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The Tech Trek

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The Tech Trek
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650 episodes

  • The Tech Trek

    How AI Is Reshaping the CISO Role and Modern Security Teams

    2026/03/24 | 28 mins.
    Michael Fanning, CISO at Splunk, joins The Tech Trek for a grounded conversation on how the security leader role is changing in the AI era. This episode gets into the real tension facing modern CISOs, balancing risk without slowing the business down, hiring for technical depth over narrow credentials, and defining success in a field where perfection is not a realistic metric.
    This is a practical conversation for security leaders, engineering leaders, founders, and operators trying to make sense of AI adoption inside the enterprise. Mike breaks down why security has to move from fear based messaging to business enablement, why many teams may be overlooking strong security talent hiding in adjacent technical roles, and where AI can either reduce burnout or make it worse.
    In this episode
    Why the CISO role is becoming more engineering driven and more tightly tied to business outcomes

    Where AI creates real leverage for security teams, and where it introduces new operational risk

    Why the security talent gap may be as much a hiring mindset problem as a supply problem

    What actually causes burnout in security teams, beyond the usual talking points

    How to think about success in security when zero incidents is not a serious metric

    Highlights
    1:44, The CISO role is shifting from pure protection to business enablement

    7:11, AI creates leverage for defenders, but it is also accelerating the attacker playbook

    9:31, The biggest AI security risks, from developer copilots to agent driven decision making

    14:15, Why security teams need room to experiment with AI or risk falling behind

    16:58, Only 1 percent of CISOs surveyed prioritized technology to close the skills gap

    22:16, AI can reduce burnout, but only if it cuts noise instead of creating more of it

    Security is about assessing risk and finding a way to say yes in a way that is responsible.
    A practical idea worth taking back to your team
    Look beyond candidates with formal security titles. Mike makes the case that strong engineers, SREs, and cloud practitioners often already understand the systems, access models, and infrastructure realities that matter most. Security can be taught on top of that foundation.
    Link to report: https://www.splunk.com/en_us/form/ciso-report.html
    Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations with leaders shaping how technology actually gets built, secured, and scaled.
  • The Tech Trek

    From Engineer to CEO | Tech Trek Brief

    2026/03/23 | 3 mins.
    What does it really take to go from engineer to CEO?

    In this Tech Trek Brief, Michael White, Co founder and CEO of Multiply, shares a few of the ideas that matter most from a broader conversation on founder growth, leadership, and the shift from building things to building a company.

    What stood out most is that this is not really a story about title progression. It is a story about learning to operate with more uncertainty, taking on bigger challenges before you feel ready, and realizing that leadership at the highest level starts to look a lot more like influence than execution.

    What we get into

    • Why growth often starts before you feel ready
    • Why strong founders are pulled by a real problem
    • Why founder timing matters more than people think
    • Why leadership becomes influence, alignment, and conviction

    Timestamped highlights

    00:00 The real shift from engineer to CEO
    00:18 Growth starts before readiness
    00:56 Leadership changes when execution is no longer enough
    01:50 The best founders are pulled by a problem
    02:35 The three ideas that tie it all together
    Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations on leadership, company building, and the people shaping what comes next.
    The full Michael White episode is also available.
  • The Tech Trek

    How Shadow AI Is Changing Cybersecurity and Insider Risk

    2026/03/20 | 23 mins.
    Raj Koo, CTO at DTEX, joins The Tech Trek for a sharp conversation on insider risk, shadow AI, and why security teams need a more modern way to think about intent. This episode is worth your time if you are trying to understand how AI is changing cyber risk, why non malicious behavior can still create major exposure, and what it takes to protect the business without slowing down innovation.
    Raj explains why the old approach of blocking known bad behavior is no longer enough. As employees bring personal AI tools into the workplace, security teams are dealing with a new reality, one where productivity gains, agentic workflows, and data exposure are all colliding at once.
    In this episode
    Why DTEX focuses on inferring intent, not just catching exfiltration

    Why shadow AI is different from shadow IT, and harder to control

    How non malicious employee behavior can become the biggest insider risk category

    Why agentic AI raises the stakes for visibility and governance

    How mature insider risk programs are shrinking response times even as costs rise

    Timestamped highlights
    00:00 Raj Koo on inferring intent in cybersecurity

    01:59 Why early warning signals matter more than the exfiltration point

    04:38 The rising cost of insider risk

    06:25 How shadow AI became a major non malicious risk

    08:13 Why shadow AI is more complex than shadow IT

    17:53 Detection times are improving, but the cost problem is getting worse

    Standout line
    Security has a chance to stop being seen as the function that blocks productivity and start being seen as the function that helps the business adopt better tools safely.
    Practical takeaway
    If your team is dealing with AI adoption in the wild, start with visibility before judgment. Understand which tools people are using, what they are using them for, and where the real risk sits before defaulting to blanket restrictions.
    Link to 2026 Cost of Insider Risks Global Report: https://ponemon.dtex.ai/
    Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations with builders, operators, and technology leaders shaping how modern companies work.
  • The Tech Trek

    How Agentic AI Changes Enterprise Software

    2026/03/19 | 29 mins.
    Sumeet Arora, Chief Product Officer at Teradata, joins The Tech Trek for a sharp conversation on the shift from human driven SaaS to agentic software. This episode digs into what changes when software stops just supporting human workflows and starts driving outcomes alongside people, why trust and governance matter more as AI systems take on more responsibility, and what serious companies need to do now to prepare.
    This is a practical discussion about where the market actually is, what gets overhyped, and what leaders should focus on beneath the noise. Sumeet lays out a clear view of the emerging enterprise stack, from knowledge and context to agents, governance, and outcomes. He also explains why the winners may not be the loudest companies in AI, but the ones that get their data, knowledge, and operating model right.
    In this episode
    • Why agentic software is a real shift, but still in its early stages• What trust, governance, and explainability need to look like in an AI first enterprise• How software companies should rethink product strategy for agents as well as humans• Why every employee may need to become a manager of AI agents• Why knowledge infrastructure could matter more than the agent layer itself
    Timestamped highlights
    • 00:45 Teradata’s role in helping enterprises become autonomous• 02:34 Where we really are in the agentic AI maturity curve• 10:16 How software shifts from workflow centric to outcome centric• 16:17 Why every employee may need an AI workforce• 21:57 The skill gap between enterprise users and agentic adoption• 24:48 Why knowledge, not just agents, will define the winners
    Standout line
    “The fundamental winners will be ones who get the knowledge fabric correct.”
    Practical takeaway
    If you are building for an AI driven future, do not start with agents alone. Start with trusted knowledge, usable context, clear policies, and systems that can explain decisions. The companies that treat agentic AI as a stack, not a feature, will be in a much stronger position.
    Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations with leaders shaping the future of technology, product, AI, and enterprise transformation.
  • The Tech Trek

    How AI Is Changing Crypto Crime, AML, and Cyber Investigations

    2026/03/18 | 28 mins.
    Victor Fang, CEO and Founder of Anchain AI, joins The Tech Trek for a timely conversation on crypto crime, AI driven fraud, and what financial institutions need to understand as digital assets move closer to the mainstream. This episode is worth your time if you care about cybersecurity, compliance, crypto risk, anti money laundering, or where agentic AI is starting to reshape investigation work.
    This conversation goes beyond headlines. Victor breaks down how bad actors are using generative AI for phishing, identity fraud, exploit development, and ransomware, then explains how defenders are using AI, graph intelligence, and agent workflows to fight back. It is a sharp look at the collision of crypto, cybersecurity, regulation, and AI infrastructure.
    In this episode
    What crypto crime actually looks like today, from exchange hacks to romance scams and ransomware

    Why crypto risk now extends well beyond crypto native users

    How financial institutions, regulators, and compliance teams are adapting

    Where AI is helping attackers move faster, and where it is giving defenders an edge

    Why agentic workflows and MCP powered investigation tools could change this category fast

    Timestamped highlights
    00:00 Victor Fang on crypto crime, AI versus AI, and agentic AML

    00:53 What Anchain AI does and why blockchain investigation is becoming more important

    01:56 How generative AI is already being used in crypto crime and phishing

    06:30 What banks, regulators, and AML teams need to understand about crypto adoption

    10:44 Why Victor believes AI can give defenders the advantage

    16:17 How Anchain uses blockchain data, graph intelligence, and agent workflows to investigate faster

    22:04 Why the company’s MCP server could extend beyond crypto into KYC and financial applications

    25:21 What the next wave of agent driven security and investigation might look like

    One standout idea from the conversation, crypto is much closer to you than you think.
    Practical takeaways
    Crypto risk is no longer a niche issue, it is increasingly tied to broader fraud, ransomware, and financial crime

    AI is accelerating both offense and defense, which raises the bar for security and compliance teams

    Agentic investigation workflows could dramatically reduce manual work in AML, fraud, and cyber operations

    Companies building in regulated spaces need infrastructure that can handle both speed and scrutiny

    Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations with builders, operators, and technical leaders shaping what comes next.

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About The Tech Trek

The Tech Trek is a podcast for founders, builders, and operators who want a clearer view into how modern startups actually get built. Host Amir Bormand talks with the leaders behind product, engineering, data, and growth to unpack how companies go from idea to traction, scale, and the hard decisions in between.
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