7 Layers

Follow 7 Layers
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

Decoding and understanding the technology that drives the internet and connects us all. 7 Layers is a bi-weekly podcast produced by SDxCentral. -- 7 Layers is a 25 to 35-minute educational podcast that examines IT infrastructure innovations.  Hosted by Connor Craven, who brings his knowledge as an Associate Studios Editor at SDxCentral, 7 Layers breaks down the latest technology trends impacting IT professionals.  Each episode features a leading tech journalist who provides unique and cutting-edge insights on the industry.

SDxCentral


    • Mar 8, 2023 LATEST EPISODE
    • weekly NEW EPISODES
    • 20m AVG DURATION
    • 119 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from 7 Layers with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from 7 Layers

    7 Layers: MWC Barcelona 2023 Review

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2023 12:40


    Industry trade group GSMA stated that more than 88,000 people attended its recent MWC Barcelona 2023 event, a number that might be hard to verify but seems legitimate considering the masses of people spread throughout the multiple halls of Barcelona's cavernous Gran Via. While attendance might not have matched the 109,000 people GSMA said had attended the last pre-Covid event in 2019, many in attendance were still amazed by the strong turnout for the mobile telecommunication industry's largest annual event. On this week's SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast, I am joined by Reporter Julia King to take a look back at the MWC Barcelona 2023 event, highlighting some of the bigger news and trends to emerge from the show. This includes: • The network API push highlighted by GSMA's Open Gateway initiative that has so far attracted nearly two-dozen operators and vendors attempting to squeeze more revenue from 5G networks. • The differing dynamics between vendor heavyweights Ericsson, Huawei, and Nokia. Ericsson's event splash was somewhat subdued due to ongoing operational challenges; Huawei looked to counter ongoing geopolitical struggles with sheer mass; and Nokia deconstructed its logo to emphasis its operating momentum. • There was considerable open radio access network (RAN) news from the event, especially from European-based operators that have been aggressively trialing different open RAN solutions and have staked out deployment benchmarks. • And what would a telecom focused event be without looking toward the future. In this case, it was expected benefits from soon-to-be-available 5G-Advanced specifications and further-down-the-road 6G technology. We are still at least a year away from the former, and at least five years away from the latter, but what fun is a trade show if you can't dream a little. We hope you enjoy this audio look back at the MWC Barcelona 2023 event, and make sure to check out all of our coverage of the show on our dedicated event page. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Open RAN Security Stance a Sensitive Situation

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2023 38:48


    The open radio access network (RAN) market recently gained significant U.S. government support when Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel touted open RAN as a way for operators to circumvent network equipment from China-based vendors like Huawei and ZTE. Specifically, Rosenworcel noted the ability for open RAN technology to provide operators with greater access to more secure networking equipment. “In the long run, these systems can help diversify the technology in our networks and grow the market for more secure 5G equipment,” she stated during a speech at a Center for Strategic and International Studies event earlier this year. The U.S. has earmarked billions of dollars to be used to help rip-and-replace existing network infrastructure from China-based vendors, including RAN equipment. The FCC had previously reported America's wireless network infrastructure included at least 24,000 pieces of Huawei or ZTE equipment spanning about 8,400 locations. Most of this work toward open RAN has been under the guidance of the O-RAN Alliance, which is an industry trade group working on technical specifications that foster greater adoption of open RAN equipment. However, that organization has been questioned for its inclusion of some members linked to organizations included on the U.S. Entity List that tracks organizations and individuals considered to support “activities contrary to U.S. national security and/or foreign policy interests.” This issue at one point resulted in Nokia pausing activities with the O-RAN Alliance over concerns about Chinese members' blacklisted status with the U.S. government. The O-RAN Alliance quickly adopted changes to its participation documents and procedures that brought Nokia back into the fold. John Strand, CEO of Strand Consult, stated that this connection should raise concerns over the security structure of open RAN equipment. “What I dislike is that open RAN has been marketed as an alternative to Chinese infrastructure,” Strand said. “Open RAN is just as Chinese as anything else. There's 11 or 12 working committees in [O-RAN Alliance] and China Mobile is either the chair or the vice-chair of nine or 10 of them. China Mobile and 43 other Chinese companies on the U.S. Entity List are key stake holders in [O-RAN Alliance]. … That's an issue.” On this episode of the SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast, Strand provides more insight into those potential concerns and areas where other security challenges could impact the adoption of open RAN architectures. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Check Point VP Unpacks the Latest in Cloud Security, AI, ChatGPT

