Susan St. Ledger, Splunk | Splunk .conf19
>>live from Las Vegas. It's the Cube covering Splunk dot com. 19. Brought to You by spunk. >>Hey, welcome back. Everyone's live Cube coverage in Las Vegas. That's plunks dot com. 2019 thistles their annual customer conference, where they unleash all the new technologies, announce all the new things. Everyone's here. It's the 10th anniversary of Splunk dot com cubes. Seventh year we've been covering slung been quite the journey from scrappy, startup going public growth phase. Now market leader on Outside has to come to success from the products and the engineering. And, of course, the people in the field that that served customers. And we're here with Susan St Leger, who's the president of worldwide field operations. Thanks for coming back to see you. >>Thank you, John. It's exciting to be here. >>So in the keynote, bringing data to every outcome is really the theme. Um, you seem to got a spring to your step here. You excited this year? What an amazing successful show because you got a platform. But the proof is out there. You got that ecosystem. You got people building APS on top of it. It's kind of all coming together this year, >>It sure is experience. It's it's it's just it's a huge leap forward, and I think so. Much of it is a vision of data to everything. And if you think about it, we talk about. We want to bring data to every question, every problem in every action. And the biggest thing you're going to see that you did see in the show is it's no longer just about the Splunk index. We're going to help you get you get value out of data wherever it lives. >>You had some big news on acquisition front Signal FX. Big chunk of change for that company. Private hot category. Observe ability, which really taste is out. That next 20 mile stare in the marketplace, which is cloud native. >>That's a >>cloud Service is, which comes together in the platform with logging coming together. >>Yeah, so exciting Way looked hard at that entire market, and signal FX was definitely the right answer. They operated a scale similar to us. They know how to how to operate it that scale, and so they're gonna be able to serve our customers well. And our view of the world is it's going to be hybrid for a very long time. But they serve that new cloud native world better than anybody else. It's It's when you do monitoring the cloud native world. It's really interesting to think about it. It's all made up of Micro service is right. So thousands of Micro Service's hundreds, thousands of Micro Service's and so in traditional monitoring, it's always you're tryingto monitor things you know could go wrong. In a microt service landscape, you don't know everything that could possibly go wrong. And so it's a level of complexity that's just very different. And so it's all about instrument ing, so that when something does go wrong, you can solve it. >>You guys have a very loyal based customer base, and that's again testament success. But the product has changed, and the value problems is emerging even further with data. That's a big theme. Data to everywhere, everything and security has come up on the radar a few years ago, here, the show. But this almost is a full blown security show at this point, because security center of everything you can't ignore it's become a centerpiece of everything data, the access to the diversity, How is that impacting the field because you're not. I mean, I guess you're a security company enabler and solve security problems. Date is a big part of it. Sure, I was at shaping your operations, >>So I think the thing to understand is correct. We're not just a security company, but we are number one in the security Magic quadrant. We're number one in both I. D. C and Gardner, and so that's important. But what happens is all the data the equal act for security can also be used for all these other use cases. So, generally speaking, whatever you're collecting for security is also valuable for I t operations, and it's also valuable for many other use cases. So I'll give you an example. Dominoes, which is a great customer of ours. They're gone 65% of their orders now come in digitally, okay? And so they monitor the entire intend customer experience. But they monitor it not only from a nightie operations perspective. That same data that they used righty operations also tells them you know what's being ordered, what special orders are being made and they use that data for promotions based upon volume and traffic and timing. they actually create promotion. So now you're talking about the same data that he collected for security night operations you can actually use for promotions, which is marketing is >>not a lot of operating leverage in data. You're getting out this. The old model was is a database. Make a queer. You get a report. Little time problem there. But now you have. Well, that other date is over there in another database. Who runs that data? So the world has certainly changes now, data needs to be addressable. This seems to be a big theme here on undercurrent. I know data to everywhere is kind of global theme, but don't diverse data feeds a I cracked and address ability allows for application access. >>Correct. So we look at the entire data landscape and say, we want to help you get data value out of your data wherever it lives. And it's right now, we've changed to the point where we are operating on data in motion, which is with data stream processor, which is hugely beneficial. You mentioned you know, a I m l way actually do something so unique from an ML perspective because we're actually doing the ml on the live streaming so, so much more valuable than doing it in batch mode. And so the ability to create those ML models by working on live data is super powerful. >>Good announcement. So you guys had the data processor. You have the search fabric, >>data fabric search, >>real time and acceleration our themes there. I want to get your thoughts on your new pricing options. Yes. Why now? What's that mean for customers? >>So if we want to bring data to everything, we have to allow them to actually get all the data right? So we needed to give them more flexible models and more alternative models. So for some people and just motto is very comfortable. But what they want it was more flexibility. So if you look at our new traunch pricing are predictable pricing, there's a couple of things that we've done with it. Number one is from 125 gig all the way up to unlimited. We'll show your predictable pricing so you don't have to guess. Well, if I move from 20 terabytes 2 50 what's that gonna cost me? We're gonna tell you, and you're gonna know and so That's one. The second thing is you don't have to land on the exact ingest. So before, if you bought a terabyte, you got a terabyte. Right now there's a traunch from 1 to 2 terabytes. There's a trunk from 2 to 5 terabytes. And so it gives the customers flexibility so that they don't have to worry about it coming back to buy more right away. >>So that's kind of cloud by as you go variable pricing. Exactly. I want your thoughts on some of the sales motions and position and you guys have out in the field. Visa VI. The industry has seen a lot of success and say Observe ability. For instance, Southern to Rick and Kartik About this. Yes, you guys are an enterprise software cloud and on premises provider you Enterprise sales motion. >>Yes, >>there's a lot of other competition up there that sells for the SNB. They're like tools. What's the difference between an offering that might look like Splunk but may be targeting the SNB? Small means business and one that needs to be full blown enterprise. >>Yeah, so I think the first and foremost most of the offerings that we see land in S and B. They have scale issues over time, I and so what we look at it and say is and they're mostly point products, right? So you can you can clutter up your environment with a bunch of point products, doing all these different things and try and stitch them together. Or you can go with this fun clock for him. So which allows you thio perform all of the same operations, whether B I t Security or Data Analytics in general. But it really isn't. It's about having the platform. >>You guys, what reduced the steps it takes to implement our What's the value? I guess. Here's Here's the thing. What's the pitch? So I'm on Enterprise. I'm like, Okay, I kept Dad. I got a lot of potential things going on platform. I need to make my data work for me any day to be everywhere. I au g Enterprise Cloud. What's the Splunk pitch? >>So our pitches were bringing dated everything, and first and foremost it's important. Understand why? Because we believe at the heart of every problem is a data problem. And we're not just talking t and security. As you know, you saw so many examples. I think you talk to his own haven earlier this week. Right? Wildfires is a data problem New York Presbyterian is using using us for opioid crisis. Right? That's a data problem. So everything's a data problem. What you want is a platform that can operate against that data and remove the barriers between data and action. And that's really what we're focused on. >>He mentions own haven that was part of Splunk Ventures Fund. You have a social impact fund? Yes, what's the motivation line that is just for social good? Is there a business reason behind it or both? >>What's this? So we actually have to social focuses. One is long for good, and that is non profit. What we announced this, what we announced a couple weeks ago that we reiterated yesterday was the spunk, social impact funds, a splint venture social impact fund, and this is to invest in for profit companies using data for social good. And the whole reason is that we look at it and so we say we're a platform. If you're a platform, you want to build out the ecosystem, right? And so the Splunk Innovation Fund splint Ventures Innovation Fund is to invest in new technology focused on that that brings value out of data. And on the other side, it's the spunk. Social impact. Thio get data companies that are taking data and creating such a >>Splunk for good as Splunk employees or a separate nonprofit. And >>it's not a separate nonprofit entity, but it is what we what we invest in. Okay. >>Oh, investing in >>investing in non for profit. Exactly like when we talked about the Global Emancipation Network right, which uses Splunk to fight human trafficking. That's on the nonprofit side. >>So take me through. This is a really hot area we've been covering for good because all roads I want now is for bad. Mark Zuckerberg's testifying from the Congress this morning kind of weird to watch that, actually, but there's a lot of good use cases. Tech tech can be shaped for good. A lot of companies are starting and getting off the ground for good things, but they're kind of like SMB, but they want the Splunk benefit. How do they engage with spunk if I'm gonna do ah social impact thing say cube for good? I got all this Tech. How do I engage punk? I wanted, but I don't know what to do. Have access to