Security Unlocked - The Human Element with Valecia Maclin

For Women’s History Month, we wanted to share the stories of just a few of the amazing women who make Microsoft the powerhouse that it is. To wrap up the month, we speak with Valecia Maclin, brilliant General Engineering Manager of Customer Security & Trust, about the human element of cybersecurity. 

In discussion with hosts Nic Fillingham and Natalia Godyla, Valecia speaks to how she transitioned into cybersecurity after originally planning on becoming a mechanical engineer, and how she oversees her teams with a sense of humanity - from understanding that working from home brings unique challenges, to going the extra mile to ensure that no member of the team feels like an insignificant cog in a big machine - Valecia is a shining example of what leadership should look like, and maybe humanity too. 

 

In this Episode You Will Learn: 

  • The importance of who is behind cybersecurity protocols 
  • How Microsoft’s Engineering, Customer Security & Trust team successfully transitioned to remote work under Valecia’s leadership 
  • Tips on being a more inclusive leader in the security space 

 

Some Questions that We Ask: 

  • What excites Valecia Maclin about the future of Cybersecurity 
  • How does a mechanical engineering background affect a GM’s role in Infosec 
  • How Valecia Maclin, General Manager of Engineering, Customer Security & Trust, got to where she is today 

 

Resources:  

Valecia’s LinkedIn

Advancing Minorities’ Interest in Engineering

SAFECode

Microsoft’s TEALS

Microsoft’s DigiGirlz

Microsoft Security Blog

Nic’s LinkedIn

Natalia’s LinkedIn


Related:

Listen to: Afternoon Cyber Tea with Ann Johnson

Listen to: Security Unlocked: CISO Series with Bret Arsenault 

Discover and follow other Microsoft podcasts at microsoft.com/podcasts


Security Unlocked is produced by Microsoft and distributed as part of The CyberWire Network. 


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Code Story: Insights from Startup Tech Leaders - S4 E13: Troy Goode, Courier

Troy Goode is based in San Francisco, with his family of 3 kids. They are 10, 8 and 2... so they are back in diapers. He finds family life super rewarding, and loves to go outside, to the park, and spend time with his family.


His parents had a boat when he was growing up, and they lived in a rural area. He used to sail down (as a spectator, not a sailor) a nearby river in Virginia. As he got older, he missed the simple peace yet required work that came with sailing - so he picked it back up as an adult.


He's worked on several startups as a VP of Engineering and CTO. At one point he was building a collaboration tool, and he was trying to mimic the hierarchy of Slack notifications. He figured it out it was not only difficult to build... but every developer was recreating this in their solution. He decided to build it one last time.


This is the creation story of Courier.


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KIMO

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Links


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Credits: Code Story is hosted and produced by Noah Labhart. Be sure to subscribe on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPocket CastsGoogle PlayBreakerYoutube, or the podcasting app of your choice.



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Lex Fridman Podcast - #172 – Ryan Schiller: Librex and the Free Exchange of Ideas on College Campuses

Ryan Schiller is the creator of Librex, an anonymous discussion feed for college communities. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors:
Allform: https://allform.com/lex to get 20% off
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EPISODE LINKS:
Librex App: https://librexapp.com/

PODCAST INFO:
Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast
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OUTLINE:
Here’s the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time.
(00:00) – Introduction
(07:06) – Librex
(08:59) – Deep Fakes
(13:06) – Silencing of ideas
(24:01) – Building Librex
(33:47) – How Librex took over Dartmouth
(42:13) – Anonymity
(45:04) – Private vs public life
(54:32) – Building a sense of community
(59:14) – Refusing to sell user data
(1:06:05) – Moderation
(1:12:54) – Freedom of speech
(1:23:45) – Scaling
(1:28:02) – Yik Yak
(1:35:22) – AWS and Parler
(1:40:25) – Safe spaces
(1:43:22) – Jeffrey Epstein
(1:52:50) – Chess and poker
(2:03:29) – Advice for young people
(2:14:21) – Book recommendations
(2:20:16) – Mortality

The Stack Overflow Podcast - How we keep Stack Overflow’s codebase clean and modern

You can find Roberta on Twitter. For anyone who understands Portuguese, you can also check out her podcast

Check out Roberta's recent blog post on best practices, and when to ignore them.

If you're interested in Dapper, an open source project built by Stack Overflow folks that works as a simple object mapper .Net, you can check it out here.