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 20:01


    In this episode of the 7 Layers podcast, TJ Gonen, VP of Cloud Security at Check Point sat down with SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu to delve into the ever-changing world of cloud security – specifically emerging trends in the evolution of the cloud threat landscape. Furthermore, we will explore how advanced artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) technologies, such as ChatGPT, are being utilized to enhance cloud security, and discuss the most promising AI and ML-based cloud security solutions. Check Point Research recently reported a 48% year-over-year increase in cloud-based cyberattacks for 2022, as organizations increasingly move operations to the cloud. “There are just way more cloud assets, so it's very natural for more attacks to happen on such a large estate,” Gonen told SDxCentral. “Another thing that's happening more and more, it's already a reality … is that more critical assets are moving to the cloud.” “That speed of change and scale of cloud is the number one reason for this increase in cybersecurity attacks,” he added. “So, operationalizing cloud security at speed and scale and keeping up is going to continue to be the biggest challenge.” AI and ML technologies can help address this issue as “[what] they are actually very good at is to move fast, is to automate stuff.” The Check Point Research team recently published several studies into OpenAI's ChatGPT and Codex. “[What] Codex and ChatGPT show to all of us is what AI can do now,” Gonen said. “It just showed what impact it can have on almost everything we do in life, not just the technology nerds.” He noted Check Point has been using AI across the board for four years. “When you connect the security solution, you might find yourself with thousands of alerts, and sometimes thousands of alerts is a bigger problem than no alerts,” Gonen said. “One of the ways that we're using, for example, machine learning and AI, is to take these alerts and instead of just throwing them at the user, we actually use machine learning and AI to prioritize and talk about or focus only on the risks that matter. ” He also expects AI and ML technologies to replace some of the security layers that today are driven by humans. “For example, I think that we are maybe a year away from replacing, what's called in the security world, the tier-one analyst — the people who take alerts from a bunch of places and sit in a SOC and try to correlate them to understand what happens on the first tier.” “That's perfect because you can focus more on the higher-skilled individuals,” Gonen added. Listen to the full interview now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: VMware Focused on Open Source Interaction, ML Security

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 36:44


    Chip Childers has been at VMware for six months, during which time he has focused on steering the vendor's use and interaction of open source software platforms and refining its approach to supporting those efforts. These are significant areas of interest for VMware and for Childers' role as VP and chief open source officer at the vendor, which is increasingly interacting with the open source community. “For projects that VMware hosts, we want to make sure that we're very welcoming to participants that want to collaborate with us, but also how do we engage in a really authentic way with open source communities that are out there, maybe at a foundation or owned by another vendor or just even a collective of individuals,” Childers said. “So we spent a lot of time on making sure that VMware has a very thoughtful community strategy and how it engages with these projects.” Those comments build on what Childers said were his initial areas of focus when he took on the role last year. At that time, Childers repeatedly mentioned a need for VMware to be “intentional” with its interactions across the open source community. This work also includes VMware exploring other open source opportunities that it can help foster and in turn help power new VMware services. “We're exploring project communities, we're trying to make a very positive impact in those communities and, frankly, get to the point where those communities are generating software that we think is going to be useful for VMware, either internally or as part of our product strategy,” Childers added. This includes a specific focus on operationalizing machine learning (ML). Childers mentioned projects like Kubeflow, which supports ML stacks running on Kubernetes. Kubeflow is currently under the guise of Google, but is working toward inclusion in the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). Childers also touched on the growing need for VMware to work on securing open source ML platforms. He described attack models that can add noise to an image in a way that can trick an ML model into thinking “a banana is an apple.” To counter this, VMware is looking at different projects, with Childers citing the Adversarial Robustness Toolbox project that is currently on GitHub as a potential way to test various threats or attack vectors. “As we look at it we see how important these operational attributes of machine learning are going to be to our customers and, frankly, to the industry writ large,” he added. Listen to more of Childers' insight into VMware's areas of focus in the latest episode of the SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: 5G Open Innovation Lab Links Edge Ecosystem Opportunities

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 40:46


    The 5G Open Innovation Lab is looking to help telecommunication operators and enterprises tap into the rapidly growing cloud and software developer ecosystem they know they need to tap into to reach their digital transformation goals. Jim Brisimitizis, general partner at 5G Open Innovation Lab, explained that these efforts involve his organization acting as a central contact point between these industry segments, a task lightened by the group's list of big-name segment players. The 5G Open Innovation Lab was established in early 2020, and included founding partners Intel, NASA, and T-Mobile US. That group selected 17 start-up companies as initial members of its 12-week program that allowed them to tap into industry and financial resources to help them design and develop 5G and edge applications targeted at enterprise digital transformation goals. Brisimitizis noted this work is most transformational for communication service provider (CSPs) that could be most challenged by this cloud evolution. “The lab was really born from the standpoint of exposing the CSP markets to a very vibrant and always moving software development ecosystem, i.e. startups. Expose them to a network of fairly large global platforms like Microsoft, and VMware, and Dell, and Intel, and Amdocs, and others, and then also exposing them to a set of enterprises who are on these digital transforming journeys,” Brisimitzis said. “And by exposing them they see both the opportunity, they see both how their networks could potentially integrate into the fabric of IT platforms from around the world, i.e. the partners that we have, and then they would see that demand from the enterprises too.” The group's timing also aligns with the broader industry trend of migrating network resources to a cloud environment using cloud-native principles like containers that can better serve 5G-based edge use cases. “The timing is coming more in line with the opportunity than it was in the past,” Brisimitzis said. “In the past, where it was simply co-hosting or colocating of server infrastructure, power, cooling, and connectivity, is now surpassed to a function of, hey, software development is going in one direction, the cloud's already a foregone conclusion, it's here to stay, the edges is going to be real. There's a whole slew of use cases that are going to require more and more proximity computing, i.e. edge, and the carriers have two really important ingredients in that mix. They have real-estate locations and they have spectrum.” Listen to more of Brisimitzis' insight into this 5G and edge opportunity for telecom operators and vendors in the latest episode of the SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Dell Focused on Open 5G Sanity

