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Debbie Reynolds “The Data Diva” talks to Robin Meyer, General Counsel at TokenEx. We discuss her passion for privacy and emphasis on it for General Counsels, what tokenization is and how TokenEx leverages this technology, the advantage of tokenization regarding data classification, tokenization can protect sensitive data, her current concerns about privacy and technology, concerns about biometric access technology and data redundancy, differences in Data Privacy in US and EU, a wide variety of Data Privacy policies in US companies and laws which are mainly consumer-based, getting buy-in and cooperation in Data Privacy, Data Privacy is becoming critical to profitability, concerns over adverse or invasive conclusions of AI systems, examination of potential future AI and Metaverse harm, and her hope for Data Privacy in the future.Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=REGNEQPG4USC8)
Episode 231 Sean Whitesell is a Microsoft MVP and cloud architect at TokenEx, where he designs cloud-based architectural solutions for hosting internal services for TokenEx. He serves as President of the Tulsa Developers Association. He regularly presents in the community at developer events, conferences, and local MeetUps. Rob Richardson is a software craftsman, building web properties in ASP.NET and Node, React, and Vue. He is a Microsoft MVP, published author, frequent speaker at conferences, user groups, and community events, and a diligent teacher and student of high-quality software development. You can find his recent work at robrich.org/presentations. Matthew D. Groves is a Microsoft MVP who loves to code. From C# to jQuery, or PHP, he will submit pull requests for anything. He got his start writing a QuickBASIC point-of-sale app for his parent's pizza shop back in the 1990s. Currently a Product Marketing Manager for Couchbase, he is the author of the book AOP in .NET, and the video Creating and Managing Your First Couchbase Cluster. Links https://twitter.com/codewithseanw https://twitter.com/rob_rich https://twitter.com/mgroves Resources Pro Microservices in .NET 6 https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-1-4842-7833-8 https://github.com/Apress/pro-microservices-in-.net-6 https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-net https://dotnet.microsoft.com/en-us/ https://dotnet.microsoft.com/en-us/languages/csharp https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/services/kubernetes-service/#getting-started https://www.docker.com/ https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/overview/kubernetes-on-azure https://masstransit-project.com/ https://benorama.com/the-evolution-of-software-architecture-bd6ea674c477 https://opentelemetry.io/docs/instrumentation/net/ https://serilog.net/ https://grafana.com/ https://prometheus.io/ https://robrich.org/slides/databases-in-the-microservices-world "Tempting Time" by Animals As Leaders used with permissions - All Rights Reserved × Subscribe now! Never miss a post, subscribe to The 6 Figure Developer Podcast! Are you interested in being a guest on The 6 Figure Developer Podcast? Click here to check availability!
Robin Meyer, CIPP/US and CIPP/E, is General Counsel for TokenEx, a company that protects sensitive data through tokenization. Prior to recently joining TokenEx, Robin developed a deep expertise from the buyer's perspective of tech contracting of all different flavors as well as procurement. She has significant experience as a point of input for senior leadership teams and is energized by the intersections of legal, technical and business issues and projects. In this episode, Olga and Robin explore the approach to tech contracts and ways in which that approach needs to change. They discuss review and negotiation approaches that highlight the default of the tech industry in its contracts -- and a different way ahead.
Sean is a Microsoft MVP, ASP Insider, Technical Reviewer, and Cloud Architect at TokenEx. Links https://twitter.com/codewithseanw https://www.seanwhitesell.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/sean-whitesell/ https://www.twitch.tv/codewithsean https://github.com/seanw122 Resources https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-net Microservices Patterns Fundamentals of Software Architecture "Tempting Time" by Animals As Leaders used with permissions - All Rights Reserved × Subscribe now! Never miss a post, subscribe to The 6 Figure Developer Podcast! Are you interested in being a guest on The 6 Figure Developer Podcast? Click here to check availability!
The CCM is used as the standard to assess the security posture of organizations on the Security, Trust, Assurance, and Risk (STAR) registry. The STAR program promotes flexible, incremental, and multi-layered certifications that integrate with popular third-party assessments to avoid duplication of effort and cost. Security providers can fill out the extended question set that aligns with the CCM and send it to potential and current clients to demonstrate compliance to industry standards, frameworks, and regulations. It is recommended that providers submit the completed CAIQ to the STAR Registry so it is publicly available to all clients.Join us as we interview Chris Dixon; Governance, Risk & Compliance Manager at TokenEx and listen as he takes us on their journey utilizing the CCM and STAR including What problems does it solve or how did it help mitigate risk?How has using the CCM helped Tokenex reach some of its security targets?What are the major benefits?
One of the biggest payments challenges for merchants is how to handle payment data - whether it’s at the POS or in the remote domain where e-commerce and mobile payments take place. A lot of this concern is driven directly by PCI DSS compliance and broadly by the reputational risk data breach represents. One of the major techniques merchants employ, in order to remove the need to store payment data, is tokenization - the replacement of the high value card data with a low value representation managed by another party. Merchants just store the token for lookup purposes while the third party maintains the database that links these low value tokens to the true primary account number or PAN. At Glenbrook, we refer to these as merchant tokens because they are specific to and paid for by the merchant. We’ve also heard them referred to as acquirer tokens because the tokenization function is often performed by the merchant’s acquirer, processor, gateway, or payment service provider. Makes sense, right? Put the radioactive payment card data into another party’s hands. But for large and mid-size merchants, the provision of tokenization services to an acquirer has a few downsides: The token database maintained by the provider is specific to the merchant. If the merchant wants to shift to another provider, tokenization portability can be an issue and a costly one. In our merchant work, we are seeing the largest ones looking at a multi-acquirer topology for cost, redundancy, and channel flexibility purposes. But each acquirer will use its own tokenization scheme, adding complexity and limiting functionality. Omnichannel merchants may employ one provider for POS transactions and another for ecommerce. That doesn’t work when you want to provide a consistent experience to your returning customer. You want a token that works across channels, i.e. an omnichannel token. In this Payments on Fire® episode we talk with Alex Pezold, CEO of Token, an acquirer neutral, independent tokenization provider. We talk a lot about protecting payment and bank account data. But we also address the growing need for protecting other data assets and how tokenization can help accomplish that.
In this segment, they discuss some mergers, acquisitions, and partnerships, such as TokenEx partnering with SureCloud, Check Point acquires ForceNock, Zix agrees to acquire AppRiver for $275 million, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode122 Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!
In this segment, they discuss some mergers, acquisitions, and partnerships, such as TokenEx partnering with SureCloud, Check Point acquires ForceNock, Zix agrees to acquire AppRiver for $275 million, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode122 Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!
This week, Paul is joined by Matt Alderman to discuss some mergers, acquisitions, and partnerships, such as TokenEx partnering with SureCloud, Check Point acquires ForceNock, Zix agrees to acquire AppRiver for $275 million, and more! In this second segment, they discuss some security product launches and announcements from Trustwave, NopSec, ConnectGuard, Pulse Secure, Synopsys, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode122 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, Paul is joined by Matt Alderman to discuss some mergers, acquisitions, and partnerships, such as TokenEx partnering with SureCloud, Check Point acquires ForceNock, Zix agrees to acquire AppRiver for $275 million, and more! In this second segment, they discuss some security product launches and announcements from Trustwave, NopSec, ConnectGuard, Pulse Secure, Synopsys, and more! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode122 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly