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Evan Powell (@epowell101, CEO at DeepTempo) talks about the intersection of CyberSecurity, Deep Learning and new AI techniques to improve operational security. SHOW: 915SHOW TRANSCRIPT: The Cloudcast #915 TranscriptSHOW VIDEO: https://youtube.com/@TheCloudcastNET CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK: http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotwNEW TO CLOUD? CHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCAST: "CLOUDCAST BASICS" SPONSORS:Cut Enterprise IT Support Costs by 30-50% with US CloudTry Postman AI Agent Builder TodaySHOW NOTES:DeepTempo websiteThe Promise of CyberSecurity Foundation ModelsEvan on The Cloudcast #165Topic 1 - Welcome back to the show, Evan. It's hard to believe it's been over ten years since we last spoke in your StackStorm days. Give everyone a quick introduction.Topic 2 - Today's topic is the intersection of Deep Learning and CyberSecurity. Let's start at a high level. As someone who has founded several companies, what's interesting enough in this space for you to jump in?Topic 3 - I talk to many customers about AI and use cases. If they don't have a leading use case, I often ask where they have a lot of data, and they want insights data. The needle in the haystack scenario. It could be text, unstructured data, log files, data lakes, just about anything. Is this scenario correct when it comes to CyberSecurity? What are the leading use cases?Topic 4 - I've been reading and hearing how AI has been a boon for hackers; what are your thoughts on the ever-lasting cat-and-mouse game in the security space and how it has evolved with AI?Topic 5 - Let's dig into the tech; at DeepTempo's core, you use Deep Learning and specific foundational models. You wrote a great blog recently on Cybersecurity models. When folks hear the term foundational or frontier model, they think of LLMs and GenAI. How is this different?Topic 6 - Is this a SaaS model? On-prem? Where does the tech sit and why?FEEDBACK?Email: show at the cloudcast dot netBluesky: @cloudcastpod.bsky.socialTwitter/X: @cloudcastpodInstagram: @cloudcastpodTikTok: @cloudcastpod
For our 10th installation of the data on k8s community meetup, we talk with CEO of Mayadata Evan Powell about container attached storage, Portworx acquisition, openEBS, can open source make it, and we geek out a bit with questions from the audience. // Key takeaways: Kubernetes - extended by CAS and other software - is not just solving the problems of running data on Kubernetes, it is fast becoming the preferred platform for data. // Abstract: Back in 2018 the CNCF published a blog we wrote called Container Attached Storage. Today - September 22nd 2020 - a new blog is appearing on their site updating Container Attached Storage. https://bit.ly/2FYGgeR This talk borrows very heavily from that blog. What is CAS? Why would anyone use Kubernetes itself for storage? How does a microservices architecture help? Why is shared storage at the end of the road - though still used underneath CAS sometimes? // Evan Bio Evan has helped conceptualize, fund, position, lead and scale a few eventually important enterprise infrastructure software companies which were acquired. He is also a part time investor and mentor. Evan is currently CEO at MayaData. MayaData enables the use of Kubernetes as a data layer and sponsors open source projects including the CNCF project OpenEBS and the LitmusChaos engineering project. MayaData also helps to sponsor DOKC. Previously Evan helped conceptualize and build StackStorm, a DevOps workflow automation company, where he was co-founder and CEO. StackStorm was acquired and the project became a Linux Foundation project. Before StackStorm, Evan was founding CEO of Nexenta Systems which defined and led the open storage and software-defined storage space. ▬▬▬▬▬▬ Connect with us
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news.
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news.
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news.
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news. The post Network Break 256: Startup Forward Networks Nabs $35 Million; Vodafone Dials OpenRAN For Incumbent Alternatives appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news. The post Network Break 256: Startup Forward Networks Nabs $35 Million; Vodafone Dials OpenRAN For Incumbent Alternatives appeared first on Packet Pushers.
