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UID:pretalx-bsideslv24-RFMM8R@pretalx.com
DTSTART;TZID=PST:20240807T093000
DTEND;TZID=PST:20240807T101500
DESCRIPTION:<RING\, RING> 1999 called\; it wants its computer security poli
 cy back. \n\nAs we arrive at the 25th anniversary of a successful Y2K resp
 onse\, we also arrive at the anniversary of the Melissa virus – a securi
 ty event that cost an estimated $80 million. In the words of the FBI\, Mel
 issa “foreshadowed modern threats”\, but a quarter-century later\, its
  core policy and legal security challenges remain unaddressed. \n\nSecurit
 y incidents now cause billions in financial losses\, and have potentially 
 catastrophic impacts on public safety\, national security\, and critical i
 nfrastructure.\n\nIt's time to end to the "Goldilocks era" of computer sec
 urity policy. The 1990's beauty of the baud has now morphed into an unstab
 le “company town” tech economy\, too often powered by hype cycles and 
 security “outages” and “glitches.”\n\nThrough original research on
  engineering catastrophes where loss of life resulted\, this talk explains
  how historical responses to safety shortfalls hold lessons for a more suc
 cessful next quarter century of computer security.  \n\nBy retelling the s
 tory of computer security using the language of safety -- the traditional 
 legal and policy lens for technologies that have the potential to kill or 
 harm -- our Wednesday keynote poses four  elements of a more successful fu
 ture.
DTSTAMP:20260423T024652Z
LOCATION:Florentine A
SUMMARY:Keynote\, Day 2:  Homicideware - Andrea M. Matwyshyn
URL:https://pretalx.com/bsideslv24/talk/RFMM8R/
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UID:pretalx-bsideslv24-MDXAN8@pretalx.com
DTSTART;TZID=PST:20240807T110000
DTEND;TZID=PST:20240807T123000
DESCRIPTION:We do not live in the best of all possible worlds. Effectively 
 considering the future of AI\, software safety\, and security risk starts 
 with building a shared language – one that is understandable both to the
  security community and policymakers. Professor Matwyshyn will guide the a
 ttendees through a series of definitions\, then begin a session called “
 Difficult Conversations\,” where we will unpack some of the tough policy
  and legal questions that have historically presented obstacles to meaning
 ful improvements in security.  What is “safety” in the context of soft
 ware?  What is resilience? Which software-reliant systems are safety-criti
 cal from the perspective of users (and who is responsible for their mainte
 nance)? How should we evolve our approach when failures in digital systems
  bring real world harm? How do we create more robust structures of account
 ability?
DTSTAMP:20260423T024652Z
LOCATION:Copa
SUMMARY:Difficult Conversations - Andrea M. Matwyshyn
URL:https://pretalx.com/bsideslv24/talk/MDXAN8/
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