James Comey: In 2010 there were 6.8 billion people on the earth and 12.5 billion devices connected to the Internet.
Brian Solis: By 2020, the number of devices connected to the Internet is expected to exceed 40 billion.
Alex Stamos: Companies across the world are waking up to the fact that their security posture is insufficient to fend off the threats ...
David Ulevitch: Like it or not, every business is a security company now.
Benjamin Dean: As we plough billions of dollars into intelligence agencies, supposedly to keep us all safe from 'cyber-attacks', it has the effect of further weakening the already low incentives for companies to invest in information security themselves.
Steven Bellovin: We don't even have the right words.
Christopher Soghoian: The reason why we don't have any serious proposals on the table that would improve cybersecurity, is because big companies don't actually want to be held accountable.
Bruce Schneier: This isn't something the market can solve on its own ...
Alex Stamos: In my dreams, I squint up at the flock of sales cyber vultures, "circling back" until I lose my will to resist their entreaties, or perhaps to live.
Danny Yadron: To grow sales, FireEye's Dave DeWalt has to say he can stop the hackers. But for sales to keep growing, the hackers can't actually stop.
Jose Pagliery: To scare potential clients, Tiversa would typically make up fake data breaches. Then it pressured firms to pay up.
John Prisco: The reality is that cybersecurity is a corrupt industry that needs bad guys to stay lucrative.
|