The Organization of American States’ Carribean Regional Cybersecurity Symposium DR 2024

*** Simposio de Ciberseguridad de la OEA

Cyber Pirates of the Caribbean.
Sorry, couldn’t help myself.

In September I got an invite to sit on a panel at the GFCE’s annual meeting. Then the Organization of American States got in touch and asked if I’d sit on their emerging tech panel at the regional pre-meeting. I guess that went well because they then asked if I’d be willing to cover for their quantum cyber specialist who couldn’t make a Cybersecurity Symposium in the Dominican Republic at the end of the month. My approach to this sort of thing is to always say yes; that’s how I found myself in Ghana last year.


Most people think of Punta Cana and an all inclusive week on a resort when it comes to the Dominican Republic, but I was headed to Santo Domingo which can be a bit rough around the edges. It was an intense week of coming to understand the cybersecurity needs of a region facing the results of climate instability head on while also rapidly developing their digital economy.


Our panel was set to go on the first day, which was good – I like to get them done sooner. Co-panelist Heather happened to be coming in on a flight right behind mine so we met at the airport and shared a cab across the city to the hotel. Having not eaten since 5am, I sat in the empty hotel restaurant and ate a poor club sandwich that cost an eye watering $30USD while wondering what I was doing here. There is nothing like hunger and exhaustion to make you doubt yourself.


I finally got into the room and collapsed for a couple of hours and awoke feeling more like my usual, confident self; food and rest resolves most anxiety. I went for a wander around the hotel and found Heather on the pool deck watching the sun going down (dramatic sunsets in the DR). She works in AI research and we had a good chat about how it’s being used in cybersecurity and both left with enough context to take on the panel in the morning.

Our moderator got switched right before the event but Donavon was agile, knowledgeable and did a great job chasing down themes as they came up rather than following a script. The conversation dove into AI but also left space for IoT and quantum in a cyber context.

I came away from the GFCE event in DC earlier in the month cognisant of the need to keep technical detail out of these kinds of high level talks, especially if you’re talking to most of the people in the room through a translator. The technical side of cyber isn’t necessarily what you need to focus on because it doesn’t really change how most people interact with it. An easier to grasp example might be to ask if you need to have a strong understanding of the metallurgy involved in casting your car’s engine in order for you to drive it. This isn’t to say you need to simplify the the point of absurdity, but getting into the technical weeds tends to be an academic back-patting exercise rather than being helpful to the audience.


On this panel (as I’ve done in all of them), I don’t pretend I’m something I’m not. I’m a teacher, an I.T. technician and a cyber operations instructor and often refer to anecdotal cyber teaching situations to land a point. People seem to appreciate this approach because presenting material as a teacher is something everyone can relate to, and there is enough intellectual intimidation in cyber as it is. There is also enough marketing misinformation that a clear eyed, educationally focused approach resonates.

Our talk mainly focused on artificial intelligence but quantum did get some airtime, though many questions (as at the GFCE) orbited the complexities of trying to teach cybersecurity. As mentioned at the Serious Play Conference in August, teaching a subject that few people have the basic digital media literacy to even contextualize is a challenge. The fear that arises from this ignorance is real and makes teaching cyber especially difficult.

I’m always conscious of the Canadian perspective I bring to an international event like this. Canada seldom participates at the international cybersecurity events I’ve attended. We fund a lot of them (including this one), but finding Canadians willing to make the trip and talk the talk seems difficult. I was the only Canadian on any of the panels at this one too though I’m hoping to change that. If international cooperation is about relationships, having Canadians talking at events like these is paramount.

When asked about IoT threats I brought up two Canadian instances that resonated with the room (I was asked about them repeatedly across the week). One was my visit to the Canadian Institute for Cybersecurity in Fredericton last spring which included a look at their IoT lab. The curiosity this generated has me wondering if an OAS event in Fredericton at UNB wouldn’t go amiss. Does Canada ever host these things?

The second Canadian cyber challenge was the rash of car thefts Canada is experiencing. It’s tempting to define this under traditional criminal activity but these are new vehicles with ‘state of the art’ electronics that are being hacked, making this an IoT cyber problem. When you know enough about cybersecurity you start to think differently about how it’s integrated into your day to day life. My cunning solution is to drive manual vehicles that are ‘pre-smart’. They’re unhackable and also undrivable for most thieves. If you don’t expect technology to do everything for you, you’re not beholden to its weaknesses.

With our panel in the rearview, I made it a point of understanding the context through which Caribbean and Latin American states are tackling cybersecurity. Our very nice hotel provided bottled water because you’re not supposed to drink what comes out of the taps. It’s astonishing to me that people without available drinking water are going after digital transformation and the cybersecurity that enables it, but if you want to participate in the 21st Century economy that’s the price of admission. Perhaps digitization will solve the water problem too.

