Featured Speakers
Build Powerful Relationships Thought Leadership
Peer Networking
Join us on May 21st in Boston for a private, invitation-only dinner designed specifically for Chief Information Security Officers and senior cybersecurity executives. This unique event offers a confidential setting to engage with peers, gain actionable intelligence, and hear from two of Pondurance’s leading experts on the evolving cyber threat landscape.
Featured Speakers
-
Will Gadzinksi, AVP, Digital Forensics and Incident Response (DFIR) at Pondurance (trusted by 35+ insurance panels)
-
Dustin Hutchison, SVP, Cyber Advisory and CISO at Pondurance
Together, they will provide firsthand insights into the most critical cyber threats of 2025, real-world attack scenarios, and proven strategies to strengthen your organization’s security posture.
Key Topics Include
-
Emerging attack vectors and evolving threat actor tactics
-
Lessons learned from recent forensics investigations
-
Common gaps in organizational readiness and response
-
What’s working (and what’s not) in today’s cyber defenses
-
Aligning strategy, people, and technology for resilience
-
The vital role of visibility, speed, and collaboration in incident response
Don’t miss this opportunity to connect with fellow cybersecurity leaders, exchange ideas, and stay ahead of the threat landscape in an intimate and highly interactive setting.
Space is limited — secure your seat today.
Agenda
11:00 am to 2:00 pm CDT
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Registration & Networking
Network with your peers
12:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Executive Luncheon
Welcome Introduction, Lunch and Conversation

Why attend?
In recent weeks, a frontier AI system demonstrated capabilities that signal a fundamental shift:
Identifying and exploiting critical vulnerabilities across complex systems
Executing multi-step cyber operations with minimal human guidance
Operating at a speed and scale that traditional teams cannot match
WHAT YOU’LL DISCUSS
AI-driven threats: How offensive capabilities are evolving faster than defenses
Operational reality: What breaks first—tools, teams, or processes?
Signal vs. noise: Why current security models may not keep up
AI as defense: What a new, AI-driven security operating model actually looks like
Near-term horizon: What arrives in the next 12–18 months—and what to do now



