CyberWire Daily - Encore: Monica Ruiz: Moving ahead when not many look like you. [Policy]
Episode Date: March 5, 2024In honor of International Women's Day, please enjoy this encore of Monica Ruiz sharing her story. Cyber Initiative and Special Projects Fellow at the Hewlett Foundation Monica Ruiz shares her career d...evelopment from aspirations of being a weather woman to her current role as a grantmaker and connector in cybersecurity. Monica discusses how her international study experience changed her outlook and brought her to the field of security. She shares the difficulties she faced as a woman of color when when not that many people look like you, and how she used that as her reason to move forward and better the cybersecurity field through her work. Our thanks to Monica for sharing her story with us. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to the Cyber Wire Network, powered by N2K.
Air Transat presents two friends traveling in Europe for the first time and feeling some pretty big emotions.
This coffee is so good. How do they make it so rich and tasty?
Those paintings we saw today weren't prints. They were the actual paintings.
I have never seen tomatoes like this.
How are they so red?
With flight deals starting at just $589,
it's time for you to see what Europe has to offer.
Don't worry.
You can handle it.
Visit airtransat.com for details.
Conditions apply.
AirTransat.
Travel moves us.
Hey, everybody.
Dave here.
Have you ever wondered where your personal information is lurking online?
Like many 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 private by signing up for Delete.me.
Now at a special discount for our listeners.
private by signing up for Delete Me. Now at a special discount for our listeners,
today get 20% off your Delete Me plan when you go to 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.
Hello, my name is Monica Ruiz,
and I am the fellow for the Cyber Initiative
and Special Projects Program at the Hewlett Foundation.
for the Cyber Initiative and Special Projects Program at the Hewlett Foundation.
Early on, I wanted to be a weather woman.
And I think that's because in my fifth grade class,
I was the person that would give the morning announcements.
And so for some reason, I had an interest in weather and I had an interest in TV. And so that's what I wanted to be.
But things have certainly changed since then.
You know, early on, my parents really encouraged both my two brothers and sister to be curious.
And they also never really pushed any gender roles on us.
And so as the youngest in the family, I also tended to have my brothers and sisters hand-me-downs.
And so I, you know, growing up had a blue bike, which I loved.
And I never really associated like blue bike with boys bike or pink bike, girls bike.
I just had my blue bike and I
loved it. And, you know, fast forward to college, I developed an interest in international relations.
And so I really moved from, you know, TV and giving the morning announcements in fifth grade
to more of a broader international relations context. And I studied abroad in China during my bachelor's degree. And that really played a big
role in what I did afterwards, because it gave me access to a culture and a language that was
so different than my own. And so, you know, returning from China to complete my bachelor's
degree, I was fascinated with having been, you know, outside of my comfort zone that I graduated
and wanted to go right back to Asia.
And so I lived in South Korea for a year where I taught English.
And there I lived very close to a U.S. Air Force base where I started learning about security policy issues more broadly.
And I think that's what started getting me into security, not cybersecurity at that point, but security more broadly in the context of international relations.
relations. And so, you know, returning from Korea, I got back to Miami, which is where I grew up,
and I started interning and later became a contractor at U.S. Southern Command.
And that really allowed me to delve deeper into security policy issues.
And one of the things that I noticed there that, you know, I had never fully experienced when I was younger is the massive gender imbalances in the security world.
And frankly, this really pushed me deeper into this space because, you know, I guess I wanted to push back on the fact that there weren't that many women and there weren't that many women of color in in the settings where i was spending a lot of my time and so not only was i fascinated substantively about
these issues but it also played a very personal role for me to see not that many people that look And so, you know, from there, I realized that cybersecurity is an issue area that's not
only vertically relevant within an organization, but it really cuts horizontally across all
sectors and all regions.
And so, you know, building from my time in China and my time in South Korea and my time
in Boston when I was finishing up my graduate degree, I really realized that this is a
field that I want to dive into full time.
full-time. Currently, you know, my day-to-day is centered on being a connector. That's how I would explain it. You know, we're grant makers at the Hewlett Foundation, and we provide support to
civil society, university, nonprofits for them to build out their cybersecurity
nonprofits for them to build out their cybersecurity areas of focus and teams.
But we also try to go beyond the grand dollar by connecting different organizations and individuals that are working on similar issues.
And so a lot of that entails understanding what the landscape looks like and being aware
and oftentimes innovative with what are the connections that
we make to really help build that field even further.
Always feel free and open and confident to lean forward, especially on issues that you
want to know more about.
especially on issues that you want to know more about.
Don't feel intimidated if there is not that many people that look like you.
Have that serve as a reason for why you would be even more forward-leaning.
I think it's important to make sure that everyone has an opportunity to build our security and feels comfortable doing so. So I hope that my research on the building of these cyber security
volunteer cyber units is something that has long-term effects.
The Hewlett Foundation is a supporter of the Cyber Wire.
Your business needs AI solutions that are not only ambitious, but also practical 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 connect, prepare, and automate your data workflows,
helping you gain insights, receive alerts, and act with ease through guided apps tailored to your Data is hard. Domo is easy. Learn more at ai.domo.com.
That's ai.domo.com.