Victoria Yan Pillitteri
Manager, Security Engineering & Risk Management Group
NIST
Victoria Yan Pillitteri is a supervisory computer scientist in the Computer Security Division at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Ms. Pillitteri is the Acting Manager of the Security Engineering and Risk Management Group, and leads the Risk Management Framework team (Federal Information Security Modernization Act (FISMA) Implementation Project). The group conducts the research and development of the suite of risk management guidance used for managing cybersecurity risk in the federal government, and the associated stakeholder outreach and public-private coordination/collaboration efforts. She serves as the lead of the Joint Task Force working group, a partnership with Department of Defense, the Intelligence Community and Civilian Agencies to develop a unified security framework to protect USG from cyberattacks, and is co-chair of the Federal Cybersecurity and Privacy Professionals Forum hosted by NIST. Pillitteri is the co-author of multiple NIST publications, including Special Publications (SP) 800-53, 800-37, 800-171, 800-171A, 800-172, and 800-172A.
MS. Pillitteri holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Maryland, a M.S in Computer Science, with a concentration in Information Assurance, from the George Washington University, completed the Key Executive Leadership Program at American University, and is a Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP). She has completed a Senior Executive Service Candidate Development Program and is SES certified by the Office of Personnel Management Qualifications Review Board.
Troy Schneider
President
GovExec 360
Troy Schneider
President
GovExec 360
Nick Wakeman
Editor-in-Chief
Washington Technology
Nick Wakeman
Editor-in-Chief
Washington Technology
Join us November 29th at 2:00 PM ET!
We’ll explore early lessons from contractors who have gone through the Joint Surveillance Voluntary Assessment program. This program from the Defense Industry Base Cybersecurity Assessment Center validates compliance with the NIST 800-171 standard, which is at the heart of CMMC.
While CMMC itself is not finalized so certain processes may change, the Joint Surveillance Voluntary Assessment program offers the best real-world experience for having your IT systems evaluated for their cybersecurity posture.
We’ll talk to these companies about what they learned, what they had to change and how they are moving forward to prepare for CMMC.