tools? How do I buy or engage with Splunk? >>Yes, start parties. Fund managers is making sure it's not just money, right? It's money, its access to talent. It's access to our product. And it's, you know, help with actually thinking through what they're trying to achieve, so it really is the entire focus. It's not just about the tech, Thea. Other thing I would say is you saw that we put out a Splunk investigate, and you also saw us talking about spunk, business slow and mission control. Those air now all built on a native SAS platform. And so the ability for our ecosystem now to go build on a native son platform is going to be incredibly powerful. >>So you expect more accelerated opportunities that all right, what's your favorite customer success stories? I know it's hard to pick your favorites, like picking a favorite child may be filled with the categories. Most ambitious class clown class favorite me. What's the ones you would call a really strong, >>so hit on a couple of my lover Domino story and the other one that I love, that I touched on. But I want to expand on because I think it's an amazing story. Is New York Presbyterian on using the Yes See you sprung for traditional security for private patient privacy. They also use it for medical devices. But here's the thing they use it for to help the opioid crisis. And you're like, How is opioid crisis a data problem? What they do is they actually correlate all the data that so doctors are prescribing the opioids who they're prescribing them to a number of prescriptions being building their pharmacy and then the inventory of opioids. Because they actually have sensors on all the cabinets where they get the opioids, they correlate all the data, and they make sure that if they understand if opioids being stolen from the hospital, because what people don't understand is that the opioid a lot of big part of the opioid crisis starts with hospitals to say of such a big volume of opioids. And so that, to me, is just I guess I love it because it's a great customer success story. But it's also again, it's so much fun doing good problem. >>A lot of deaths. I gotta ask you around your favorite moments here dot com, and you're a lot of conversations in your customer conversations this year. Let's do a little Splunk of the Cube right now can take the patterns, all the data, your meetings. What's the top patterns that are emerging? What are some of the top conversation themes that just keep popping up with customer? Specifically, >>I think the biggest thing is that they have seen more innovation unleash this year than they have ever seen in one year from Splunk. The other thing is that we've gone far outside of our traditional spunk index right and that the portfolio has grown so much and that we're allowing them to operate and get value out of the data wherever it lives. So data in motion and then you saw in data fabric search. We'll let you query not only the Splunk indices, but also H D. F s and s three buckets and more buckets to come. So more sinks if you will. So, really, what we're trying to do is say, we're just going to be your date a platform to help you get value >>Susan, you're a great leader and slung. Congratulations on your success again. They continue to grow every year. Splunk defies the critics. Now you're a market leader. Culture is a big part of this. What is your plans this year To take it to the next level? You're president of field worldwide, field operations, global business landscape. What are some of your goals and objectives on culture >>and the culture? So thank you, Jon. First of all, for your comments and were so committed to our culture, I think you know, as you grow so quickly, it takes a real effort to stay focused on culture way, have an incredible diversity and inclusion program. Onda We do way. It's a business imperative for us. Every single leader has diversity, diversity, inclusion, focuses and targets. And so I think that's a huge part of our culture. And the reason I say that, John, I don't know if you've ever heard about a 1,000,000 data points. Did anybody ever way Always talk about, you know in different different settings will share a couple of our 1,000,000 data points. What we want to make sure is a culture is that way. >>We >>have our employees showing up with their authentic self and because you do your best work when you can show up is your authentic self. And so we have people share a handful of their 1,000,000 data points at all different times throughout the year to get to know each other as individuals, as human beings and really understand what matters to each other. And I love that 1,000,000 data points culture, and I got that. We truly live it. And again it's It's about authenticity. And so I think that's what makes us incredibly special. >>And inclusion helps that trust >>fund elaboration, yes, and also just add to that. We're very proud of the fact that we made the fortune list this year for best places to work for women. So it shows that our focus, you know, we started. We started revealing our metrics just about two years ago, and we've had significant improvement way. Believe that what you focus on what you measure is what you improve. So we started measuring and improving it, and this year we made the list for a fortune that's called walking. It is Congratulations. Thank you. We're very excited about >>awesome on global expansion. I'm assuming is on the radar. Well, >>always, especially at this point. We're ready to double down and some of the tier one mark. It's a lovely for sure >>wasn't saying. Legend. President of worldwide field operations here inside the Cube. Where day to slung dot com 10th anniversary of their customer conference Our seventh year covering Splunk Amazing Ride They continue to ride the big wave. Thats a Q bring you all the data on insights here. I'm John Ferrier. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
