116: So What Returns.....Can the Pentagon Really Boil the Ocean?

    17 ФЕВР.

    Episode 116: So What Returns.....Can the Pentagon Really Boil the Ocean?

    n this return episode of So What? on Tech Transforms, host Carolyn Ford reconnects with co-host Tracy Bannon to unpack one of the most significant structural shifts happening inside the Pentagon: the consolidation of R&D, AI, and data organizations under a single Chief Technology Officer. On paper, it looks like bureaucratic reorganization. In practice, it could redefine how innovation moves from research to battlefield deployment. Tracy, who regularly briefs at the Pentagon, explains why this move is less about reshuffling boxes on an org chart and more about breaking down long-standing silos between research, prototyping, operational deployment, and data governance. By bringing organizations into tighter alignment, the goal is parallel execution with shared visibility, faster momentum without sacrificing mission integrity. But speed brings risk. Cultural friction between research environments (where failure is tolerated) and operational environments (where failure carries consequences) could become the real test of whether this consolidation succeeds. Rather than leaving AI adoption to fragmented pilot programs or shadow experimentation, leadership is pushing controlled, enterprise-scale access. Carolyn and Tracy explore why offering multiple models matters strategically, how secure infrastructure is already in place to support it, and what it means when leadership says, “Use it—prove you can’t.” They also examine the restructuring of Advana, the Pentagon’s enterprise data platform, and what its breakup signals about data ownership, governance, and the ongoing battle between centralized visibility and cultural resistance. The real friction point, Tracy argues, isn’t technology, it’s data stewardship, policy alignment, and whether organizations are willing to move from “my system, my risk” to shared mission accountability. Throughout the episode, they return to the central question of the series: So what actually changes? They outline the signals they’ll be watching over the next three months, speed of adoption, policy adaptation, cross-organizational collaboration, and whether cultural barriers soften or harden under pressure. This is a conversation for leaders navigating large-scale transformation, those wrestling with how to accelerate innovation without losing control, and how to align people, process, and technology when the mission demands both speed and accountability. Show Notes: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/Tracyylbannon/ E-mail: Trac@Tracybannon.tech Website: https://Tracybannon.tech/ Breaking Defense: Pentagon Reforms R&D and AI- https://breakingdefense.com/2026/01/pentagon-rolls-out-major-reforms-of-rd-ai/ Tracy Bannon Blog: https://straighttalk4gov.org/ GenAI.mil Info: https://www.war.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/4354916/the-war-department-unleashes-ai-on-new-genaimil-platform/ Advana background: https://www.ai.mil/Initiatives/Analytic-Tools/ Moltbook: https://www.moltbook.com/

    47 мин.
  4. Episode 115: The Uncle Rufus Problem: Fixing Cyber’s Weakest Links Before It’s Too Late

    20 ЯНВ.

    Episode 115: The Uncle Rufus Problem: Fixing Cyber’s Weakest Links Before It’s Too Late

    Retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery joins Tech Transforms for a blunt, practical look at the cyber risks the U.S. keeps underestimating—and why “Uncle Rufus’s rail switch” may be the weak link that matters most. Montgomery breaks down military mobility as a national security problem hiding in plain sight: once equipment leaves the secure “Noah’s Ark” of a base and hits rural rail networks and switching systems, it enters a “Mad Max” environment with limited redundancy, limited cyber expertise, and huge strategic consequences. From there, the conversation moves into what it would take to fix the problem before a crisis: recurring federal assessments, targeted grant programs for smaller operators, and the messy reality of congressional jurisdiction that slows action. Montgomery also makes the case for a dedicated Cyber Force—arguing the current “force generation” model across military branches can’t recruit, train, and retain cyber talent at the scale needed. Finally, the episode tackles the cyber insurance market: why organizations are underinsured, why risk is hard to price, and why the most promising models pair insurance with real assessments, remediation, and recurring validation. Montgomery closes with updates on Cyberspace Solarium 2.0 progress, what’s stalled, what’s “backsliding,” and what measurable wins still matter—plus a rapid-fire “Tech Talk” round that includes Batman, battleships, and top-down cyber hygiene. Show Notes: Foundation for Defense of Democracies - fdd.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-montgomery-b8932810/ Twitter: @MarkCMontgomergy Cyber Insurance Reform Op-Ed: https://cyberscoop.com/congress-cyber-insurance-reform-op-ed Cyberspace Solarium Commission Reports: https://cybersolarium.org

    52 мин.
  5. Episode 114: Trust by Design: Why AI Needs a New Digital Foundation

    6 ЯНВ.

    Episode 114: Trust by Design: Why AI Needs a New Digital Foundation

    In this episode of Tech Transforms, Carolyn Ford sits down with Will Roper, one of the key architects of modern defense digital transformation, for a wide-ranging conversation that challenges a core assumption of today’s tech landscape: what if AI can’t scale because the Internet was never designed to support it? Drawing on his experience leading Project Maven, overseeing the Air Force’s cloud adoption, and placing AI on a U-2 spy plane, Roper explains why the real barrier to AI adoption isn’t algorithms, it’s infrastructure. He explores how today’s Internet favors centralization, making it powerful for consumers but fundamentally misaligned with highly regulated, IP-sensitive industries like aerospace, defense, and critical infrastructure. The conversation dives deep into sovereign data territories, zero-trust collaboration, and why data should never have to move in order to be useful. Using vivid analogies—from Formula One racing and digital twins to The Matrix, Roper outlines a new model for federated infrastructure that enables secure collaboration without sacrificing ownership, trust, or governance. Carolyn and Will also explore digital certification, continuous airworthiness, and the idea of a “digital flight envelope,” where physical systems can validate and recertify themselves in real time, reshaping how safety, speed, and innovation coexist. The episode wraps with rapid-fire Tech Talk questions, a philosophical discussion on simulations and trust, and a look ahead at what the next decade of technology may bring. This is a must-listen episode for leaders rethinking infrastructure, AI readiness, and what it truly means to build systems that scale—securely, ethically, and intelligently. Show Notes: Email: roper@istaridigital.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/williamroper/ Summary "There is No Spoon" Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEcPlqImjWc Dr. Roper’s Paper: There Is No Spoon - The New Digital Acquisition Reality https://www.af.mil/Portals/1/documents/2020SAF/There_Is_No_Spoon_Digital_Acquisition_7_Oct_2020_digital_version.pdf Official Bio: https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Biographies/Display/article/1467795/dr-will-roper/ Istari https://www.istaridigital.com/ Flyer One: https://www.executivebiz.com/articles/istari-digitals-flyer-one-x-plane-on-track-for-digital-certification-will-roper-quoted

    49 мин.
  6. 26.12.2025

    Episode 112: Tech Transforms – Live from the Owl Evolution Summit

    Tech Transforms went live in front of an in-person audience (and simultaneously on the virtual platform and LinkedIn Live) for a special episode featuring Steve Stratton, retired Green Beret, former White House and Secret Service professional, and award-winning author of Skip Jack (included in attendees’ welcome package). The conversation explored why storytelling beats “speeds and feeds” when it comes to helping leaders and teams understand technology, remember what matters under pressure, and create real decision advantage. Steve explains how story creates emotional connection, strengthens recall, and gives context that data sheets can’t. Together, the hosts dig into the OODA loop, using a visceral film clip from We Were Soldiers to illustrate what decision-making looks like in chaos—then fast-forward to the near-future battlefield described in Skip Jack, where leaders are overwhelmed by sensors, AI, intel feeds, and massive data volume. A highlight is the reading from Chapter Five, where the commander describes mining high-threat networks and the dark web, relying on data diodes to stop malicious payloads hidden in media files, and pushing decisions to the point of information to speed response in a “nonkinetic war… at the speed of the internet.” The episode closes with rapid-fire “Tech Talk” questions—night vision tech, dream casting for Nicky Fury, and fictional worlds worth visiting—before the live audience transitions into the event’s first mission brief.

    26 мин.
  7. Episode 111: One Woman’s Rebellion Against Reckless AI

    25.11.2025

    Episode 111: One Woman’s Rebellion Against Reckless AI

    In this thought-provoking episode of Tech Transforms, host Carolyn Ford welcomes Janet Kang, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur turned nonprofit leader whose work sits at the intersection of AI innovation, ethics, and long-term societal impact. After building companies since age 13, launching multiple ed-tech ventures, and incubating AI-powered products in a corporate venture studio, Janet experienced firsthand the exhilarating speed and unsettling risks of deploying AI in real-world environments. Those experiences ultimately led her to join Just Horizons Alliance, a nonprofit committed to developing open protocols, ethical frameworks, and real-time auditing tools that help organizations build and deploy AI responsibly. Janet shares candid stories from the early days of AI adoption, where models behaved inconsistently, guardrails lagged behind product timelines, and the pressure to scale fast often overshadowed deeper questions of safety and accountability. She explains why today’s biggest risk isn’t far-off superintelligence; it's the immediate, under-regulated integration of AI into education, healthcare, hiring systems, and public services. For younger users especially, she warns, AI already shapes communication, decision-making, confidence, and even identity and most tech leaders lack the tools to properly assess or mitigate those risks. Carolyn and Janet explore why ethical AI requires more than thought leadership and policy statements. It requires action: adversarial testing, real-world simulations, contextual frameworks, and independent audits that account for messy human behavior, not just ideal use cases. They also discuss the structural barriers women face in tech, the mentors who “give up their seat” to make space, and the mindset shift that comes with parenthood thinking in decades, not quarters. Looking ahead, Janet envisions a future where AI becomes “infrastructure, not the main character” as invisible and reliable as flipping a light switch because circuit breakers, safety layers, and accountability systems are finally in place. Until then, she calls on builders, executives, educators, and policymakers to take practical steps now: test relentlessly, understand failure modes, prioritize vulnerable users, and choose impact over speed. This is an episode for leaders who want to innovate boldly and responsibly, those wrestling with how to balance progress with protection, and how to shape an AI-powered future worthy of the next generation. Show Notes: www.justhorizons.org https://www.linkedin.com/in/kangjanet/ Pause superintelligence petition - https://www.axios.com/2025/10/22/superintelligence-ai-pause-yoshua-bengio Books Mentioned Empire of AI — Karen Hao The Alignment Problem — Brian Christian The Broken Earth Trilogy — N.K. Jemisin (recommended by Carolyn)

    46 мин.
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Global technology is changing the way we live. Critical government decisions affect the intersection of technology advancement and human needs. This podcast talks to some of the most prominent influencers shaping the landscape to understand how they are leveraging technology to solve complex challenges while also meeting the needs of today's modern world.