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Search document.querySelector(".c-header__button--search").addEventListener('click', () => document.querySelector('#site-search-modal').showModal()) The Stack The Stack Sign In Subscribe Home About Partner Featured open data 11 UK water utilities are joining forces on Open Data as an ambitious project wins backing , and Ed Targett June 16, 2023 Quantum computing IBM just made a major leap forwards in quantum computing , and Ed Targett June 15, 2023 MOVEit As victim count mounts, a critical new MOVEit
John Scimone looks so fresh-faced, it’s hard to believe that he’s been around the block a bit, but Dell Technologies’ Chief Security Officer (CSO) has seen a thing or two in his time. Scimone – who cut his teeth as a security analyst back at the Defense Information Systems Agency 20 years ago – in 2014 found himself at the heart one of the world’s biggest cybersecurity incidents; just weeks after being appointed CISO at Sony in 2014, getting pummelled by a nation state attack that ultimately bricked 3,262 o
Getting digitally sucker punched by a nuclear-armed rogue state (the attack was later attributed to North Korea) weeks into the job has to be up there with some of industry’s worst hard landings and there can be little doubt that the experience was formative. Sitting down with The Stack for an interview at the Dell Technologies World conference in Las Vegas on May 23, Scimone has the present tense on his mind however.