It's the Cube covering And, of course, the people in the field that that served customers. So in the keynote, bringing data to every outcome is really the theme. We're going to help you get you get value out of data wherever it lives. That next 20 mile stare in the marketplace, which is cloud native. And so it's all about instrument ing, so that when something does go wrong, of everything data, the access to the diversity, How is that impacting the field So I think the thing to understand is correct. So the world has certainly changes now, And so the ability to So you guys had the data processor. I want to get your thoughts on your new pricing options. And so it gives the customers flexibility so of the sales motions and position and you guys have out in the field. between an offering that might look like Splunk but may be targeting the SNB? So you can you can clutter up your environment with a bunch of point What's the Splunk pitch? I think you talk to his own haven He mentions own haven that was part of Splunk Ventures Fund. And so the Splunk Innovation Fund splint And it's not a separate nonprofit entity, but it is what we what we invest in. That's on the nonprofit side. A lot of companies are starting and getting off the ground for good things, but they're kind of like SMB, And so the ability for our ecosystem What's the ones you would call a really strong, the Yes See you sprung for traditional security for private patient privacy. I gotta ask you around your favorite moments here dot So data in motion and then you saw in data fabric search. Splunk defies the critics. so committed to our culture, I think you know, as you grow so quickly, it takes a real effort to have our employees showing up with their authentic self and because you do your best work when you can show up Believe that what you focus on what you measure I'm assuming is on the radar. We're ready to double down and some of the tier one mark. Thats a Q bring you all
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Karthik Lakshminarayanan, Google & Kim Perrin, Doctor on Demand | Google Cloud Next 2019
>> live from San Francisco. It's the Cube covering Google Club Next nineteen Rodeo by Google Cloud and its ecosystem partners. >> Hey, welcome back. Everyone's the live Cube covers here in San Francisco for Google Cloud. Next nineteen. I'm Javert Day Volante here on the ground floor, day two of three days of wall to wall coverage to great guests. We got Kartik lost. Meena Ryan, product management director of Cloud Identity for Google and Kim parent chief security officer for Doctor on Demand. Guys, welcome to the Cube. Appreciated Coming on. >> Great to be here. >> Thank you so honestly Way covering Google Cloud and Google for many, many years. And one of the things that jumps out at me, besides allows the transformation for the enterprise is Google's always had great technology, and last year I did an interview, and we learned a lot about what's going on the chip level with the devices you got. Chrome browser. Always extension. All these security features built into a lot of the edge devices that Google has, so there's definitely a security DNA in there and Google the world. But now, when you start getting into cloud access and permissions yesterday and the Kino, Thomas Kurian and Jennifer Lin said, Hey, let's focus on agility. Not all his access stuff. This is kind of really were identity matters. Kartik talk about what's going on with cloud identity. Where are we? What's the big news? >> Yeah, thank you. So clouded. Entities are solution to manage identity devices and the whole axis management for the clouds. And you must have heard of beyond Corp and the whole zero trust model and access. One thing we know about the cloud if you don't make the access simple and easy and at the same time you don't provide security. You can get it right. So you need security and you need that consumer level simplicity. >> Think it meant explain beyond core. This is important. Just take a minute to refresh for the folks that might not know some of the innovations. They're just start >> awesome. Yeah. So traditional on premises world, the security model was your corporate network. Your trust smaller. Lose The corporate network invested a lot to get to keep the bad people out. You get the right people on and that made ten T applications on premises. Your data was on premises now the Internet being a new network, you work from anywhere. Work is no longer a thing. You work from anywhere. What gets done right? So what is the new access? More look like? That's what people have been struggling with. What Google came up with in two thousand eleven is this model called Beyond Core versus Security Access Model will rely on three things. Who you are is a user authentication the device identity and security question and last but not least, the context off. What are you trying to access in very trying to access from So these things together from how you security and access model And this is all about identity. And this is Bianca. >> And anyone who has a mobile device knows what two factor authentication is. That's when you get a text messages. That's just two factor M. F. A multi factor. Authentication really is where the action is, and you mentioned three of them. There's also other dimensions. This is where you guys are really taking to the next level. Yeah, where are we with FAA and some of the advances around multi factor >> s O. So I think keeping you on the highlight is wear always about customer choice. We meet customers where they are. So customers today have invested in things like one time use passwords and things like that. So we support all of that here in cloud identity. But a technology that we are super excited about the security, Keith. And it's built on the fighter standard. And it's inserted this into your USB slot of that make sense. And we just announced here at next you can now use your android phone as a security key. So this basically means you don't have to enter any codes because all those codes you enter can be fished on way. Have this thing at Google and we talked about it last time. Since we roll our security keys. No Google account, it's >> harder for the hackers. Really Good job, Kim. Let's get the reality. You run a business. You've been involved in a lot of start ups. You've been cloud nated with your company. Now talk about your environment does at the end of the year, the chief security officer, the buck stops with you. You've got to figure this out. How are you dealing with all this? These threats at the same time trying to be innovative with your company. >> So for clarity. So I've been there six years since the very beginning of the company. And we started the company with zero hardware, all cloud and before there was beaten beyond Corp. Where there was it was called de-perimeterization. And that's effectively the posture we took from the very beginning so our users could go anywhere. And our I always say, our corporate network is like your local coffee shop. You know, WiFi like that's the way we view it. We wanted to be just a secure there at the coffee shop, you know, we don't care. Like we always have people assessing us and they're looking at a corporate network saying, You know, where your switches that you're, you know, like where your hardware like, we want to come in and look at all like we don't have anything like, >> there's no force. The scan >> is like way. Just all go to the Starbucks will be the same thing. So that's part of it. And now you know, when we started like way wanted to wrap a lot of our services in the Google, but we had the problem with hip a compliance. So in the early days, Google didn't have six years ago. In our early days, Google didn't have a lot of hip, a compliant services. Now they do. Now we're moving. We're trying to move everything we do almost in the Google. That's not because we just love everything about Google. It's for me. I have assessed Google security are team has assessed their security. We have contracts with them and in health care. It's very hard to take on new vendors and say Hey, is there security? Okay, are their contracts okay? It's like a months long process and then even at the end of the day, you still have another vendor out there that sharing your day, that you're sharing your data with them and it's precarious for me. It just it doubles my threat landscape. When I go from Google toe one more, it's like if I put my data there, >> so you're saying multi vendor the old way. This is actually a problematic situation for you. Both technically and what operate timewise or both are super >> problematic for me in terms of like where we spread our data to like It just means that company every hack against that company is brutal for us, like And you know, the other side of the equation is Google has really good pricing. Comparatively, yes, Today we're talking about Big Query, for example, and they wanted to compare Big Query to some other systems and be crazy. G, c p. And And we looked at the other systems and we couldn't find the pricing online. And, like Google's pricing was right there was completely transparent. Easy to understand. The >> security's been vetted. The security's >> exactly Kim. Can you explain when you said the multi vendor of creates problems for you? Why is this? Is it not so much that one vendor is better? The other assistant? It's different. It's different processes or their discernible differences in the quality of the security. >> There are definitely discernible differences in quality, for sure. Yeah, >> and then add to that different processes. Skill sets. Is that writer? Yes, Double click on that E >> everybody away. There's always some I mean almost every vendor. You know, there's always something that you're not perfectly okay with. On the part of the security is something you don't totally like about it. And the more vendors you add, you have. Okay. This person, they're not too good on their physical security at their data center or they're not too good on their policies. They're not too good on their disaster recovery. Like there's you always give a little bit somewhere. I hate to say it, but it's true. It's like nobody's super >> perfect like it's It's so it's a multiplication effects on the trade offs that you have to make. Yeah, it's necessarily bad, but it's just not the way you want to do it. All right? Okay. >> All the time. So you got to get in an S L A u have meetings. You gotta do something vetting. It's learning curves like on the airport taking your shoes off. Yeah. Yeah. And then there's the >> other part. Beyond the security is also downtime. Like if they suffer