One of the first speakers at this event did a deep dive into misinformation and how it is generated using the latest in deepfake technology. Extremists are using this tech in propaganda campaigns. The corrosive effect this has on our shared media is interesting. I had a number of chats with Daniel throughout the conference and discovered that his motivating interest is in the nature of online communities and how they work in terms of social norms and expectations. This kind of decentralized, narrow (as opposed to broad) band media transmission is becoming the new norm, yet no one seems to be teaching how it is influencing society in media theory classes. It’s something I want to go after in terms of updating digital media education in Canada.


The theme of the symposium was, DisruptX:Redefining the future of cybersecurity in Latin America and the Caribbean”, so many of the talks revolved around the impact A.I. is having in cybersecurity. As in most places, it’s a force leveller. People writing phishing emails now write with perfect grammar and spelling, and don’t use form letters anymore because AI can generate targeted, articulate messages specifically for individuals. This enabling of cyber criminals by automated systems targets our existing cyber-illiteracy, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Automated malware as a service can be purchased by anyone who can turn a computer on. The days of technically talented hackers are far behind us as AI serves to elevate anyone looking to cause problems through online communications.

To further complicate the landscape, you’ve got state actors (including world superpowers) performing offensive cyber operations against governments, businesses and even individuals. At this cost-no-object end of the spectrum you’ve got cyber militaries operating on budgets in the billions possibly taking aim at your company or government.  If you’re a developing economy with minimal digital infrastructure, how do you possibly keep it secure against that? The short answer is you don’t, sometimes you just get pwned.


OK, so what do I do, you ask? You’ve got a couple of options when it comes to protecting your internet facing systems (in this case critical systems that make society work and provide things like electricity):


1) Put money up front building the most secure network you can, but this requires talented people who are in short supply (the cyberskills shortage isn’t just happening in Canada). It also means paying up front for something that hasn’t happened yet, and isn’t can’t be guaranteed secure no matter what you throw at it. The case for preemptive cyber capacity building remains a struggle and not just in the Caribbean, it’s a problem in Canada too.

2) The other option is to design full backup systems so you can recover when the inevitable happens, but this too requires technical talent, forethought and a willingness to invest in the future – all aspects of cyber that humans everywhere struggle with.
Like the GFCE event in Washington, a lot of time was given to thinking about governance and policy. These frameworks are vital, especially if we want to push back against the human nature that isn’t likely to invest in anything precautionary, but the nature of the cyber means also needing to be proactive and agile because of the asymmetrical nature of the threats. 
I hope there is room in policy and governance to ensure that there are resources left over to support this kind of agility. This work often happens in companies and government agencies rather than in university research labs and needs to be more accessible to the people on the ground doing the work. So much of the research funding in Canada is tied to post-secondary institutions. Agile action research in cyber by practitioners rather than academics is essential if we’re to retain any ability to deal with emerging threats in a timely fashion.
This confusion around the nature of cybersecurity (is it an apprenticeable skillset or an academic pursuit?) is another one of those evolving understandings still somewhat out of focus as we come to understand what cybersecurity it. It was nice to see one of my favourite cyber graphics come up in one of the first RICET education talks reminding everyone that cyber is a complete field of study ranging from apprenticelike hard technical roles to academic legal and human facing work in subjects ranging from HR to education.
Like any other field of study, cybersecurity is full of nuance.


*** Extracurriculars

Fascinating conversations and an opportunity to network without a schedule or talking points. These ‘extracurricular’ evening events are often the most informative!

The conference had a couple of extracurricular events where I often hear the most enlightening things. A delegation from the South Pacific was attending this event with the thinking they they are facing many of the same challenges that the Caribbean states are. Tim from the Cook Islands and I had many great talks about the sudden change they are going through. About two weeks before the conference Elon flipped a switch and suddenly everyone on the islands could afford high speed internet for the first time through Starlink. The rest of us have been in the digital pot as the heat has been slowly turned up over the past two decades and don’t realize it’s boiling. Can you imagine going from 90’s dial up to 2024’s AI/social media/fake-news cyber-nightmare in one week? Tim’s managing the IT there. Someone should be writing a book about this time travelling digital experiment.
The fortress in colonial Santo Domingo at sunset. The DR’s relationship with its past, like Canada’s, is complicated and unfinished.

On the final evening they took us out to the colonial tourist area and a look around Fortaleza Ozama. Being me, I found watching the chaos of the evening commute around the castle distracting. Like the evening social the night before, this was an opportunity to chat with people working in cyber from many different perspectives. I’d run into Franklin from Suriname who I’d met in Ghana last year and we picked up right where we’d left off. Suriname is about to go through some dramatic changes.

