Ransomware/Extortionware

CISO Dinner

October 2, 2024 - London, UK

Visionaries

Fox Ahmed BNP Paribas
Fox Ahmed

Global Head of Cybersecurity & Technology and Data Protection Regulatory Risk

BNP Paribas

Dinner

Fox Ahmed is the Global Head of Cybersecurity and Technology Regulatory Engagements at BNP Paribas. He has over 25 years’ experience working for Tier 1 banks with global responsibilities. Fox is currently responsible for ensuring the Group has an effective risk based approach in integrating Governance, Compliance and Regulatory requirements into programmes and digital initiatives with focus on Cybersecurity and Technology Risk Management. He is playing a crucial role in supporting the key digital strategies of the Group by enabling the management of risk at the speed and scale required in today’s digital world.

Matt Logan Claroty
Matt Logan

Field CTO - EMEA

Claroty

Dinner

With over 20 years knowledge and experience working within the System, Information and Cyber Security domains. Experience working with all industries including government, across the whole of EMEA. Having specialist experience with post and pre sales. Including; installation, design, architecting, consulting, sale and sales engineering experience. Expert in building Sales Engineering teams for start up vendors including refining sales process, maturing sales processes including proof of value delivery and closure.

October 2, 2024

Agenda

All times United Kingdom Time

6:00 PM-9:30 PM

Ransomware/Extortionware

CISOs face a huge headache trying to understand how to know when they were attacked, what data attackers have corrupted? How quickly can they recover from the attack? And do they have to pay a ransom to get the data back? Ransomware remains a significant challenge for companies, not simply because it has become ubiquitous, but also because of the significant impact a single ransomware attack may have on a company and every other company or customer that relies on that company. Cybersecurity and risk management have always been vital for the flow of any business. However, the current condition of the global supply chain makes it exceptionally vulnerable to severe damage from an attack more so than usual. When the supply chain is barely getting by, criminals are more likely to assume they have leverage over businesses. A ransomware attacker may be more brazen and exercise higher demands than they might have a few years ago.

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