downtime. How much is that going to impact our company? >> Karthik, you talked about this This new access mall, this three layer who authentication that is the device trusted in the context. I don't understand how you balance the ratio between sort of false positives versus blocking. I think for authentication and devices pretty clear I can authenticate. You are. I don't trust this device. You're not getting in, but the context is interesting. Is that like a tap on the shoulder with with looking at mail? Hey, be careful. Or how are you balancing that? The context realm? >> Yeah, I think it's all about customer choice. Again, customers have, but they look at their application footprint there, making clear decisions on Hey, this is a parole application is a super sensitive as an example, maybe about based meeting application. Brotherly, not a sensitive. So when they're making decisions about hey, you have a manage device. I will need a manage device in order for you to access the payroll application. But if you have you bring your own device. I'm off perfectly fine if you launch a meeting from that. So those are the levels that people are making decisions on today, and it's super easy to segment and classify your application. >> Talk about the the people that are out there watching might say, You know what? I've been really struggling with identity. I've had, you know, l'd app servers at all this stuff out there, you name it. They've all kinds of access medals over the years, the perimeters now gone. So I got a deal to coffee shop, kind of working experience and multiple devices. All these things are reality. I gotta put a plan together. So the folks that are trying to figure this out, what's that? You guys have both weigh in on on approach to take or certain framework. What's what's? How does someone get the first few steps off to go out towards good cloud identity? >> Sure, I only go first, so I think many ways. That's what we try to simplify it. One solution that we call cloud identity because what people want is I want that model. Seems like a huge mountain in front of me, like how do I figure these things out? I'm getting a lot of these terminologies, so I think the key is to just get started on. We've given them lots of ways. You can take the whole of cloud identity solution back to Kim's point. It can be one license from us, that's it and you're done. It's one unified. You I thinks like that. You can also, if you just want to run state three applications on DCP we have something called identity ofher Proxy. It's very fast. Just load yaps random on disability and experience this beyond >> work Classic enterprise Khun >> Yeah, you run all the applications and dcpd and you can And now they're announcing some things that help you connect back with John Thomas application. That's a great way to get started. >> Karthik painted this picture of Okay, it's no perimeter. You can't just dig a moat. The queen wants to leave the castle. All the security, you know, metaphors that we use. I'm interested in how you're approaching response to these days because you have to make trade us because there are discernible differences with different vendors. Make the assumption that people are going to get in so response becomes increasingly important. What have you changed to respond more quickly? What is Google doing to help? >> Well, yeah, So in a model where we are using, a lot of different vendors were having to like they're not necessarily giving us response and detection. Google. Every service we'd wrap into them automatically gets effectively gets wrapped into our security dashboard. There's a couple of different passwords we can use and weaken. Do reporting. We do it. A tremendous amount of compliance content, compliance controls on our DLP, out of e mail out of Dr and there's detection. There's like it's like we don't have to buy an extra tool for detection for every different type of service we have, it's just built into the Google platform, which is it's It's phenomenal from >> detection baked in, It's just >> baked in. We're not to pay extra for it. In fact, I mean way by the enterprise license because it's completely worth it for us. Um, you know, assumes that came out, the enterprise part of it and all the extra tools. We were just immediately on that because the vault is a big thing for us as well. It's like not only response, but how you dig through your assets toe. Look for evidence of things like, if you have some sort of legal case, you need vault, Tio, you know, make the proper ah, data store for that stuff >> is prioritization to Is it not like, figure it out? Okay, which, which threats to actually go after and step out? And I guess other automation. I mean, I don't know if you're automating your run book and things of that nature. But automation is our friends. Ah, big friend of starting >> on the product measures I What's the roadmap looks like and you share any insight into what your priorities are to go the next level. Aussie Enterprise Focus. For Google Cloud is clear Customs on stage. You guys have got a lot of integration points from Chromebooks G Sweep all the way down through Big Query with Auto ML All the stuff's happening. What's on your plate for road map? What things are you innovating around? >> I mean, it's beyond car vision that we're continuing to roll out. We've just ruled out this bit of a sweet access, for example, but all these conditions come in. Do you want to take that to G et? You're gonna look. We're looking at extending that context