Red Hat Government Symposium | On-Demand
Event overview:
As emerging technologies like generative artificial intelligence (gen AI) and quantum computing evolve, so does the threat landscape. Organizations must act now to implement pragmatic strategies that protect critical data before new mandates and more sophisticated attacks arrive.
In this session from the Red Hat Government Symposium, industry experts discuss how to navigate the transition to modern security approaches. Learn how to weave zero trust, confidential computing, and post-quantum cryptography (PQC) into your infrastructure to stay ahead of future vulnerabilities.
Key discussion points:
The quantum countdown: Why the transition to post-quantum cryptography is a multiyear journey that must begin today to counter "harvest now, decrypt later" threats.
Data in use: How confidential computing fills the critical gap in the data lifecycle, protecting sensitive information while it's actively being processed.
Practical playbooks for migration: Strategic steps for beginning your migration, including performing crypto inventories, prioritizing high-value assets, and testing interoperability.
Strengthening the edge of the network: Adapting IT security models to reinforce purpose-built systems at the edge through continuous monitoring and hardware-rooted integrity.
Measuring success: Identifying the key metrics—visibility, velocity, and viability—that track your organization's progress toward a resilient, zero trust architecture.
Speakers:
Michael Epley
Chief Architect and Security Strategist, Public Sector, Red Hat
Steve Orrin
Federal Chief Technology Officer, Intel Corporation
Ray Romano
Deputy Assistant Director for Cyber Threat Investigations, U.S. Department of State
Dustin Moody
Mathematician, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)