Uplifting National Security Through Cyber Collaboration

The Australian Cyber Collaboration, with sponsorship from fellow industry leading corporations, MITRE, DTEX, CrowdStrike, Splunk and Quintessential Equity hosted a National Cyber Symposium earlier this week.

The Symposium featured national and international panellists from all levels of government and the private sector to discuss the key threats and opportunities facing the nation to determine action plans that drive cyber resilience through collaboration. 

The Centre’s Chair of the Board Kim Scott, opened the conference in our state-of-the-art Cyber Range at our facility in Lot Fourteen, discussing The Centre’s mission, membership, and collaboration.

This was then followed by a round table discussion facilitated by DTEX’s Mohan Koo discussing strategic collaboration projects already in flight such as: protecting our SMEs and Supply Chain, Upskilling Australia’s Workforce, Insider Threat Centre-of-Excellence and Securing Local Government Authorities.

US Government, MITRE Corporation’s Julie Bowen and Chris Folk engaged in an insightful Q&A on how decades of applied MITRE research conducted on behalf of the US Government will advance Australia’s sovereign capabilities.

The Symposium then moved to Stone & Chalk where The Deputy Premier, Dr Susan Close addressed the attendees on how important collaboration is to advance Australia’s Cyber Resilience.

The afternoon ended with a panel discussion lead by industry experts from Splunk, DTEX, and CrowdStrike reinforcing why world leaders are cyber security vendors are investing in South Australia.

Everyone walked away inspired by the innovative ideas on how we can collaborate further in the Australian Cyber Community.

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