framework with all the third party applications that we have even answers Thing called beyond our devices FBI and beyond Corp Alliance, because we know it's not just Google security posture. Customers are made investments and other security companies and you want to make sure all of that interoperate really nicely. So you see a lot more of that coming out >> immigration with other security platform. Certainly, enterprises require that I buy everything on the planet these days to protect themselves >> Like there's another company. Let's say that you're using for securing your devices. That sends a signal thing. I trust this device. It security, passing my checks. You want to make sure that that comes through and >> now we're gonna go. But what's your boss's title? Kim Theo, you report to the CEO. Yeah, Awesome guys. >> Creation. Thank you >> way. We've seen a lot of shifts in where security is usually now pretty much right. Strategic is core for the operations with their own practices. So, guys, thanks for coming on. Thanks for the thing you think of the show so far. What's the What's The takeaway came I'll go to you first. What's your What's the vibe of the >> show? It's a little tough for me because I have one of my senior security engineers here, and he's been going to a lot of the events and he comes to me and just >> look at all >> this stuff that they have like, way were just going over before this. I was like, Oh my God, we want to go back to our r R R office and take it all in right today. You know, if we could So yeah, it's a little tough because >> in the candy store way >> love it because again, it's like it's already paying for it. It's like they're just adding on services that we wanted, that we're gonna pay for it now. It's >> and carted quickly. Just get the last word I know was commenting on our opening this morning around how Google's got all five been falling Google since really the beginning of the company and I know for a fact is a tana big day that secures all spread for the company matter. Just kind of getting it. Yeah, share some inside quickly about what's inside Google. From a security asset standpoint, I p software. >> Absolutely. I mean, security's built from the ground up. We've been seeing that and going back to the candy store analogy. It feels like you've always had this amazing candy, but now there's like a stampede to get it, and it's just built in from the ground up. I love the solution. Focus that you found the keynotes and all the sessions that's happening. >> That's handsome connective tissue like Antos. Maybe the kind of people together. >> Yeah. I don't like >> guys. Thanks for coming on. We appreciate Kartik, Kim. Thanks for coming on. It's accused. Live coverage here on the ground floor were on the floor here. Day two of Google Cloud next here in San Francisco on Jeffrey David Lantz Stevens for more coverage after this short break.
SUMMARY :
It's the Cube covering I'm Javert Day Volante here on the ground floor, day two of three days of the chip level with the devices you got. One thing we know about the cloud if you don't make the access simple and easy and at the same Just take a minute to refresh for the folks that might not know some of the innovations. So these things together from how you security and access model And this is all about identity. This is where you guys are really taking to the next level. And it's built on the fighter standard. at the end of the year, the chief security officer, the buck stops with you. the coffee shop, you know, we don't care. there's no force. It's like a months long process and then even at the end of the day, you still have another This is actually a problematic situation for you. every hack against that company is brutal for us, like And you know, The security's the security. There are definitely discernible differences in quality, for sure. and then add to that different processes. On the part of the security is something you don't totally like about Yeah, it's necessarily bad, but it's just not the way you want to do it. It's learning curves like on the airport taking your shoes off. Beyond the security is also downtime. Is that like a tap on the shoulder with with looking at mail? But if you have you bring your own device. So the folks that are trying to figure this out, what's that? You can also, if you just want to run state three applications Yeah, you run all the applications and dcpd and you can And now they're announcing some things that help All the security, you know, metaphors that we use. There's a couple of different passwords we can use and weaken. It's like not only response, but how you dig through your assets toe. I mean, I don't know if you're automating your run book and on the product measures I What's the roadmap looks like and you share any insight into what your priorities are to Customers are made investments and other security companies and you want to make sure Certainly, enterprises require that I buy everything on the planet these Let's say that you're using for securing your devices. Kim Theo, you report to the CEO. Thank you Thanks for the thing you think of the show so far. You know, if we could So yeah, It's like they're just adding on services that we five been falling Google since really the beginning of the company and I know for a fact is a tana big day that secures and it's just built in from the ground up. Maybe the kind of people together. Live coverage here on the ground floor were
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