CyberWire Daily - Encore: Camille Stewart: Technology becomes more of an equalizer. [Legal] [Career Notes]

Episode Date: July 28, 2024

Cybersecurity attorney Camille Stewart shares how her childhood affinity for making contracts pointed to her eventual career as an attorney. Having a computer scientist father contributed to Camille's... technical acumen and desire to include technology in her life's work. Camille has worked various facets of cybersecurity law from the private sector, federal government, on the Hill and in the Executive Branch, and now as part of Big Tech as Head of Security Policy and Election Integrity for Google Play and Android where she creates policy geared towards making sure users are safe on their platform and equipped to make informed decisions.. We thank Camille for sharing her story with us. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're listening to the Cyber Wire Network, powered by N2K. of you, I was concerned about my data being sold by data brokers. So I decided to try Delete.me. I have to say, Delete.me is a game changer. Within days of signing up, they started removing my personal information from hundreds of data brokers. I finally have peace of mind knowing my data privacy is protected. Delete.me's team does all the work for you with detailed reports so you know exactly what's been done. Take control of your data and keep your private life Thank you. JoinDeleteMe.com slash N2K and use promo code N2K at checkout. The only way to get 20% off is to go to JoinDeleteMe.com slash N2K and enter code N2K at checkout. That's JoinDeleteMe.com slash N2K, code N2K. Hi, my name is Camille Stewart, and I'm a cybersecurity attorney.
Starting point is 00:01:43 I used to make my parents sign contracts when I was a kid, so I always knew I wanted to be an attorney. They would make promises about grades or anything really. And I would grab a piece of paper and I'd outline the terms, make my sister witness it and make them sign it. So I always knew I wanted to be an attorney. On the other side of that, my dad's a computer scientist. So I grew up tinkering with computers and technology and sitting in the back of his computer science class that he taught at the local community college. So I also had an acute interest in technology and technical acumen pretty early. So I didn't know how I would put those two things together, but I knew I had to be an attorney and I knew technology would play some kind of role in that.
Starting point is 00:02:22 I knew technology would play some kind of role in that. So I went to law school at American University because I liked the international program, but also I was going to work in the intellectual property law clinic, or at least I aspired to, which ended up happening. I thought maybe I would protect people's technology if I couldn't actually be technical and be a lawyer. people's technology if I couldn't actually be technical and be a lawyer. And after law school, I was recruited to Cyvalence, a cybersecurity company that focuses on open source threat intelligence. So after I spent five years or so at Cyvalence, I went to the Department of Homeland Security and the Obama administration in the Cyber Infrastructure and Resilience Policy Office.
Starting point is 00:03:04 in the Cyber Infrastructure and Resilience Policy Office. And that was a great opportunity to really dive in on more of the international work, but also a lot of the really pressing issues that had a private sector tie. So encryption, cyber export controls, healthcare, cybersecurity, and election security. After that, I went to Deloitte so that I could continue the work that I was doing in the department, but from the outside. So I was a security and privacy consultant for DOD and DHS. While working at Deloitte, I also was doing some research for a think tank. I had spent some time on the Hill before I started my legal career. And so I kind of felt like I had done small tech at Cyvalence, which was like my
Starting point is 00:03:50 foreign private sector. I had done the federal government, both from a Hill perspective and an executive branch perspective. I'd done this research work and I felt like the last piece of the puzzle to really be able to speak holistically about law and policy issues related to cybersecurity and technology was to go to big tech. To have a full understanding of how big tech is looking at these issues and as it increasingly becomes a player in even our governance structures and has a say in how many of the issues that we are looking at, which are so big, privacy, supply chain management, cybersecurity in general. I had to understand what these companies were thinking about as they made these decisions, how the expertise was embedded in the organization, etc. So I started
Starting point is 00:04:46 to look at big tech companies to transition to and ultimately decided on Android and Google Play, where I'm the head of security policy and election integrity now, because Google Play and Android seemed like that small tech environment within this broader tech ecosystem. I represent the user. I create policies and advocate to teams in the best interest of the user internally. So the policies that I write and the strategies that I lead are all geared towards making sure our users are safe on our platform and equipped to make informed decisions.
Starting point is 00:05:54 decisions. Create your own lane. Every experience that you've had is valuable and has some bearing on the work you plan to do and the place you find yourself next. Especially in cyber, it is a multidisciplinary industry and requires the expertise of folks across the spectrum, whether it's social sciences or technical acumen, law, policy, et cetera. All of those things are beneficial, essential to solving these really complex problems. So I encourage folks to use all of their skill sets to address these complex issues and to do the work to bridge the gap on the technology. That part's easy, but those soft skills you have or that background expertise are all things that will help us solve these complex and ever evolving challenges. I want folks to look at my work and say, she was able to empower and to create a generation of informed citizens
Starting point is 00:06:56 that can actively engage on their security and privacy. Understanding how technology works, what its limitations are, how it plays in societies, how it plays out in the lives of people, and being able to make informed decisions about how you engage is how technology becomes more of an equalizer. And I just, I want to play a part in making that possible. Thank you. and adaptable. That's where Domo's AI and data products platform comes in. With Domo, you can channel AI and data into innovative uses that deliver measurable impact. Secure AI agents
Starting point is 00:07:53 connect, prepare, and automate your data workflows, helping you gain insights, receive alerts, and act with ease through guided apps tailored to your role. Data is hard. Domo is easy. Learn more at ai.domo.com. That's ai.domo.com.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.