EP207 Slaying the Ransomware Dragon: Can a Startup Succeed?

Guest: Bob Blakley, Co-founder and Chief Product Officer of Mimic Topics: Tell us about the ransomware problem - isn't this a bit of old news? Circa 2015, right? What makes ransomware a unique security problem?  What's different about ransomware versus other kinds of malware? What do you make of the “RansomOps” take (aka “ransomware is not malware”)? Are there new ways to solve it? Is this really a problem that a startup is positioned to solve? Aren’t large infrastructure owners better positioned for this? In fact, why haven't existing solutions solved this?  Is this really a symptom of a bigger problem?  What is that problem? What made you personally want to get into this space, other than the potential upside of solving the problem?  Resources: EP206 Paying the Price: Ransomware's Rising Stakes in the Cloud EP89 Can We Escape Ransomware by Migrating to the Cloud? EP45 VirusTotal Insights on Ransomware Business and Technology EP204 Beyond PCAST: Phil Venables on the Future of Resilience and Leading Indicators EP7 No One Expects the Malware Inquisition Anderson Report (July 1972)  “The Innovator Dilemma” book “Odyssey” book (yes, really) Crowdstrike External Technical Root Cause Analysis — Channel File 291 (yes, that one)

Om Podcasten

Cloud Security Podcast by Google focuses on security in the cloud, delivering security from the cloud, and all things at the intersection of security and cloud. Of course, we will also cover what we are doing in Google Cloud to help keep our users' data safe and workloads secure. We’re going to do our best to avoid security theater, and cut to the heart of real security questions and issues. Expect us to question threat models and ask if something is done for the data subject’s benefit or just for organizational benefit. We hope you’ll join us if you’re interested in where technology overlaps with process and bumps up against organizational design. We’re hoping to attract listeners who are happy to hear conventional wisdom questioned, and who are curious about what lessons we can and can’t keep as the world moves from on-premises computing to cloud computing.