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 38:35


    Dell Technologies' Dennis Hoffman has spent the past three years refining his company's growing focus on the 5G telecommunications space. A refinement that has been bolstered by the growing adoption of open and cloud-native architectures that Dell Technologies has been infusing throughout its broader ecosystem. “We've been focused almost exclusively from the beginning on helping people embrace open network architectures and monetizing them,” Hoffman said in an interview with SDxCentral. Hoffman, who is SVP and GM for Dell Technologies' Telco Systems business, explained that this was an important challenge for the telecommunications space that has historically been averse to big technology swings. “If it's your job to run a network that can never go down – and only got more important during the pandemic – you have to be careful about the ways you do it,” Hoffman said. “It's an opportunity, though, for a company like Dell as cloud native, and industry standard, and all the stuff – all the the buzzwords that dominate it – start to get utilized in the design of telecommunications networks, it creates a massive opportunity for somebody like us.” Dell Technologies has slowly been chopping away at these opportunities, using its legacy knowledge in data centers and servers to help operators construct and run open systems to power their 5G core and edge networks. This has allowed the vendor to gain traction in both brownfield network deployments and greenfield operators like Dish Network. “There's this move from closed architectures and legacy technologies to all the new software defined, cloud-native industry standard stuff, [and it's] well and good, but if it's all delivered by a group of vendors that you can't count on to be around in five years, it's very hard for them to adopt,” Hoffman said. “One of the pieces of feedback we get all the time is our scale, our global reach, and our financial stability are really important decisions for them as they kind of figure out how they move from where they are today to where they want to be and more fully embrace digital transformation.” Looking ahead, Hoffman said one area of focus will be on the growing push toward the network edge, which is a space telecom operators should be ideally positioned in to gain significant market presence. “All that edge real estate owned by the world's telecoms is really priceless real estate, frankly,” Hoffman said. “We felt like it was very much aligned with what we're trying to do to help enable edge computing. And it's not going to be easy for us to do that ff we don't have much deeper, stronger, more powerful relationships with the world's network operators. For those reasons we kind of entered the space and found pretty quick that the focus areas that needed help. We're taking open technologies and pulling them together into systems that telcos can rely on.” Listen to more of Hoffman's insight into the market, the challenging vendor dynamics, and where operators are focused moving forward in the latest episode of the SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Fortinet Sees Nation States Teaming Up With Cybercriminals

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2023 24:56


    Fortinet's FortiGuard Labs recently released its predictions for 2023, highlighting the trend of advanced persistent cybercrime enabling a new wave of destructive attacks at scale, fuelled by cybercrime as a service. In this episode of the 7 Layers, Derek Manky, chief security strategist and VP of global threat intelligence at FortiGuard Labs, sat down with SDxCentral editor Nancy Liu to discuss security trends. Manky and the team at the labs have seen cyberattacks become more destructive in nature this year, as well as the emergence of reconnaissance-as-a-service. Ransom-as-a-service in particular involves more destructive attacks, “so it's becoming more bold,” he said, adding that “reconnaissance-as-a-service … we have not really seen this yet, but it's something I expect to see in 2023.” The labs also saw cybercrime converging with advanced persistent threat methods in 2022. Manky explained that advanced persistent cybercrime combines advanced persistent threat (APT), which has traditionally been used by nation-states to target critical infrastructure, with cybercrime that is financially motivated. “We're seeing a PTS of nation-state groups now teaming up with cybercriminal groups,” Manky said. “So In the private sector, I see them now worried about APT they were not before because APT groups teaming up with cybercrime groups, those destructive targeted threats are now hitting the private sector. It's the same thing on the public sector side. They typically have only been worried about APT, but now they are also expanding their focus to cybercrime because it's shared infrastructure and those groups are working together and the attacks are becoming highly targeted.” “So in the private sector, I see them now worried about APT that they weren't before because APT groups are teaming up with cybercriminal groups, these destructive targeted threats are now hitting the private sector. It's the same on the public sector side. They used to just worry about APT, but now they're widening their focus to cybercrime because it's a shared infrastructure and these groups are working together and the attacks are becoming very targeted”. Advanced persistent cybercrime “is our single biggest threat to expect in 2023 and beyond,” he added. To mitigate these threats, Manky is encouraging organizations to use solutions and principles such as artificial intelligence, security-as-a-service, secure access service edge (SASE), zero trust, and zero-trust networks access (ZTNA). “Cybercriminals are using artificial intelligence, so we need to on the defensive side do that to cybersecurity teams, so leveraging automation, orchestration, AI power, and security operations is a big effective measure that can go a long way without having to hire headcount and increase your opex,” he said. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Juniper Juggles RIC Work

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 28:52


    The radio access network (RAN) is central to a wireless network deployment. It's the physical pieces of equipment we all see out in the wild, sometimes standing proudly and showing off its various antennas, sometimes being shy and trying to hide as a pine tree. But as these RAN networks continue to evolve based on the latest 5G standards, they are being pruned by virtualized (vRAN) and open RAN platforms designed to provide easier management and control. The next step in this process is the use of a RAN intelligent controller (RIC) to provide operators with a way to manage these vRAN and open RAN systems on a per-bit and per-sector basis. The RIC operates in the middle of a RAN deployment as a kind of linkage to the wider network. It allows operators to deploy xApps and rApps that then allow operators to design and control RAN functions, providing administrative RAN sovereignty over functions that are typically implemented as proprietary features on base stations. These “apps” are microservices-based applications operating in near-real time (xApps) and non-real time (rApps) that provide an operator with more control over their open RAN environments. RIC development has steadily gained attention from vendors looking to help operators manage their growing RAN infrastructure. VMware, for instance, recently added Viavi Solutions to its RIC ecosystem, bringing standardized framework and metric testing to its platform. Juniper Networks has also been making progress in the RIC space. Japan's Rakuten Symphony late last year selected the vendor's RIC platform as the sole selection as part of the Rakuten Symworld Platform. The vendor has also conducted a multivendor RIC trial with European telecom giant Vodafone and open RAN provider Parallel Wireless. Jai Thattil, senior director and head of service provider strategic marketing at Juniper Networks, joined us on the latest SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast to provide more details into the vendor's RIC work, what has gone into developing a RIC platform to work across vendors and operators, and challenges still facing the still maturing ecosystem. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Security, SASE, Private 5G Top SDxCentral Ecosystem Topics in 2022

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 16:54


    The SDxCentral ecosystem witnessed significant change in 2022, highlighted by ongoing cybersecurity attacks, the proliferation of new networking technologies, and industry changing merger and acquisition activity. Basically, another year at the office. The SDxCentral editorial staff sat down before the year ticked over to discuss what they found to be the biggest news and trends across their respective beats in 2022. While the sound quality might indicate that conversation was secretly recorded, rest assured we all knew what was up. Reporter Tommy Clift led off, touching on the rapid perception evolution blockchain technology went through in 2022, moving away from its association with the troubling cryptocurrency space to being used in commercial situations by established telecommunication players. Editor Nancy Liu had an exceptionally busy year covering the cybersecurity space for SDxCentral. Liu touched on near non-stop cyberattacks that hit some of the industry's biggest names, including Uber, Microsoft, Okta, and Cisco. These attacks also targeted soft targets like city governments and school districts. Liu also highlighted the ongoing adoption of zero-trust network access (ZTNA) platforms that overtook rival cybersecurity acronyms for buzz in 2022. This was helped by the late-year push by the White House to deploy ZTNA principles across government agencies. Reporter Emma Chervek hit on the ongoing developer talent shortage challenge facing the software and cloud ecosystem, which remains a challenge in this post-pandemic environment. Chervek noted this challenge led to increased attention for low-code and no-code platforms designed to lower the barrier for application development. SDxCentral Editorial Assistant Julia King injected some sassy commentary on the secure access service edge (SASE), which continued to grow in 2022. The SASE space hit a level of maturity that has vendors now looking to differentiate through all-inclusive offerings instead of past partnerships, which itself could lead to greater industry consolidation in 2023. And finally, Executive Editor Dan Meyer touched on the surging attention placed on private networks, which vendors and operators think could prove a compelling 5G enterprise use case. More ominously, Meyer noted Broadcom's pending $69 billion acquisition of VMware could cause significant ripples across the cloud and virtualization space. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Palo Alto Networks CISO on Protecting Palo Alto Networks

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 37:57


    Palo Alto Networks Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) Niall Browne sat down with SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu in Las Vegas during the company's Ignite event to discuss how Palo Alto Networks secures the company itself and its customers using its own zero-trust network access (ZTNA 2.0), secure access service edge (Prisma Access), cloud security (Prisma Cloud), and autonomous security operation center (Cortex XSIAM) products, the unique challenges it faces to secure one of the largest security companies in the world, and what keeps Browne up at night. Palo Alto Networks is transitioning to a platform approach for security that includes its next-generation firewalls, zero trust-based authentication, and SASE services. Browne believes next-generation ZTNA and SASE are the answer to securing a hybrid workforce. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Working Group Two Tackles 5G Core Cloudification

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2022 33:38


    Mobile telecom operators continue to ramp their 5G core deployments with many of those efforts based on running vital core operations in a cloud environment. This is an effort that Working Group Two CEO Erlend Prestgard said is critical for operators to monetize their next-generation 5G deployments. “We're trying to steal the business model back from the tech giants and bring them back to telecom,” Prestgard said in an interview with SDxCentral. Working Group Two's efforts in this scheme are by offering a cloud-based 5G core to operators that they can then plug their 5G radio access network (RAN) and support systems into. That core sits on Amazon Web Services' (AWS) cloud infrastructure that operators can tap into through an as-a-service model. Working Group Two was started in late 2017 after Cisco struck a deal with Norway-based telecommunications provider Telenor on a new venture to offer cloud solutions for mobile operators. Working Group Two was tasked with helping mobile operators use cloud-based platforms to launch new services. Telenor provided the platform's technology, which is an open source, cloud-native, multi-tenancy, full stack mobile core network delivered as a service. The software behind the platform is a single code base built on multiple radio networks. Cisco provided a virtualized version of its evolved packet core (vEPC) and APIs into that packet core that are available to the Working Group Two platform. Cisco also provided go-to-market support for bringing those services to enterprise, commercial, IoT, and mass-market customers. Working Group Two today counts deals with operators in Sweden and its native Norway, with a significant customer in CK Hutchison. Prestgard explained that operators realize the importance and need for a cloud-native core but are now trying to tackle integration complexity. “Integrating with the outside world, that still takes time,” Prestgard said. “So, spinning up, I think we've sold that part of the equation. I think now we're working to simplify, automate, externalize as much configuration, integration work as possible, which is also a long journey.” Check out our latest SDxCentral 7 Layers Podcast to get more insight from Prestgard on market opportunities and challenges. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: What Is It Like to Secure the ‘Smart' Las Vegas?

