Stanford Hosts Cyber Bootcamp for Congressional Staffers

Stanford University is hosting its third annual cyber bootcamp for congressional staffers this week in an effort to bring policy makers up to speed on a group of thorny and accelerating issues with myriad ramifications.

August 14-16, the university is offering informational sessions, panel discussions, role-playing exercises and networking opportunities for nearly three dozen staffers from the United States House and Senate, representing offices and committees such as Homeland Security, Commerce, Judiciary, Energy, Appropriations and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

"We created the cyber bootcamp precisely because many congressional staffers had told us this was the type of help they needed," said Amy Zegart, co-director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), a sponsor of the event, in a prepared statement.

Zegart said that after three years there is a waiting list for the bootcamp and points to Senator John McCain's visits to the Hoover Institution, which hosts the event, and CISAC as examples of the bootcamp's effects on policy making.

Topics and speakers at this year's bootcamp include:

  • Offensive cyberspace operations and their role in national cybersecurity;
  • Why defense is harder than cyber offense;
  • How market forces enhance or weaken cybersecurity;
  • Automotive cybersecurity;
  • Difficulties of applying existing law to accelerating technology;
  • Psychological, economic and organizational issues related to cybersecurity;
  • Fundamental principles of cybersecurity;
  • Condoleezza Rice;
  • Michael McFaul;
  • Marc Andreessen, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz;
  • Toomas Hendrick Ilves, former president of Estonia;
  • Andy Grotto, fellow at CISAC and Hoover fellow; and
  • Joel Peterson, Jet Blue chairman and a professor in the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

"The Congressional Cyber Boot Camp is our signature event because we're connecting the worlds of public policy and cybersecurity in ways that help advance national security." Zegart said in a prepared statement.

About the Author

Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • abstract glowing circuit patterns

    Microsoft Reduces Copilot Integrations in Windows 11

    Microsoft is dialing back its aggressive Copilot push in Windows 11, promising a sweeping quality overhaul that puts performance and reliability ahead of AI feature expansion .

  • silhouette of business person facing wall of data

    Why AI Strategy Belongs in the President's Office

    Institutions that are succeeding with AI share one thing in common, and it is not a better committee, a larger budget, or a more sophisticated technology stack. It is a president who never handed off the steering wheel.

  • Profile silhouette of a person thoughtfully touching their chin, overlaid with transparent data visualizations and digital interface elements suggesting artificial intelligence and analytics.

    The Institutional Knowledge Shift Is Reshaping Higher Ed IT

    Higher education IT leaders are navigating a quiet but consequential transition: Experienced team members are retiring or leaving for private-sector roles, and the teams replacing them are smaller, newer, and often stretched thin. The result is a structural shift in how technology decisions are made, executed, and sustained.

  • large cloud icon on the right in an abstract world above a polygon with a dark blue background

    Cloud Security Alliance Expands Focus on Governance and Assurance for Agentic AI Systems

    The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) recently announced a series of CSAI Foundation milestones aimed at securing what it calls the agentic control plane, including a new catastrophic risk initiative, CVE Numbering Authority authorization, and the acquisition of two agentic AI specifications.