Friday 10 June 2016

Structure News: A cloud pioneer pays it forward

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STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where We'd Still Prefer That Howard Street Remain Open Each Fall
June 10th, 2016 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about the market for bug bounties, the difference between real AI and marketing AI, and how Salesforce is stepping up to help the cloud community grow.
STRUCTURE NEWS
HIGHER PAYOUTS AND GREATER PARTICIPATION HIGHLIGHT BUGCROWD’S “STATE OF THE BUG BOUNTY 2016” REPORT
Bugcrowd CEO Casey Ellis (pictured, a Structure Security adviser) rolled out the second edition of the company’s “State of the Bug Bounty” report, full of statistics about the growing demand for crowdsourced security testers. There are a lot of great stats in the report, but one that stood out to me: the average payment for a successful find is only $294.70, which is what a lot of companies spend on coffee and bagels every day.

THE STRUCTURE SHOW: SELLING THE CLOUD, TWITTER REBOOTS PRODUCT (AGAIN), AND AI WASHING BECOMES A THING

On this week’s episode of the Structure Show, Derrick Harris of Mesosphere joins me to talk about Microsoft’s growing pains in the cloud, the revolving door that is the product development leadership position at Twitter, and why even as companies like Facebook release true AI-driven breakthroughs like Deep Text, the temptation to slap the “AI” buzzword into marketing copy is growing stronger by the week.
INDUSTRY NEWS
CYLANCE, FIGHTING MALICIOUS HACKERS WITH AI, HITS $1B VALUATION AFTER RAISING $100M
Real AI-backed businesses, however, are booming. Cylance (whose founder and CEO Stuart McClure will be speaking at Structure Security this September) just raised $100 million to continue building out its CylancePROTECT system, which is already used by thousands of companies, according to Techcrunch.

FORMER NASA CHIEF UNVEILS $100 MILLION NEURAL CHIP MAKER KNUEDGE

Could the next great datacenter chip share some common DNA with the space program? Secretive chip startup KnuEdge has emerged from stealth mode with $100 million in funding and a design for a chip that aims to greatly improve transfer speeds between the memory and CPU, as noted by Venturebeat.

SLACK’S ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WILL TELL YOU WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

If you use Slack, it’s likely the more savvy users in your group have programmed a bunch of mostly hilarious Slackbot messages in response to certain events. But Slack actually wants to make its system provide a lot of helpful information automatically based on artificial intelligence and Slack’s exploding data set, said Noah Weiss, Slack’s head of search, learning, and intelligence, in an interview with Recode.

TOUCH OF JAY: MEET THE MASERATI DRIVING DEADHEAD LAWYER WHO STANDS BETWEEN HACKERS AND PRISON

If (rightly or wrongly) you’ve found yourself on the business end of the U.S. government’s cybercrime division, chances are you’ve met Jay Leiderman. Buzzfeed has a delightful profile of the Jimmy McGill of the hacker community, who has represented clients such as Mathew Keys and various members of Anonymous while making some very good points about the absurdity of some U.S. computer hacking laws.

SOURCES: ORACLE SUFFERS CLOUD CAPACITY SHORTAGE, SOME LARGE CUSTOMERS UNABLE TO USE SERVICE CREDITS

At least some people wanted to actually use Oracle’s cloud. CRN reports that a bunch of customers who were given Oracle Cloud credits as part of larger deals all tried to exercise them in May before the credits expired, and Oracle had to scramble to make sure it could meet that demand.

PIVOTAL CLOUD FOUNDRY IS NOT JUST FOR NEW APPS ANYMORE

A lot of Pivotal’s appeal over the past few years has been its promise to help older companies set up fast cloud-based internal applications without a huge learning curve. Pivotal used to provide that service for brand-new apps, but Fortune reports that Pivotal is now promising customers it can help them migrate old apps to the cloud, which could be a huge source of growth for the company.
BIG PICTURE
When we think of the cloud in 2016, our thoughts invariably turn to Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, the three pillars of the public cloud infrastructure market. But Salesforce.com is arguably the original cloud computing company, and as it closes in on its 17th year of existence, it is showing plenty of signs that it remains a power broker in enterprise computing.

Two separate stories regarding Salesforce.com’s investments in the future of the cloud caught my eye this week. First, The Wall Street Journal reported that Salesforce wants to invest $50 million in enterprise cloud computing startups and create an incubator for the discipline, which doesn’t always translate as well to other incubator programs. Then Fortune reported that CEO Marc Benioff -- as original a character as Silicon Valley has created in a generation -- thought about investing in cloud consigliere Pivotal, despite owning two companies that pretty much compete directly with Pivotal.

It’s no secret that Benioff is as gifted a marketer as we’ve seen in tech since the first dot-com boom, a masterful speaker who can deploy spot-on technical knowledge and sophisticated world observations within the same sentence. But it’s not just for show; Salesforce has been a tireless advocate for cloud computing for an extremely long time now, and its willingness to bet on promising enterprise computing founders (so long as it gets a piece, of course) is another welcome source of investment for a market category that lacks the buzz of its social-platform-wannabe counterparts.

As the easy money recedes in the tech industry, investor enthusiasm for boring-yet-vital enterprise technology becomes even more important. Whatever the challenges of the broader financial market, there is no dispute that computing is becoming a greater part of life each year, and the fundamental technologies required to support that growth take longer to develop than the sexier social media apps that promise low overhead and quick returns for venture capitalists.

Being part of the cloud revolution is a little like turning back the clock to the early 2000s, when despite the excesses of the dot-com boom it was clear to a small but dedicated number of people that tech was going to change the world. The golddiggers and charlatans that gave HBO’s Silicon Valley so much material to work with didn’t really dive in until the hard work had been done in building out the cloud, paving the way for the minimal investment required to create their apps and “platforms.”

The next wave of technology -- whether it’s virtual reality, bots powered by artificial intelligence, or self-driving cars -- is going to rely on the breakthroughs that enterprise computing companies are developing in the shadows as we speak. We’re proud to highlight the best of those companies later this year at Structure, and hope that Saleforce makes some wise investments in the technology plumbing of the future.
 
 


 
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