American computer security expert (born 1971)
Martin McKeay (born June 29, 1971)[ 1] is a United States computer security expert and blogger who works for Akamai Technologies as a Security Evangelist.[ 2] [ 3] He writes one of the most popular security blogs[ 4]
and also a podcast called the Network Security Podcast .[ 5] He is a Qualified Security Assessor .[ 6] In 2006, he started blogging for Computer World .[ 7]
He was a product evangelist for StillSecure.[ 8]
He has been a speaker at many conferences including Hacker Halted , RSA Conference [ 9] and DEF CON .[ 10]
He is an advocate of the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard .[ 11] [ 12] [ 13]
^ "Ep 312 – We need a warning label" . Technorama. June 29, 2011.
^ "About" . Network Security Blog. January 4, 2008.
^ Brenner, Bill (July 27, 2011). "New Akamai security team in place: McKeay joins Corman, Smith, Ellis" Archived 2012-07-11 at archive.today . CSO Online.
^ Stiennon, Richard (August 1, 2006). "Meet Martin McKeay" . ZDNet .
^ Grimes, Roger A. (August 3, 2010). "Waiting for an Internet security fix? Don't hold your breath" . InfoWorld .
^ Carr, David F. (May 17, 2010). "Taking Credit Card Security Seriously" . Forbes .
^ Jennings, Richi (January 3, 2006). "IE wails, spectrum tales (and rocket birdman)" . Computer World .
^ "StillSecure appoints security expert and blogger Martin McKeay as a Product Evangelist" . Help Net Security. February 27, 2007.
^ "Why is "cloud security" so over hyped?" . Tripwire (on YouTube). February 15, 2011.
^ "PCI 2.0: Still Compromising Controls and Compromising Security" . DEF CON 19. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
^ "PCI, Security Blogging & Podcasting – an Interview with Martin McKeay – Host of the Network Security Podcast" Archived 2012-05-10 at the Wayback Machine . Imperva Security Podcast Transcript. 2009.
^ Spark, David (March 1, 2010). "RSA 2010: Let’s stop trying to protect everything" . Tripwire .
^ Holtfreter, Robert (July/August 2006). "Latest debit card fraud schemes" Archived 2010-06-20 at the Wayback Machine . Fraud Magazine . pp. 33-53.