| 1:30 PM–2:30 PM |
In this opening session, author and cloud governance expert Drew Barkiewicz will look at the legal, economic, and risk-related trends surrounding cloud computing. Offering a provocative and informed perspective on the issues of cloud adoption, Drew will discuss how cloud computing alters the risk profile of computing and how IT executives need to respond. Speaker - Drew Bartkiewicz, Vice President of E&O, Cyber and New Media Liability, The Hartford Drew Barkiewicz is Vice President of E&O, Cyber and New Media Liability. He is the founder of The Hartford’s business to insure the systemic risks and liabilities associated with The Internet, Technology, Cloud Computing, and Social Media. He is currently a Board Member of ORMA and was an advisor in 2009 to the World Economic Forum’s council on the Future of the Internet. He is also a council board member of The Ponemon Institute and has been published in over 40 publications on the topics of privacy, cyber law, Internet risk and uncertainties. Drew is the author of the upcoming book, Unseen Liability, Blind Spots of the Information Age. Prior to joining The Hartford, Drew founded another line of Technology risk insurance for a company that went public as Darwin Professional Underwriters (DR on the Nasdaq). He previously held senior and executive positions at salesforce.com and BroadVision Software, where he was a also task force author for the 2001 Brookings Institution book, Unseen Wealth. Drew started his career in various management positions at United Technologies US and Europe, and he was a U.S. Army Officer in the 82nd Airborne who served in the Gulf War in 1991. Drew is a graduate of West Point, he holds an MBA from the Yale School of Management, and he speaks Spanish, French, and Italian. Unseen Liability is due for publication in the Spring of 2010
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| 2:45 PM–3:45 PM |
Fear the cloud! That is the conventional thinking of the security industry. The source of concern is the uncertainly surrounding virtualization because it is “in the cloud”, and therefore, beyond control. But is that really true? The practical reality is that there are providers that take security, risk, and compliance very seriously, and others that do not. This session will explore a variety of risk and compliance management tools utilized by service providers such as SAS 70 audits, PCI assessments, ISO 27001/2 compliance, vulnerability management and more. In addition, this session will discuss best practices (and legal pitfalls) for marketing investments in security and risk management as a differentiator from other service providers. Speaker - Douglas Barbin, Director, SAS 70 Solutions, Inc. Mr. Barbin has a lengthy career in the security and compliance industry where he has served in auditor, consultant, and managed service provider roles. These experiences give Mr. Barbin a comprehensive understanding of the issues facing assessors and service providers. Doug is alumni of the “Big 4” global and multiple tier one security technology/service organizations, including managed service and SaaS providers.
Doug Barbin is currently a Director at SAS 70 Solutions, a company that provides assurance and technology compliance services to global organizations. Prior to joining SAS 70 Solutions, Mr. Barbin was the Director of Product Management for VeriSign’s Managed Security Services business, where he was responsible for the MSS “SaaS” platform architecture and lines of business and was the liaison for SAS 70 audits, PCI assessments, and other types of compliance reviews of these MSS. Mr. Barbin also led product marketing where he published a white paper titled “Leveraging Security as a Competitive Differentiator”, among other works. Prior to transitioning into the MSS division, Doug was in charge of VeriSign’s western US security consulting practice.
Mr. Barbin graduated cum laude with BS degrees in Accounting and Administration of Justice from Penn State University and has an MBA from Pepperdine University. He is a Certified Pubic Accountant (CPA), Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP), Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE), SANS GIAC Certified Forensic Analyst (GCFA), and is also Pragmatic Marketing Certified (PMC).