When you find yourself having a drink with the head of Mastercard’s security division and the entourage from Columbian cyber, you wonder how you got here. Tim from Cook Island’s wife messaged him asking what he was up to now. His response was, ‘I’m drinking rum at a castle at sunset!” Indeed.

The trip included a projection onto the fortress of the DR’s history. It reminded me of the projection show they were doing on the Houses of Parliament in Ottawa a few years ago and raised some interesting questions about how digital is insinuating itself into island life.
The seemingly incongruous VR experience at the fortress was complimented by animated digital projections throughout, to the point where it was easy to forget you were in a centuries old fortress, which is the point of being there, isn’t it?  A few times in the conference the corrosive effect of AI on regional culture was noted (AI’s fixation on large datasets tends to stamp out anything but the biggest producers of data). I suspect digitization (itself a byproduct of globalization) has a generally corrosive effect on people’s ability to be where they are. We spend an awful lot of our time taking photos to share online instead of being where we are (like the ones in this post? -ed).


*** RICET

The final day switched gears and became RICET, the Regional Initiative for Cybersecurity Education and Training, put on by the OAS and Florida International University. This focus on education and training is essential if we’re to establish sustainable and effective cybersecurity.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, the vast majority of cyber incidents are the result of human failure. No matter how you want to frame it, our current cyber woes arise from a multi-generational failure to develop effective digital media literacy of which cybersecurity is perhaps the most interdisciplinary and complex because it’s all about the edge cases. You can’t hack something you don’t fundamentally understand.
We’ve been fixated on coding as a solution to the digital skills crisis, but digital media literacy is about much more than coding. In cyber you need flexible, stochastic approaches with familiarity across a much wider range of digital technology. I’ve met too many compsci specialists who are sidelined by simple technical issues to believe that this is the epitome of digital literacy. I also heard the dreaded term ‘digital native‘ during some of these talks, but I’m not going to get into that nonsense again here. 
RICET panels talked about the usual worries around the lack of talent, though like everyone else they spent much of the time on bandaid solutions like adult retraining instead of looking at strategic fixes like implementing nationwide cyber skills talent discovery and development in public schools that would not only address the user negligence problem, but would also resolve our cyber-professional shortage.
We’ll never resolve this global digital skilling failure with stop gap solutions. We need both short term and long term strategies, but like the funding for seemingly obvious things like network security and data backups, getting anyone to fund that future is a struggle.
Watching these earnest cyber developers working on shoestring budgets trying to make this work while Canadians literally watch drinkable water go down the toilet has me wondering why we face so many of the same challenges they do. On my way back home I messaged a colleague in cyber education and lamented the fact that cyber expertise in Canada seems to be more about marketing than it does cybersecurity. I summarized the problem with genuine cyber-education in simple terms: there’s no money in it.  That observation extends to cyber in general. One of the reasons for the high burnout rate is asking the people who know what they’re doing to do it without needed resources.
I enjoyed learning about the regional challenges being faced in the Caribbean, but what always surprises me about these glimpses into international cybersecurity is just how similar the problems we all face are. In a discipline where the bad guys only have to get it right once but the defenders have to get it right every time, the only hope for cybersecurity professionals is to develop connections, build international cyber-diplomacy and work together. Circling the wagons and sharing intelligence, tools and best practices is the only advantage we have against the cyber pirates (it’s ok, I’m bringing it back) that surround us.  This event was a prime example of that kind of networking. I hope to be a part of future ones.

Winging out of Santo Domingo at sunrise on Delta’s A320 Airbus. What a beautiful country. Wish I’d had the opportunity to see more of it…

The Bermuda Triangle on a sunny Friday morning in October.

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SMART Adventures and Off Road Performance Dirtbikes

 Over the long weekend I got out to SMART Adventures again for my yearly knobbly tire exercise. If you’ve read TMD you’ll know I’ve tried to off road in South Western Ontario, but got stick for riding on hydro cuts and farmland and generally got nimbied right out of dual sport ownership. SMART is my release valve while thinking of ways to escape living in the one part of Canada that doesn’t make off road riding easy.


If I lived anywhere else I’d have picked up the DR650 I found on a farm a couple of years ago and that would be my dedicated off road machine. My neighbor picked up a new Tenere 700 and I’ve long had my eye on Honda’s CRF300 Rally – both of those would do the trick, though after this weekend I’m thinking a dirt focused specialist might be the way. 

