Security You Should Know
In this episode, Cassio Goldschmidt [https://www.linkedin.com/in/cassiogoldschmidt/], co-founder and CTO at Reflex Security [https://reflexsecurity.io/], explains how Reflex replaces static, script-driven tabletops with adaptive AI-driven simulations that fight back, measure real human behavior under pressure, and surface the gaps that scripted exercises never reach. Joining him are Nick Espinosa [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickespinosa/], host of the nationally syndicated Deep Dive Radio Show [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-deep-dive-radio-show-and-nicks-nerd-news/id1262505658], and Jay Wilson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaywwilson/], CISO and CIO at Insurity [https://insurity.com/]. Want to know: * Why do traditional tabletops train teams to know the plan rather than execute under pressure? * What's the difference between a team that panics and a team that chokes, and why does it matter? * How does Reflex use AI agents to adapt the simulation based on what the team actually does? * Can you run separate tabletops for technical, legal, and executive audiences without multiplying the workload? * Is there a risk that security leaders optimize for the AI's score rather than genuine preparedness? * How does an AI agent joining a video conference change the way a tabletop runs? * How hard should training be relative to the real thing? Check out the episode for the answers you need. Huge thanks to our sponsor, Reflex Security https://reflexsecurity.io/ Most tabletop exercises are static, predictable, and easy to pass. Reflex Security [https://reflexsecurity.io/] built the first tabletop that fights back, throwing teams into dynamic simulations against intelligent AI adversaries that adapt to your every move. With Reflex, your team can move from checkbox exercises to real crisis readiness.
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