Thanks to our lifeboat badge winner of the week, Colonel Panic, for explaining: What the boolean literals in PowerShell are

 

 

PHPUgly - 229: No Perceived Value

Links from the show:

This episode of PHPUgly was sponsored by:

PHPUgly streams the recording of this podcast live. Typically every Thursday night around 9 PM PT. Come and join us, and subscribe to our Youtube Channel, Twitch, or Periscope. Also, be sure to check out our Patreon Page.

Twitter Account https://twitter.com/phpugly

Host:

Streams:

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Patreon Page

PHPUgly Anthem by Harry Mack / Harry Mack Youtube Channel

The Stack Overflow Podcast - We chat with Slack developers about building apps, APIs, and open source communities

Shay is a developer advocate building open source tools and writing education content. Outside of work she writes poetry, indulges fad hobbies, and reads whatever’s left out on the coffee table. 

Steve Gill a Developer Relations Manager, currently managing the SDK tools team at Slack. The tools teams develops all of our open sourced SDK, such as Bolt for JavaScript, Python, and Java. In his spare time, he enjoys playing ice hockey, woodworking and gaming.

You can find Shay on  LinkedIn and  Twitter

Learn more about Steve on LinkedIn and Twitter 

If you're interested in Bolt, there is lots to learn here.

No lifeboat this week, but thanks to Alex for emailing us to ask: "alternatives to more better element usage?" If you have ideas, we're all ears.

Lex Fridman Podcast - #171 – Anthony Pompliano: Bitcoin

Anthony Pompliano is an entrepreneur, investor, writer, and podcaster on topics of decentralized finance. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors:
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EPISODE LINKS:
Anthony’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/APompliano
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Pomp Letter: https://pomp.substack.com/
Pomp Podcast: https://anthonypompliano.com/podcast/

PODCAST INFO:
Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast
Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr
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SUPPORT & CONNECT:
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– Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman
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– LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman
– Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman
– Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman

OUTLINE:
Here’s the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time.
(00:00) – Introduction
(08:54) – Army
(16:35) – Iraq
(24:14) – Will there always be war?
(31:27) – Bitcoin maximalism
(39:56) – Money is a belief system
(42:27) – Bitcoin
(46:03) – Censorship
(50:35) – Bitcoin as main currency
(59:27) – Scarcity creates value
(1:01:08) – Money is time
(1:09:34) – Eric Weinstein vs Bitcoin Community
(1:23:23) – Ray Dalio
(1:40:31) – Bitclout
(1:43:43) – How to get Bitcoin
(1:54:28) – Investing
(2:05:05) – Volatility
(2:18:08) – Philosophy of the meme
(2:28:03) – Dogecoin
(2:37:33) – NFTs
(2:43:21) – Virtual reality
(2:48:17) – AI
(2:54:18) – Bitcoin resources
(2:58:44) – Book recommendations
(3:01:22) – Can money buy happiness?
(3:03:16) – Meaning of life

Code Story: Insights from Startup Tech Leaders - S4 Bonus: Rens ter Weijde

Rens ter Weijde lives in Amsterdam with his 3 month old daughter, who he enjoys very much. And, he considers himself quite lucky cause his girlfriend does most of the work. He's an avid kitesurfer, and he likes to be outdoors on the water. He started wave surfing and did it for 8 years, but found it incredibly difficult. He switched to kite surfing 6 years ago, and finds it much more enjoyable.


He was a strategy consultant for 10 years, but then he hit a wall at one point and decided to move on to something new... and that new thing was AI. When he attempted to break into the space and become educated, he had to manually string together courses and content by himself. As he went through this process, he thought this process can be optimized, or done in a better way.


This is the creation story of KIMO.


Sponsors

Imagine Golf

VirtualPBX

KIMO

TIKI


Links


Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts

 

Amazing tools we use:

  • This podcast is hosted on RedCircle, a FREE platform for podcasts and brands to scale their message. 
  • Want to record your remote interviews with class? Then, you need to use Squadcast.
  • Code Story uses the 1-click product ClipGain, sign up now to get 3hrs of podcast processing time FREE
  • If you want an amazing publishing platform for your podcast, with amazing support & people – use Transistor.fm


Credits: Code Story is hosted and produced by Noah Labhart. Be sure to subscribe on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPocket CastsGoogle PlayBreakerYoutube, or the podcasting app of your choice.



Our Sponsors:
* Check out Vanta: https://vanta.com/CODESTORY


Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/code-story/donations

Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Python Bytes - #226 Teaching Python podcast on the podcast!

Topics covered in this episode:
See the full show notes for this episode on the website at pythonbytes.fm/226