Last year’s SMART was an apex experience for both Max and I as we got advanced individual instruction on the off road vehicles of our choice, I even got to ride an electric machine! This year we’d planned to meet with friends at Horseshoe Resort and that gave us a discount opportunity with SMART, so I signed everyone up for the busy Saturday afternoon on the long weekend.


I initially went out on the Kawasaki I rode last year, but the gear shifter had been banged about by a pervious rider and it wouldn’t go into gear, so I got to switch to a Yamaha WR250F with upside down forks, high compression and proper brakes. I’d never been bothered with any of that and always thought a trail focused machine would be what I’d get as a pure dirt bike, but this Yamaha changed my mind.



Unlike the 230 I started off on or the Honda and Kawasaki 250s I rode last time, the Yamaha demands more but rewards you for it. If you can appreciate the difference between an appliance car and a sports car you can understand the difference here too. Those upside down shocks will get you across pretty much everything with incredible feel, and the brakes are precision tools, but it was the engine that took me to my next level, and eventually let me slip the surly bonds of earth and fly (!).

Trail bikes tend to be tuned for torque low down without worrying about stalling. This higher compression motor needs more revs, but when it comes on song (the exhaust snarls when you get there), it’ll pull you up any hill or over any obstacle. If you’re riding over whoops, it’ll get both wheels off the ground too.

This turned out to be just the bike I needed just as I needed it because I probably wasn’t skilled enough to appreciate it before now.  SMART put me with Adam, the brother of my instructor from last year, who did a great job of testing my limits without overwhelming me. We covered a lot of miles through the fall woods. That’s a SMART hack: if you know what you’re doing say you’re ‘expert’ on the intake form. If gets you out of the kids-who-think-they-can catagory and lets you focus on improving your craft, usually one-on-one with an instructor.



The Kwak wasn’t up for it, but that gave me a chance to explore the competition ready Yamaha…

Passed these guys while out on the trail – that’s the dream setup.

Adam and I got deep into the forest – he’s the red smudge down the trail that I’m keeping up with (because he kepts slowing to check on me). Every 10-15 minutes we’d stop and talk about technique, and then go exercise the talk.

Everyone had a good day out. The girls got out in a side by side and discovered that off roading in one of these is well within their skillsets and not at all uncomfortable. The only complaint came from Max who wanted a more extreme ATV experience as he’s now expert in that. Next time he’ll be sure to stress that he wants to be in the advanced group.


That Yam is the bomb! It’s on my wishlist now.

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Taking a 955i Tiger from Triumph Engineers to Vintage Ownership

 I’m bound and determined to keep the old Tiger in motion. Triumph has abandoned me in
terms of parts support, but there is another way and Classic Bike Magazine shows you how to find it. I used to depend on Practical Sports Bikes for keeping these pre-classics in motion, but they killed it.


Rick Parkington writes a lot about the transition from standard manufacturer supported bike ownership to vintage bike ownership, but what he’s really on about is keeping a bike in motion when the plug-and-play relationship with modern bike parts isn’t an option any more. For a modern Triumph that happens about 20 years after they build it (I’ve had older Kawasakis and Hondas that kept providing parts, but I digress).

The biggest thing to get your head around is being ready to find alternatives that meet the needs you’re facing rather than following the manual and hoping for parts to arrive that you can swap in. One of my issues on a 90k+ bike is slack in the machine. The throttle stop has worn down over the many miles so I’ve been playing with putting a spacer nut on there.

When I had it apart today I used the grinder to try two different cuts of nut to get my idle back to where it should be. The middle one gives me perhaps a mm of recovered space on the pin that catches the throttle when it returns to idle at a point that doesn’t make the engine struggle.


Another one of those vintage approaches is around battling fasteners. You can never assume something will come off as it should. In this case the fastener on the throttle casing on the handlebar creates swear words.


While I had it apart today I put in two new cables (throttle and clutch). Thanks to Rogx in Germany (who are still producing new cables for the 955i Tiger which was popular in Germany), I got two new cables with hardware and it arrived early and with no headache (love dealing with Germans!).

The clutch cable was fraying by the transmission so it was well past time. My thought is that if this one lasts as long as the first one (over 90k), then I’ll be happy. I ran both cables next to the existing ones to get the runs right and then removed the old ones afterwards. It was a satisfying Sunday afternoon in the garage.

No complaints (other than Triumph not supporting its own machines when they are less than 20 years old). These cables both did over 90k in brutal Canadian temperature changes.

A satisfying Sunday afternoon getting the Tiger sorted. I think another couple of hours and I’ll have it back in motion for the end of the riding season here.

I wrote this as I was catching up on the Indonesian Grand Prix in MotoGP after a crazy (but awesome) week at work. I lost Marc after the Valentino incident back in 2015, but I’m starting to find my Marquez fandom again…

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