On May 28, Greyson Technologies and Cisco brought together a select group of security leaders at Corner Chophouse in Winter Park for a private executive dinner centered on one of the most pressing challenges in enterprise security today: identity.
The evening featured Jesse Tuttle, a former FBI and Interpol Most Wanted hacker now turned ethical hacker, alongside Clayton Ballreich and Gary Lopez, who brought perspectives grounded in threat intelligence and security architecture. The conversation was closed-door, peer-level, and structured around a single question: where does your current identity model break?
The room stayed engaged for over three hours. That kind of sustained attention from a group of senior technology leaders reflects both the urgency of the topic and the quality of the people in the room.
Identity security is no longer a single-layer problem. It now extends across users, devices, service accounts, applications, and AI-driven systems making decisions without direct human oversight. Most access models were not designed for this shift and the gap between how organizations believe identity works and how it is actually functioning across their environments is where risk lives.
This event is part of how Greyson works alongside our customers beyond the project. We believe the strongest partnerships are built on more than transactions. Helping the organizations we serve stay informed, connected, and ahead of what is coming is part of what we do.




