Interview with Georgia Tech NIST 800-171 FCA Whistleblowers

old.reddit.com / @/u/GRCAcademy, https://old.reddit.com/user/GRCAcademy

Hey All,

I had the opportunity to interview the Georgia Tech whistleblowers and wanted to share here: Georgia Tech Cybersecurity False Claims Scandal: Meet the Whistleblowers (grcacademy.io)

They explain how they tried to stop Georgia Tech from allegedly LYING to the government about their NIST 800-171 compliance and what they have faced since they blew the whistle!

Whistleblower attorney Julie Bracker also shares what could come next and how much Georgia Tech may have to pay out!

Here are a few highlights from this episode:

  • Hear directly from the whistleblowers in this False Claims Act case
  • Details on the "Fictitious" NIST 800-171 SPRS Score
  • How much money Georgia Tech might have to pay
  • Recommendations to universities
  • Advice for other whistleblowers

Both of the whistleblowers have a long history with Georgia Tech and truly care for the institution.

Christopher Craig has worked at Georgia Tech for more than 20 years. He was the Associate Director of Cybersecurity where he managed all central cyber security personnel and built the GRC team until Georgia Tech demoted him to an Enterprise Security Architect.

Kyle Koza worked at Georgia Tech for more than 15 years until he left his role as a Principal Information Security Engineer in 2022. He got his bachelor’s and master's degrees from Georgia Tech and also co-wrote and still teaches a security incident response master's degree course at the university.

I thought Christopher's recommendation (24:37) for universities to centralize their labs was excellent!

How can a university expect to maintain its NIST / CMMC compliance if multiple labs are built and managed by different teams who may not even be familiar with the NIST 800-171 security controls?

I also loved hearing Chris tell us about the support he has received from the cyber community (38:00)! Who in cyber doesn't want to do the right thing? I would like to think those with bad intent are an extremely small percentage.

I'm looking forward to hearing everyone's thoughts on this!

V/R

Jacob Hill

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published 3 months ago




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