Today's Network Break podcast is chock full of inspirational cynicism. We cover fresh funding for Forward Networks, Vodafone trialing OpenRAN gear, SUSE closing the door on OpenStack, Extreme Networks shifting StackStorm to the Linux Foundation, and more tech news. The post Network Break 256: Startup Forward Networks Nabs $35 Million; Vodafone Dials OpenRAN For Incumbent Alternatives appeared first on Packet Pushers.
The FSF is looking for some direction, StackStorm joins the Linux Foundation, and GNOME users who like it a little traditional get some good news. Plus the Pinebook Pro starts shipping to customers, and more.
The FSF is looking for some direction, StackStorm joins the Linux Foundation, and GNOME users who like it a little traditional get some good news.
This week, a Severe RCE vulnerability affected popular StackStorm Automation software, Crowdfense is willing to pay $3 Million for iOS and Android Zero-Days, Equifax neglected cyber security prior to breach, Google launches new Cloud Security services, and an unprotected MongoDB instance exposes 800 million emails! Jason Wood from Paladin Security joins us for expert commentary on how a researcher claims an Iranian APT is behind a 6TB Data Heist at Citrix! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/HNNEpisode210 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/hnn for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Severe RCE vulnerability affected popular StackStorm Automation software, Crowdfense is willing to pay $3 Million for iOS and Android Zero-Days, Equifax neglected cyber security prior to breach, Google launches new Cloud Security services, and an unprotected MongoDB instance exposes 800 million emails! Jason Wood from Paladin Security joins us for expert commentary on how a researcher claims an Iranian APT is behind a 6TB Data Heist at Citrix! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/HNNEpisode210 Visit http://hacknaked.tv to get all the latest episodes!
This week, a Severe RCE vulnerability affected popular StackStorm Automation software, Crowdfense is willing to pay $3 Million for iOS and Android Zero-Days, Equifax neglected cyber security prior to breach, Google launches new Cloud Security services, and an unprotected MongoDB instance exposes 800 million emails! Jason Wood from Paladin Security joins us for expert commentary on how a researcher claims an Iranian APT is behind a 6TB Data Heist at Citrix! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/HNNEpisode210 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/hnn for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Aaron and Brian talk with Jason Edelman (@jedelman8, Founder @networktocode), and Matt Oswalt (@mierdin, Software Engineer @stackstorm) about the state of automation in the industry, how people are evolving their skills, if any of this DevOps is real, and what’s it’s like to be Internet Famous for a day. Show Links: [FUNDRAISING] Krispy Kreme Challenge 2017 Get a free eBook from O'Reilly media or use promo code PCBW for a discount - 40% off Print Books and 50% off eBooks and videos Network to Code website Jason’s Blog Stackstorm website Matt’s Blog - Keeping It Classless Network Programmability & Automation (book - pre order) Tech Field Day "2 Types of IT Techies" - Reddit Thread Show Notes: Topic 1 - Welcome back to the show Jason and welcome to the show Matt. Tell about what you’re working on these days. Topic 2 - What are the big trends (around automation) or popular practices that you’re seeing in the market these days? Topic 3 - Both of you guys are essentially “self taught” software/automation engineers. But there’s a bunch demand for people to learn these skills and tools. How are you seeing people learn how to make automation helpful to their jobs? Topic 4 - Matt, you’ve been at both mid-sized companies and web-scale companies and open source companies. Is there anything applicable between those two types of worlds that people can take for their jobs? Topic 5 - You’re both focused on networking. How much of automation needs to be on software elements (e.g. SDN, etc.) and how much has evolved from existing systems? Topic 6 - OK, let’s talk about this Reddit thing. First off, tell people what Tech Field Day is, and then give us the timeline about learning about this Reddit thread. Feedback? Email:show at thecloudcast dot net Twitter:@thecloudcastnet YouTube:Cloudcast Channel
If you are responsible for managing any amount of servers, then you know that automation is critical for maintaining your sanity. This week we spoke with Tomaž Muraus and Patrick Hoolboom about their work on StackStorm, which is a platform for tracking and reacting to events in your infrastructure. By allowing you to register actions with event triggers it frees you from having to worry about a whole class of concerns so that you can focus on building new capabilities rather than babysitting what you already have.