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  "description": "How should broadband providers be thinking about cybersecurity in an AI-driven world? ",
  "path": "/broadband-breakfast-on-june-3-2026-ai-and-cybersecurity/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-20T15:38:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "Gatekeeping by AI Frontier Labs Could Leave Critical Infrastructure ExposedExperts warned Wednesday that AI is accelerating cyberattacks faster than most organizations can defend against them.Broadband BreakfastBroadband Breakfast",
    "Responsible Advanced Access for Frontier AI ModelsFor decades, cybersecurity policy has rested on a simple but hard‑won insight: the most successful processes are coordinated, orderly, and transparent. With the emergence of frontier AI models with cutting-edge cyber capabilities, we need a similar practice that we’re calling Responsible Advanced Access. In this paper, experts discuss advanced access and the need for a standardized set of best practices and governance models to develop this mechanism.Aspen DigitalVaibhav Garg"
  ],
  "textContent": "## _Highlight Reel_\n\n##  _Full Video_\n\n_****Can't see the video? Join the Breakfast Club to access****_\n\n$99/month or $590/year\n\nWith President **Donald Trump's** Tuesday signing of a scaled-back version of an executive order to address the cybersecurity threats from artificial intelligence, are we seeing a change in position from the White House?\n\nWhen Anthropic unveiled Claude Mythos Preview in April, the frontier AI company declined to release it publicly. That was because, the company said, Mythos could autonomously surface thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities and chain weaknesses into multi-step exploits with minimal human direction. Access is restricted to a small set of vetted critical-infrastructure operators through the company’s Project Glasswing. Artificial intelligence is increasingly being used to manage networks, predict failures and streamlining operations. But with AI-induced threats so apparent, how should ISPs and other network operators think about AI and cybersecurity today?\n\nGatekeeping by AI Frontier Labs Could Leave Critical Infrastructure ExposedExperts warned Wednesday that AI is accelerating cyberattacks faster than most organizations can defend against them.Broadband BreakfastBroadband Breakfast\n\n### _Panelists_\n\n  * **Stephen Lilley** , Partner, Mayer Brown\n  * **Jay Harmon** , CEO and Managing Director, Borderhawk\n  * **Vaibhav Garg,** Executive Director, Cybersecurity & Privacy Research and Public Policy, Comcast Cable\n  * **Daniel Castro** , President, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation\n  * **Amy Robertson** , Chief Engineer for Cyber Intelligence, MITRE\n  * **Drew Clark** (moderator), CEO and Publisher, Broadband Breakfast\n\n\n\n###  _Panelist Resources_\n\nResponsible Advanced Access for Frontier AI ModelsFor decades, cybersecurity policy has rested on a simple but hard‑won insight: the most successful processes are coordinated, orderly, and transparent. With the emergence of frontier AI models with cutting-edge cyber capabilities, we need a similar practice that we’re calling Responsible Advanced Access. In this paper, experts discuss advanced access and the need for a standardized set of best practices and governance models to develop this mechanism.Aspen DigitalVaibhav Garg\n\n**Stephen Lilley** is a partner in the Washington DC and Northern California offices of Mayer Brown. A member of the firm’s Cybersecurity & Data Privacy, National Security, and Litigation practices, Stephen develops strategies to navigate cutting-edge and interrelated litigation, regulatory, and policy challenges rooted in data and technology. He has been named a “Leading Lawyer” for Cyber Law by the  _Legal 500_.\n\n**Jay Harmon** is CEO of BorderHawk, LLC, a cybersecurity firm focused on delivering practical, audit-ready security solutions for healthcare, telecommunications, U.S. DoD subcontractors, and critical infrastructure organizations. With two decades of experience, Harmon leads a senior team of practitioners specializing in Information Risk Management, Audit Readiness, and Compliance-as-a-Service across frameworks including HIPAA, NIST CSF/SCRM, CMMC, PCI, and SOC.\n\n**Vaibhav Garg** is the Executive Director of Cybersecurity & Privacy Research and Public Policy at Comcast Cable, where he leads work at the intersection of cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, privacy, and technology policy. He has more than a decade of experience bridging technical research with public policy, working across engineering, product, legal, and government‑facing teams to translate policy principles into operational systems and standards. He has authored more than 30 peer‑reviewed publications, with work cited by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the National Security and Telecommunications Advisory Committee (NSTAC), the Communications Sector Coordinating Council (CSCC), and international standards bodies.\n\n**Daniel Castro** is vice president at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation and director of ITIF’s Center for Data Innovation. Castro writes and speaks on a variety of issues related to tech and internet policy. In 2013, Castro was named to FedScoop’s list of the “top 25 most influential people under 40 in government and tech.”\n\n**Amy Robertson** is MITRE’s Chief Engineer for Cyber Intelligence, and the lead for Cyber Threat Intelligence for MITRE ATT&CK®. She is a cyber threat intelligence and cyber operations leader with more than 15 years of experience helping government, industry, and international partners address complex cyber threats, mission risk, and adversary behavior in contested environments. She leads threat-informed efforts that turn adversary understanding into actionable outcomes in cyber defense, operational decision-making, and cyber-physical resilience.\n\nBreakfast Media LLC CEO **Drew Clark** has led the Broadband Breakfast community since 2008. An early proponent of better broadband, better lives, he initially founded the Broadband Census crowdsourcing tool to collect and verify broadband data left unpublished by the Federal Communications Commission. As CEO and Publisher, Clark presides over the leading media community advocating for higher-capacity internet everywhere through topical, timely and intelligent coverage. Clark also served as head of the Partnership for a Connected Illinois, a state broadband initiative.",
  "title": "Broadband Breakfast on June 3, 2026 – AI and Cybersecurity",
  "updatedAt": "2026-06-04T15:42:25.349Z"
}