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| 4:00 PM–5:00 PM |
This panel of end users and legal experts will look at ways of mitigating the inherent risks of share, on-demand environments, considering the changes that need to happen to IT governance and the offerings from cloud computing provider s. Panelists are experts in the fields of privacy, law, risk, and insurance, and have worked with both cloud users and providers in understanding potential liabilities of new cloud offerings. Moderator - Drew Bartkiewicz, Vice President of E&O, Cyber and New Media Liability, The Hartford Drew Barkiewicz is Vice President of E&O, Cyber and New Media Liability. He is the founder of The Hartford’s business to insure the systemic risks and liabilities associated with The Internet, Technology, Cloud Computing, and Social Media. He is currently a Board Member of ORMA and was an advisor in 2009 to the World Economic Forum’s council on the Future of the Internet. He is also a council board member of The Ponemon Institute and has been published in over 40 publications on the topics of privacy, cyber law, Internet risk and uncertainties. Drew is the author of the upcoming book, Unseen Liability, Blind Spots of the Information Age. Prior to joining The Hartford, Drew founded another line of Technology risk insurance for a company that went public as Darwin Professional Underwriters (DR on the Nasdaq). He previously held senior and executive positions at salesforce.com and BroadVision Software, where he was a also task force author for the 2001 Brookings Institution book, Unseen Wealth. Drew started his career in various management positions at United Technologies US and Europe, and he was a U.S. Army Officer in the 82nd Airborne who served in the Gulf War in 1991. Drew is a graduate of West Point, he holds an MBA from the Yale School of Management, and he speaks Spanish, French, and Italian. Unseen Liability is due for publication in the Spring of 2010 Speaker - John Mullen, Attorney, Nelson, Levine, de Luca & Horst, LLC Speaker - Robert Parisi, National Practice Leader for Technology, Network Risk and Telecommunications, Marsh USA Current Responsibilities
Robert Parisi is a Senior Vice President and Technology, Network Risk & Telecommunications National Practice Leader for the Financial and Professional Services (“FINPRO”) unit of Marsh. His current responsibilities include advising clients on issues related to technology, privacy, and cyber related risks as well as negotiating with the carriers on terms and conditions.
Experience
Prior to joining Marsh, Robert was the Senior Vice President and Chief Underwriting Officer (“CUO”) of eBusiness Risk Solutions of AIG. Robert joined the AIG group of companies in 1998 as legal counsel for its Professional Liability group and held several executive and legal positions within AIG, including CUO for Professional Liability and Technology. While at AIG, Robert oversaw the creation and drafting of underwriting guidelines and policies for all lines of Professional Liability. In addition to working with AIG, Robert has also been in private practice, principally as legal counsel to various Lloyds of London syndicates.
Education
* Law Degree from Fordham University School of Law
* BA in Economics from Fordham College
Affiliations
* Spoken at various business, technology, legal, and insurance forums throughout the world
* Written, on issues effecting professional liability, privacy, technology and telecommunications, media, intellectual property, computer security, and insurance
* Admitted to practice in New York and the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern and Southern Districts of New York
* Honored by Business Insurance (2002) magazine as one of the Rising Stars of Insurance
* In 2009, honored by Risk & Insurance magazine as a Power Broker Speaker - Mark Webber, UK Partner, Osborne Clarke Mark heads Osborne Clarke's UK Technology Sector Group and is Chair of OC's International Technology Practice Group across Europe. He is a technology transactions lawyer with 11 years of technology experience specialising in digital business and IT projects. In the past few years here has been involved with numerous SaaS and cloud computing projects in both the EU and US. Mark's core practice focuses on scenarios where intellectual property or technology needs to be leveraged for business success. This involves advising on outsourcing, offshoring, e-commerce, licensing and development deals, open source software, channel and partner relationships. He has considerable experience in privacy and data protection and it the UK contributor to Global Privacy and Security (Wolters Kluwer). Mark was based in Silicon Valley for 3 years and as a result he regularly project manages pan-European legal advice for both European and US technology projects and businesses, often acting as de facto European general counsel for venture-backed technology businesses expanding overseas. In Legal Business's Legal Experts 2009, Mark comes "highly recommended" as a legal advisor in the Information Technology practice area. He comes recommended for technology work by Legal 500 and Chambers. Mark is registered to practise English law in California.
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