Matin Mavaddat discusses his perspective on security as a systemic concern, developed from his background in requirements engineering and systems architecture. He introduces the concept of "anti-requirements" - defining what a system should not do - and distinguishes between "syntactic security" (addressing technical vulnerabilities that are always incorrect) and "semantic security" (context-dependent security emerging from system interactions). Mavaddat shares his perspective that security itself doesn't have independent existence but rather emerges from preventing undesirable states. The discussion concludes with practical implementation strategies, suggesting that while automated tools can handle syntactic security issues, organizations should focus more energy on semantic security by understanding business context and defining anti-requirements early in the development process.
Mentioned in this episode:
Matin’s article: Reframing Security: Unveiling Power Anti-Requirements
Systems Thinking for Curious Managers by Russell Ackoff
Antifragile by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
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