Art Ocain is Airiam's Vice President of Service Delivery. A visionary leader and IT business strategist, Art acts as a virtual CIO, CISO and CTO for many of Airiam’s clients. He specializes in resilience engineering, cloud architecture, incident response, cloud strategy, virtualization, server and network administration and security, business continuity planning, disaster recovery, designing storage solutions, network design, web server management, email server management, web application development, database management, and project management.
Art is a Certified Information Security Manager (CISM), Microsoft Certified Software Engineer (MCSE), VMware Certified Professional (VCP) and Cisco Certified Network Associate (CCNA). Prior to his current role, Art was President and COO of MePush, a cybersecurity and managed IT company acquired by Airiam in 2021. He holds an MBA from University of the People.
The Cybereason MalOp Detection Engine enables our incident response team to quickly identify, contain, and eradicate the attacker from affected machines, showing us the root cause and mapping out the entire attack flow. This allows AirRescue to focus on recovery and remediation instead of spending critical hours at the beginning of the incident on the investigation. And with the Cybereason Predictive Ransomware Protection capabilities, we are confident in our ability to deflect additional attacks during our response.
Operational technology (OT), which powers much of the nation’s critical infrastructure, is being ignored. Even with CMMC 2.0 compliance, operational technology and IoT are ‘specialized assets,’ and contractors do not need to assess these against all of the CMMC controls (per https://lnkd.in/gQB2Hq2i). Having done incident response on networks where the attack came in through operational technology, I can tell you that the door is wide open for the attacker on many networks.
It will take more than raising premiums and putting more limits on the businesses that can qualify for cybersecurity insurance to prevent increased claims and higher costs.||Some of the largest insurance carriers no longer pay ransoms. The Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) has deemed many hackers terrorists, making it illegal for insurance companies to pay their demands. The insurance industry faces pressure to shift its solution from ransom payment to incident recovery as more businesses request coverage.
MIAMI, August 09, 2022--Airiam announces that is is partnering with Cybereason to offer stronger incident response and enhanced cybersecurity