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 21:19


    Chief Innovation Officer for the City of Las Vegas Michael Sherwood and Armis CTO Steve Gyurindak joined SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu to discuss Las Vegas' efforts on becoming a smart city, what it's like to secure the Sin City, and what cities should look out for when building a smart-city network. Sherwood touted Las Vegas has one of the largest private cellular networks for a municipality that “provides connectivity to sensor systems, provides wayfinding as well as connecting students to schools.” “Smart City just really rolls into how we use technology to make better outcomes, create better amenities, and really create a great experience while you're here and technology is a huge part of that from safety and security to traffic flow.” Sherwood said. “We also have a mind on security and a mind on understanding our assets in ways we've never understood before.” One of the biggest things Armis discovered when securing the city is the diversity of different devices on its network, spanning from typical PC printers, IP cameras, to even game consoles, Gyurindak noted. And Armis is happy to offer the visibility for the network, he added. “Understanding the gravity of everything that is connecting and how it interacts, and being able to assemble a cogent security policy around that is what is the challenges I continuously hear,” Gyurindak said. “You need to use tools and different types of technologies to help you guard your portfolio of assets. So to that regard, budgets aren't going to balloon up right away. It really falls back to what types of tools can you provide to staff that can help them and assist them in a manner that gives them the greatest visibility of the network but also allows the business to continue,” Sherwood said. “We can't clamp it down to what we can't operate. But we certainly can use tools to help give us insights and tell us where our risks are, so that we can better defend and protect, [which] is a huge advantage.”   Photo (L-R): Steve Gyurindak and Michael Sherwood. Source: Armis and the City of Las Vegas. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: The Kubernetes Evolution From Inside the Box

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 31:16


    Craig Box expands on his early work in the Kubernetes ecosystem, how it has impacted the cloud market, and what's next for the platform. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Cisco on 5G's Pivotal Role in the Future of Transportation

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 15:57


    On this week's episode of 7 Layers, SDxCentral reporter Tommy Clift sat down with Matt Price, Cisco Vice President of IoT Engineering and Operations to discuss the transforming connectivity demands of future transportations systems, and how 5G and multi-access technologies are playing a pivotal role in its progress. Because transportation ecosystems must chiefly prioritize safety, having ubiquitous and extremely reliable connectivity is mission-critical, Price explained. 5G provides improved security to aid car manufacturers and fleet managers to meet the connected vehicle application requirements, and control data transport costs. The discussion echoes Cisco's bullish behavior with its 5G plans. The vendor discussed its pivot towards private 5G at the MWC Las Vegas event in September – which first gained significant momentum earlier in the year when it launched its private 5G platform at the MWC Barcelona event. Michael Beesley, CTO for service provider networking at Cisco, explained during an interview that the vendor has seen the market slowly evolve over the past several months, and Cisco's embedded position in a lot of enterprises sets it up to take advantage of this evolution. “It's an area that we think is a nice intersection of both our abilities and where we see the market need and customer need,” Beesley said. “Certainly, as we engage with enterprises, both the IT and the OT sides, the fact that Cisco's already a significant partner, we already have significant technological portfolios in these accounts, both direct and through partners, the ability to offer and service a private 5G offering that is fully integrated with the enterprise systems, fully integrated with WiFi policy, visibility, security, we think that's a key attribute that we bring to the table,” he explained. Stream now to hear the full 7 Layers interview. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Deloitte Quantum Experts Argue Against Fixating on Qubit Numbers, Y2Q Dates

