As the regional CISO, Daryl leads the Office of the CISO for Google Cloud in the Asia-Pacific. He partners with Google's clients across Singapore, Australia, India, Japan and other APAC countries, and provides executive sponsorship and guidance to C-suite and senior technology leaders to help them navigate cyber security, tech risk and regulatory challenges throughout the cloud adoption lifecycle. Daryl has over 25 years experience in solving business-IT problems. He was previously the founding Partner & Head of the Cyber Security Consulting practice at KPMG Singapore from 2011 to 2022, where he led a team of 4 partners and over 100 cyber professionals. Prior to KPMG he spent 9 years in investment banking in Australia and Singapore leading global functions. In his last role at Deutsche Bank, Daryl was the global lead for the Global Banking IT Program Management Office overseeing governance for €700 million portfolio of projects. He previously established and led the IT Audit team at Westpac Bank in Australia in the early 2000s. Before joining the banking sector, Daryl spent 6 years as an IT & Operational Risk consultant to the Australian Federal Government in Canberra. Daryl is a Past President of ISACA Singapore the certifying body for cyber practitioners with over 150,000 members globally. He is currently serving as a Governor at the Institute of Internal Auditors Singapore. Daryl is certified as a CISM, CISA, CRISC, and CPA (Australia), and holds a MBA from Manchester Business School and a Master of Information Technology from the University of Canberra.
Considering the passage of the SLACIP Act, entities which own or operate critical infrastructure assets should begin considering whether their existing organisational processes will be sufficient to comply with their impending obligations, or whether new measures will need to be put into effect in order to bring themselves into conformity with the minimum requirements contemplated by the Act and the accompanying draft Risk Management Program Rules. This panel discussion will address: