RESPOND WITH CONFIDENCE

Work with the team that’s been “in the room” responding to every major global cyber event for twenty years.

ADVANCING CYBER PRODUCTS & SERVICES

When crisis strikes and time is of the essence, leverage Advancing Cyber’s innovative solution. Contact us for more information and product availability.

Advancing Cyber provides support for executives leading incident response teams during a wide range of incidents. We can also support legal teams leading response efforts covered under privilege, and provide detailed guidance to ensure teams are considering incident notification obligations and government engagement opportunities in the US and globally. For more information, check out the “Incident Response” section.

Strong incident response plans with clear roles and responsibilities for key teams are essential to the successful navigation of a major incident. Now with strong post-incident oversight from the FTC and SEC, increasing global regulatory pressures and as well as Congressional engagement, incident response planning is even more important. Exercises and executive / Board training in incident response management also available.

Regulatory Technology

ADVANCING RESPONDER

Our innovative product is under development. Check back with us soon.

Contact Us – Incidents

TIME SENSITIVE - INCIDENT RESPONSE

Cyber never stops, and we won’t either. Reach out with your incident needs and we’ll respond as quickly as possible.

FEATURED NEWS

Advancing Cyber Podcast – New Episode: Who’s in Charge?

Episode 3: Who’s in Charge? Restoring Cloud Services in a Major Incident or Disaster Natural disasters have been hitting the United States hard in 2024, and programs designed to help ensure telecommunications resiliency have been working well in the background to keep people connected and facilitate response. In this episode of Advancing Cyber, host Cristin Flynn Goodwin, joined by telecommunications policy expert Kathryn Condello and telecommunications and cybersecurity veteran Marcus Sachs, addresses a critical problem: what happens when cloud services are taken offline at such a scale that customers and