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 23:36


    Deloitte's managing director of Risk & Financial Advisory Colin Soutar and Deloitte Specialist Leader Itan Barmes joined SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu to dive into quantum security on this episode of the SDxCentral 7 Layers podcast. Soutar and Barmes answered some frequently asked questions about quantum security, such as what is it really going to take to break current cryptography with a quantum computer and why shouldn't we fixate on the number of qubits to break the crypto or as a measure of progress? Barmes argues that the number of qubits doesn't give the full picture. “The number of qubits you need in order to implement the [Shor's] algorithm, even just on paper, is just one aspect. There are many others. And the danger that I see in focusing so much on the number of qubits is that people create predictions about the timeline when we don't have the hardware exactly running the algorithm,” he said. “So we can make a prediction, but it's most likely not going to go this way. There are many more aspects that are important here, not just the number of qubits.” Soutar urges organizations to focus on preparation instead. “It was fairly noticeable that a lot of people have been talking about particular dates when are quantum computers going to be mature enough and commercially viable enough that we can implement Shor's [algorithm] and render this attack?” Soutar said. “The over-fixation on a date, I think it's just the wrong message for industry in general … It's really not a matter of when, it's whether organizations are ready to deal with it when it comes along.” The discussions about Shor's algorithm and technological advances in quantum computing and even the standardization around post-quantum cryptography currently should be detached a little from organizations' quantum-ready and crypto-agile efforts, they said. Lastly, “let's not have potential vulnerabilities overshadow all of the positive applications of quantum computing around simulation and optimization and so on,” Soutar said. “The technology at large can provide the benefits that it's certainly been promising as it continues to evolve.” Listen to the full interview now. Photo (L-R): Colin Soutar and Itan Barmes Source: Deloitte Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Verizon Drives 5G Across Ops

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 21:25


    Andrea Caldini, VP of network engineering at Verizon, has seen a lot of wireless technology evolution during her 20 years at the telecom giant. This includes that carrier's initial 3G launch based on CDMA technology, its radical move to 4G LTE more than a decade ago, and its more recent push into 5G. “I remember at some point thinking 64 kb/s was really fast,” Caldini joked during an interview with SDxCentral. Caldini cited Verizon's early 5G work, including its early work toward 5G standards that were initially outside of the normal standards bodies. Verizon has also been able to inject a lot more spectrum into its 5G services based on that technology standards ability to support larger “chunks” of spectrum. Caldini cited the carrier's extensive millimeter wave (mmWave) spectrum holdings that support significant capacity and its ongoing deployment of its C-Band spectrum that is providing a broader reach. As part of that push, Verizon itself has been able to expand those network updates broadly across the organization, including into its Verizon Business Group. That group has been a driver of Verizon's recent business operations. Verizon 5G and the Private, MEC Space That work has also begun to spread more into the private 5G space, which Caldini said is a “huge opportunity here,” and the is “a gateway into mobile edge compute.” Verizon's MEC efforts include agreements with all three major hyperscalers – Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) – to provide optionality to enterprises. This allows the carrier to support two deployment models: private MEC and public MEC. The private MEC path involves an on-premises device deployment that allows an enterprise to maintain total control over its data. The carrier runs this on top of its agreement with AWS, Microsoft, and GCP. The public MEC work taps into nearly 20 locations where Verizon is collocated with the hyperscalers. This model is one Verizon executives have previously stated provide a connection point to within 150 miles of most enterprises. “As you're creating these solutions, you're looking to have your workloads closer, so you might have a low-latency need and need to have that workload closer,” Caldini said, adding that this private and public MEC integration then allows an enterprise to adjust where they want to run applications and still have it all under strict control. “They all come together as you create these new services to support a business need.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Juniper Lead Underlines SASE, Zero Trust Should Work Together

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 24:30


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Verizon Business Doubles Down on Private 5G

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 26:39


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: CIOs Say ‘Triple Squeeze' of Economy, Talent, Supply Chain to Impact 2023 Investments

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 12:31


    CIOs are expecting their IT budgets to increase an average of 5.1% due to a “triple squeeze” of economic pressure, the talent shortage and supply chain challenges, according to a new survey from Gartner released in time for the Gartner IT Symposium 2023 in Orlando, Florida. The 2023 Gartner CIO and Technology Executive Survey gathered data from 2,203 CIO respondents in 81 countries and all major industries, and representing approximately $15 trillion in revenue/public-sector budgets and $322 billion in IT spending. The respondents ranked their company's objectives objectives for digital technology investment over the last two years. The top two objectives were to improve operational excellence (53%) and improve customer or citizen experience (45%). In comparison, only 27% cited growing revenue as a primary objective and 22% cited improving cost efficiency. During this episode of 7 Layers, Daniel Sanchez-Reina, VP analyst at Gartner, talked about the survey results, and how CEOs and boards are anticipating digital initiatives, working to bridge silos in their organizations, reducing the talent gap through unconventional methods, and empowering employees outside of the IT team to contribute to building digital capabilities. Sanchez-Reina is a VP Analyst in CIO Leadership, Culture and People. Sanchez-Reina covers the complex challenges of culture change in organizations, high-performing teams, leadership, CIO influence and CIO role evolution. He provides research on a worldwide basis, advising clients on their specific needs to achieve sustainable growth. Listen to the podcast to hear what Sanchez-Reina had to say. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: AT&T Security AVP Spotlights on Cloud, Quantum Security Efforts

