After a fantastic occasion final month in San Jose, Ars is switching coasts for October and descending in drive on our nation’s capital. In the event you’re on the East Coast and wish to come hang around with Ars EIC Ken Fisher and me whereas we speak to some neat audio system and study some stuff, then learn on!
Persevering with our partnership with IBM, Ars presents “AI in DC: Privateness, Compliance, and Making Infrastructure Smarter.” Our tone this time round might be a bit of extra policy-oriented than our San Jose occasion. We intend to have three panel discussions, with the general subjects trying like this:
- The important thing to compliance with rising applied sciences
- Knowledge safety within the age of AI-assisted cyber-espionage
- The perfect infrastructure answer on your AI/ML technique
Particularly, listed below are our panels and the panelists we have confirmed:
“The Key to Compliance with Rising Applied sciences”
Whether or not it was the transfer to the cloud within the 2010s or AI know-how right now, firms are frequently targeted on how you can innovate with rising applied sciences whereas remaining compliant with rules that just about at all times lag far behind the cutting-edge. On this panel, we’ll talk about the road firms should stroll when bringing new issues to market and the way regulatory compliance does not should be painful.
Panelists thus far:
- Anton Dam, VP Engineering for Knowledge AI/ML, AuditBoard
- John Verdi, SVP, Coverage, Way forward for Privateness Discussion board (FPF)
- James Comstock, Program Director, Providing Administration, Hybrid Multi-Cloud Storage, IBM
- Moderator: Lee Hutchinson, Senior Expertise Editor, Ars Technica
“Knowledge Safety within the Age of AI-Assisted Cyber Espionage”
Expertise evolves, and threats evolve with it—usually sooner than risk mitigation. For this dialogue, we’ll pull collectively a set of industry-recognized infosec consultants brimming with concepts on how you can assist safeguard your infrastructure, your knowledge, and your individuals from a gamut of attackers, starting from script kiddies to nation-states.