Security Is Shifting From Prevention to Resilience

Dan Cole, senior vice president of product management at Sophos, unpacks how cybersecurity strategy is shifting from a prevention-first mindset toward resilience and response.

Cole traces his career from the early days of mass malware outbreaks like Melissa and ILOVEYOU through today’s environment of nation-state actors, AI-assisted attacks, and sprawling hybrid workforces. While the tools and threat actors have evolved, he argues the core challenge has remained the same: attackers move fast, defenders are always reacting, and perfect prevention has never been realistic.

That reality is driving organizations to rethink how they measure security success. Rather than asking whether breaches can be stopped entirely, Cole explains that CISOs and boards are now asking how quickly incidents can be detected, contained, and recovered from. This shift is helping elevate managed detection and response (MDR) as a practical layer of operational resilience, especially for organizations without round-the-clock in-house expertise.

He also explores how artificial intelligence is changing both sides of the equation. Attackers are using automation to scale reconnaissance and exploitation, while defenders are increasingly relying on AI to triage alerts, surface real threats faster, and reduce response time. Cole emphasizes that AI alone is not the answer—human expertise still matters—but AI can dramatically improve signal-to-noise ratios when paired with experienced analysts.

Hybrid work emerges as another recurring theme. With users moving between office, home, and remote locations, Cole highlights the importance of consistent security policies that follow the user rather than the network. He discusses why fragmented controls and inconsistent enforcement create blind spots that attackers can exploit.

Ultimately, modern cybersecurity is a balance between technology, people, and process. Prevention still matters, but resilience is now the defining measure of an effective security program.

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Alan Shimel

Throughout his career spanning over 25 years in the IT industry, Alan Shimel has been at the forefront of leading technology change. From hosting and infrastructure, to security and now DevOps, Shimel is an industry leader whose opinions and views are widely sought after.

Alan’s entrepreneurial ventures have seen him found or co-found several technology related companies including TriStar Web, StillSecure, The CISO Group, MediaOps, Inc., DevOps.com and the DevOps Institute. He has also helped several companies grow from startup to public entities and beyond. He has held a variety of executive roles around Business and Corporate Development, Sales, Marketing, Product and Strategy.

Alan is also the founder of the Security Bloggers Network, the Security Bloggers Meetups and awards which run at various Security conferences and Security Boulevard.

Most recently Shimel saw the impact that DevOps and related technologies were going to have on the Software Development Lifecycle and the entire IT stack. He founded DevOps.com and then the DevOps Institute. DevOps.com is the leading destination for all things DevOps, as well as the producers of multiple DevOps events called DevOps Connect. DevOps Connect produces DevSecOps and Rugged DevOps tracks and events at leading security conferences such as RSA Conference, InfoSec Europe and InfoSec World. The DevOps Institute is the leading provider of DevOps education, training and certification.

Alan has a BA in Government and Politics from St Johns University, a JD from New York Law School and a lifetime of business experience. His legal education, long experience in the field, and New York street smarts combine to form a unique personality that is always in demand to appear at conferences and events.

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