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 19:15


    AT&T's Assistant Vice President of Security Dan Solero sat down with SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu at AT&T's Global Headquarters in Dallas, Texas for this episode of 7 Layers. Solero noted the security industry is facing a lot of pressure due to emerging technologies and modalities, new initiatives in the legislative and regulatory environment, and ongoing talent shortages.  To address some of those challenges, a few years ago, AT&T announced it will be a public-cloud first company, meaning the first step of its IT strategy is to determine how to get to the cloud, he said. In hybrid and multi-cloud environments, “we have to have a centralized point of view to monitor what's happening from a security perspective. So we've built our own set of systems leveraging some proprietary technology that we have and commercial off-the-shelf solutions, mainly from the market segment called cloud security posture management. And what that gives us is an ability to have a broad view of our AT&T assets out in multiple clouds and apply consistent standards and detection mechanisms across all of them.” The tier-one operator also has quantum ready on its roadmap by 2025. “It's so important to be taking action now,” Solero said. “We've declared almost like a call to action within the company, that we need to be ready for quantum risk by a certain time period, [and] we've chosen 2025. And what that means is by the end of 2025, we'll have a good plan and a good awareness of what needs to be done and in what priority order we need to address these issues and have a good understanding of how to take action.” “We're a couple of years into trying to establish practices and raise awareness within the company that we need a better inventory,” he added. “We need a more complete inventory and information about our encryption usage, where it's used, and what it is protecting. I would say that we're probably within a few months of having a plan established, and then it's all about execution.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Sumo Logic CSO Urges Regulation to Curb Social Media Security Threats

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 13:16


    Sumo Logic Chief Security Officer George Gerchow joined SDxCentral Editor Nancy Liu to dive into social media security on this episode of 7 Layers. The heat has turned up recently for popular social media platforms' security problems. SDxCentral reported in August that a former Twitter security chief filed a whistleblower complaint alleging the company has major security issues, while Tesla CEO Elon Musk publicly accused Twitter of concealing serious data security flaws. Meanwhile, Tik Tok and Facebook's data security and privacy concerns also made headlines.  Despite almost all age groups being on those platforms, “they really don't establish any kind of real security when it comes down to it for their users,” Gerchow argues. “It just leaves their platform wide open for folks to impersonate accounts, create fake accounts, to fish out of different organizations. So they're not doing the basic foundations when it comes to security and it's a shame.” He added that we need a third-party validation or regulatory requirement that can be audited for those platforms. “They've really got to be regulated.” During the podcast, Gerchow listed measures that users can do to protect themselves, including password tips and mutli-factor authentication.  All organizations have employees on social media or take advantage of it for marketing and other business purposes. “Start putting your own security measures around it,” Gerchow suggested. He noted that zero-trust principles apply directly here. “Most of it in my mind starts with identity. So when you can prove your identity and then have someone else prove who they are, that starts establishing that trust and tooling like single sign-on, multi-factor authentication are a big part of that.” “Logging is a big piece of it as well … if you're able to log what's actually going on in the enterprise. You can then even have further validation,” Gerchow said.    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: John Deere Talks RFP, Data, and Securing Autonomous Ag

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 15:05


    SDxCentral Reporter Emma Chervek is joined by John Deere's Director of Emerging Technology Julian Sanchez for a conversation at the agricultural giant's test farm outside of Des Moines, Iowa. The two discuss John Deere's request for proposal for the satellite industry to connect and automate the operations of 1.5 million agricultural machines by 2026. The agricultural giant is searching for a vendor or set of vendors to develop a SATCOM solution to provide connectivity in areas not covered by terrestrial cellular networks. "It's critical to be able to monitor what's going on with the machine at any given point from anywhere," Sanchez said. Satellite connectivity requires a lot of different players. "There are folks that are focused more on how they offer the ground solutions – the ground technology to receive the satellite signals. There [are] folks that are interested in optimizing the way in which data gets moved between ground technology and the satellite technology. There's folks that are worried about the design of the satellites and how they architect constellations. And so we we've got them all here," Sanchez explained, referring to the industry day focused on this RFP happening in a building across the farm. Sanchez also discussed the role of data and analytics in Deere's autonomous ag ambitions. "One of the things that you have to have to continue to deploy reliable autonomous solutions is ... more and more data about what the machines actually see out there in the field so that the algorithms get more intelligent over time," he said. From an autonomy standpoint, connectivity is crucial because it "unlocks the ability for farmers to have confidence" in the machine's competency compared to the confidence farmers have in their own abilities. And "in the continued evolution of autonomous solutions, [connectivity] gives us the ability to collect more data, bring that data back, and use that data to train the algorithms," he added. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers (Special Edition): MWC Las Vegas 2022 Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 19:34


    On this episode of 7 Layers, SDxCentral Executive Editor Dan Meyer and fellow reporter Tommy Clift discussed last week's MWC Las Vegas event.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Sponsored: Network Slicing Is Key to Delivering 5G Advanced Services

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 24:17


    Network slicing is key to helping critical industries modernize their operations networks. Watch this video interview to learn more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    network delivering network slicing advanced services
    7 Layers: Dell'Oro Debriefs Q2 Data Center Market

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 11:35


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Sponsored: AMD and the Value Proposition Behind 5G

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 15:56


    Operators continue to face challenges around monetizing 5G services and delivering ROI. Find out how AMD is addressing these challenges. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Podcast: 5G, Broadband Drive Metro Ethernet Evolution

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 19:06


    Demand for broadband connectivity continues to surge as the workforce and broader population in general adapt to a post-pandemic world. High-speed connection needs are no longer confined to large office buildings but are now needed across urban and rural areas. This has led to a push for more robust wired and wireless connectivity options that require even more robust backhaul capabilities. A recent report from Dell'Oro Group found the global broadband access equipment market surged 12% year-over-year during the second quarter, hitting $4.5 billion in revenues. SDxCentral recently spoke with Brendan Gibbs, SVP of automated WAN solutions at Juniper Networks, to get his insight into how the metro Ethernet market is evolving and where he sees market opportunities. The vendor itself expects metro Ethernet traffic will increase by more than 500% over the next several years as telecom operators boost their 5G network deployments and cloud providers continue to expand the reach of their data centers. Juniper recently fleshed out its Cloud Metro strategy, combining automation and artificial intelligence (AI) into a managed offering targeted at service providers battling increased data consumption from their 5G and edge deployments. The updates include Juniper moving its Paragon Automation software suite into a cloud-based, as-a-service product. Juniper launched Paragon Automation early last year, tapping into its Netrounds acquisition to provide vendor-agnostic software that monitors network services, automation, and resiliency testing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Podcast: Oracle Targets 5G Telecom Challenges

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 22:46


    Andrew De La Torre, group VP of technology at Oracle, discusses how the vendor and industry can better support 5G telecom operators. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Deloitte Dives Deep Into Cloud Investment Strategies

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 19:28


    David Linthicum, chief cloud strategy officer at Deloitte US, digs into how enterprises can have a more purposeful cloud investment strategy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Podcast (Special Edition): VMware Explore 2022 Wrap

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 14:19


    SDxCentral's Emma Chervek and Dan Meyer break down the recent VMware Explore 2022 event. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: The 5 Tech Pillars That Will Make or Break Telco Operators

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 25:36


    Arthur D. Little partner Sean McDevitt discusses his report on the five tech pillars that will make or break telecom operators in 2022. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Opensignal 5G Tests Highlight Deployment Trends

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 19:19


    On this week's SDxCentral 7 Layers Podcast we are joined by Ian Fogg, VP of Analysis at Opensignal, to discuss his firm's latest mobile network experience report and insight it provides on how U.S. operators are rolling out their 5G networks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Tech Experts From Elite Schools on Oligopolistic Competition in Cloud Market

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 30:20


    AJ Grotto and Steve Weber talk about the culture, supply and demand, economics, and market structure around the public clouds and security.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Verizon Business Bullish on NaaS, MEF Support

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 17:32


    Debika Bhattacharya, Chief Product Officer at Verizon Business Group, provides her perspective on NaaS and MEF. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: SASE, SD-WAN Are Confused Markets

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 20:20


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Noname Security Rides the API Security Wave

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 11:32


    Noname Security CISO Karl Mattson talks about API sprawl, API security, and the market trends.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Extreme Nudges Digital Twin to Networking

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 28:14


    Extreme Networks CTO Nabil Bukhari discusses the use of digital twin technology to advance the networking space. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: What SolarWinds Learned From Supply Chain Attack

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 12:25


    This week's 7-Layers talks with SolarWinds CPO Rohini Kasturi about the lessons it learned from the Sunburst attack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: FINOS Touts Fintech's Open Source Future

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 26:04


    This week's SDxCentral 7 Layers Podcast talks with Gabriele Columbro, Executive Director of the FinTech Open Source Foundation (FINOS). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Orange Business Services Talks SD-WAN, SASE

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2022 20:38


    John Isch from Orange Business Services joined 7 Layers to talk about the move to cloud and how it's facilitating SD-WAN and SASE conversations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Sponsored: Is Your Network Security Vendor Changing With the Security Landscape?

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 20:08


    Find out what solutions businesses should consider to adapt to the network security threat landscape with this Genians interview. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Trellix CPO Sees a Massive Adoption Cycle of XDR

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2022 11:45


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Okta's Auth0 Reveals Three Big Cyber Threats

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 7:54


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: Google Cloud Reveals Challenges Security Operations Teams Face

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 10:34


    Google Cloud's senior director of product management, Jess Leroy, discusses the growing challenges security operations teams are facing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: SDxCentral Editors Reflect on RSAC

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 12:22


    Tune in to this 7Layers episode to hear the SDxCentral editorial team reflect on their second day at the RSA Conference in San Francisco.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Sponsored: Rohde & Schwarz: DPI is Key to Network Efficiency

    Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2022 20:28


    Deep packet inspection gives granular insights on protocols, applications and application attributes and services. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers: SDxCentral Editors Talk RSAC Expectations

    Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 12:03


    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Previews RSA Conference 2022 Trends

    Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 11:42


    Britta Glade, Senior Director of Content & Curation at RSA Conference, talks about this year's RSAC trends she observed.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Finds Out How Kubernetes Complexity Can be Overcome

    Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 11:10


    "If you talk about the complexity of Kubernetes, part of it is that Kubernetes can do a lot of different things," said Red Hat's Stu Miniman. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    7 Layers Looks at SMB Spending Trends

    Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2022 16:01


    New Analysys Mason research shows that SMBs are adapting to the changing environment and changing their IT usage and spend. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Cisco Private 5G Focused on Outcomes

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2022 12:11


    Cisco announced the launch of their private 5G solution. Find out how enterprises will be able to take advantage of the unique properties of 5G networks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Claim 7 Layers

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel