2025 Program — CyberSat Summit
CyberSat 2025 · 9th Annual Edition

2025 Conference Program

In 2025, we introduced two new tracks: Business, Policy, Partnerships (BPP) and Technology, Threats, Solutions (TTS). Accross the program, content included agency keynotes, deep-dive sessions, and CISO-level threat intelligence.

📅 November 17–20, 2025
📍 Hyatt Regency Reston, VA
🔐 Classified: The Aerospace Corporation, Chantilly VA
🎤 45+ Sessions
Unclassified Program
BPP Track — Business, Policy, Partnerships
TTS Track — Technology, Threats, Solutions
Classified Program (TS/SCI)

Monday, November 17

Unclassified
7:00 am – 8:00 am
Breakfast and Tabletop Networking
7:00 am – 5:30 pm
Registration
8:00 am – 8:30 am
Opening Keynote Presentation
Grand Ballroom A-D

The opening keynote sets the tone for CyberSat 2025, bringing a front-line international perspective on space system cybersecurity. Captain Field serves as the Australian Defence Force Liaison Officer to United States Cyber Command, providing unique insight into how allied nations are collaborating to address cybersecurity threats to space assets and critical infrastructure.

Capt. Nicholas Field
Capt. Nicholas Field
Australian Defence Force Liaison Officer to United States Cyber Command
AUS-CYBERCOM
8:30 am – 9:00 am
Challenges and Risks: Cybersecurity Priorities
Grand Ballroom A-D

As the DOD’s Chief Information Officer, Ms. Arrington oversees the defense enterprise’s most critical IT and space-based systems. In this keynote, she’ll bring a senior-level perspective on the intersection of cybersecurity, satellite communications, and national defense priorities, offering insight into the technologies, threats, and decisions shaping our most mission-critical systems.

Katie Arrington
Katie Arrington
Performing the Duties of Chief Information Officer (CIO)
U.S. Department of War
9:15 am – 9:45 am
Enabling On-Board Intrusion Detection for Cyber Resilient Space Systems
Regency BallroomTTS

Many space systems lack on-board threat detection capabilities, which are essential prerequisites for cyber resilience. This session outlines efforts by the DHS Science & Technology Directorate (S&T) to lower these implementation barriers through the development of prioritized threat indicators for the SPARTA framework, reference implementations of on-board detectors, and concepts for how these fit into a broader space cybersecurity ecosystem.

Ernest Wong
Ernest Wong
Technical Lead, PNT & Space Systems
DHS Science and Technology Directorate
9:15 am – 9:45 am
The AI-Native Approach to Mitigating Risk and Ensuring Compliance in Space Cybersecurity
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

As the space domain becomes increasingly contested and strategically vital, the emergence of agentic AI — AI systems capable of autonomous decision-making and action — presents unparalleled opportunities and risks for national security and defense. This session brings together leading experts in national security, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, military strategy, and space operations to explore how agentic AI is transforming security in orbit and beyond. Topics include the rise of AI-Native companies in cybersecurity, the evolving role of agentic AI in cyber defense, risk management, compliance, satellite operations, and space situational awareness, new vectors of vulnerability including potential AI-driven attacks on critical space infrastructure, and partnerships between government, defense contractors, and commercial innovators to secure the space domain.

Bob Gourley
Moderator
Bob Gourley
Co-Founder and CTO
OODA LLC
Andrew Black
Andrew Black
CEO
Kovr.ai
Scott Stephenson
Scott Stephenson
VP, Sales and Business Development
Blackwire Labs
10:00 am – 10:50 am
Layered Defense, China, and the Space Power Struggle
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

The U.S. is ramping up its space ambitions by investing heavily in next-gen capabilities to secure strategic dominance. At the center is the Golden Dome project, which is reshaping the national space posture and accelerating defense innovation. However, in a contested domain, ambition isn’t enough. This session explores how rising cyber threats, shifting alliances, and intensifying competition with China are reshaping U.S. space strategy. We’ll examine the implications for private-sector partnerships, defense supply chains, and the broader industrial base under the new administration — inside a rapidly evolving space race.

Valerie Cofield
Moderator
Valerie Cofield
Executive Director
Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology
Sarah Mineiro
Sarah Mineiro
Founder and CEO
Tanagra Enterprises
Sean Papso
Sean Papso
Executive Vice President
Invictus Consulting
Victoria Samson
Victoria Samson
Chief Director, Space Security and Stability
Secure World Foundation
Lauryn Williams
Lauryn Williams
Deputy Director
Center for Strategic and International Studies
10:00 am – 10:25 am
Orbit Design of an Entangled QKD Satellite Constellation — A Case Study
Regency BallroomTTS

Quantum entangled keys offer high levels of security based on the principles of quantum mechanics. The use of satellites mitigates the problem of scalability of key distribution over large distances across the globe, as free-space optical communication losses are significantly lower than in optical fibers. A suitably designed satellite constellation offers a solution to the issues of limited availability and rate of entangled key distribution for coverage of a specified list of ground stations. This work addresses the orbital design of an Entangled QKD satellite constellation considering specified networks of optical ground stations. Optimal orbits for night-time QKD is the objective, with the minimum secure key size between a pair of stations as the primary metric.

Richa Hukumchand
Richa Hukumchand
Founder & CEO
Pramatra Space Inc.
10:25 am – 10:50 am
Exploring the Challenges and Benefits of Post-Launch Installation
Regency BallroomTTS

The focus of this presentation is a research project involving installing a software version of SNC’s Binary Armor cybersecurity solution onto an on-orbit technology demonstration satellite platform. The purpose was to determine methodologies for installing cybersecurity functionality onto already-extant satellites. The presentation describes the decision-making process for the implemented solution along with challenges encountered — such as hardware and software resource limitations and working within the constraints of integrating remotely into a system that cannot be drastically modified. Next, the methodology and results of the demonstration are described, including what data was observable and what insights were derived. Finally, the presentation discusses next steps and offers recommendations for technical and methods-based approaches for implementing cybersecurity on satellites, both those already on-orbit and those being designed with cybersecurity as part of core functionality.

Kyle Shepard
Kyle Shepard
Chief Engineer
SNC
10:50 am – 11:30 am
Tabletop Networking Break
Grand Ballroom Foyer
11:30 am – 12:20 pm
AI in the Fight: How AI Is Reshaping Attacks and Defenses in Space
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Artificial intelligence is accelerating both sides of the cyber arms race. For adversaries, AI enables faster reconnaissance, adaptive attack patterns, and precision targeting of space-based infrastructure. For defenders, it offers real-time anomaly detection, automated response, and predictive threat modeling. This session examines how AI is transforming the tactics, timing, and scale of space-related cyber conflict — and what’s at stake if defense doesn’t keep pace.

Dr. Lisa Costa
Moderator
Dr. Lisa Costa
CEO and co-Founder
Allegheny Group
Mark Fedeli
Mark Fedeli
Director, Business Development
Seekr
Peder Jungck
Peder Jungck
CTIO
BAE Systems
Chris DeMay
Chris DeMay
COO and Founder
TrustPoint
John Trionfo
John Trionfo
President, Defense Solutions
Antaris Space
11:30 am – 11:55 am
Robots in Space: Fortifying Against Vulnerabilities
Regency BallroomTTS

As space robotics play a critical role in exploration, satellite servicing, and deep-space missions, they face unique cybersecurity challenges including hacking, jamming, and data breaches. This presentation examines space robotics and the rising cyber risks to these systems and explores strategies like encryption, secure communication, and AI-driven threat detection. By adopting a proactive, defense-in-depth approach, we can ensure the resilience and security of space robotics in an increasingly connected space environment.

Meera Towler
Meera Towler
Space Robotics Program Manager
SWRI
11:55 am – 12:20 pm
CUI Level — Space Force Machine Learning Project to Predict Thruster Shorts
Regency BallroomTTS

This session is closed to press. Capt. David Vermillion presents findings from a Space Force-led effort to predict anomalies in spacecraft thrusters using an ensemble machine learning approach. The session walks through the satellite bus components involved, the data engineering and modeling techniques applied, and recommendations based on project outcomes. This is a real-world case study in applying machine learning to improve reliability and anticipate faults in operational space systems.

Capt. David Vermillion
Capt. David Vermillion
Commercial Consolidated Satellite Systems Expert
U.S. Space Force
12:20 pm – 1:30 pm
Keynote Lunch Presentation and Tabletop Networking
Grand Ballroom A-D
1:00 pm – 1:30 pm
Keynote Presentation from U.S. Space Force
Grand Ballroom A-D
1:30 pm – 2:00 pm
Tabletop Networking & Dessert Break
Grand Ballroom Foyer
2:00 pm – 2:15 pm
Lightning Session — A Quantitative Approach to Operational Resilience in Space Systems
Grand Ballroom A-D

A lightning session presenting a quantitative methodology for measuring and improving operational resilience in space systems. This approach provides organizations with metrics-driven frameworks for assessing cyber resilience, prioritizing investment, and communicating risk posture to leadership in a defensible, data-driven way.

Norm Laudermilch
Norm Laudermilch
Chief Information Security Officer
Vantor
2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Space Cyber Piracy 101 — Satellite Hacking Workshop
Lake Anne

In collaboration with Final Frontier Security & SIXGEN. Space is limited to 50 participants. Registration required.

Who wants to hack and break some satellites? This workshop involves hands-on labs introducing participants to ground station and flight software, covering system functionality, vulnerability, and exploitation. Workshop lectures cover the complexities of space systems and their operations, as well as the impacts of malicious and defensive cyber activity within such architectures.

2:15 pm – 2:30 pm
Lightning Session — Generative AI for Cyber Security of Space System Design
Grand Ballroom A-D

The cybersecurity posture of the space enterprise continues to evolve as its architecture modernizes and with the rapid commercialization of space solutions. The complexity of cybersecurity terminology, standards, and policies can lead to ambiguous and incomplete requirements for system design and acquisition. Recent advances in Large Language Model (LLM) technology provide a potential approach for performing tailoring in an automated fashion. This effort, done jointly with Aerospace Corp., aims to develop a framework to bridge the gap between cybersecurity requirements and space system design requirements. This presentation discusses the development of a comprehensive framework to align cybersecurity requirements with space system design, leveraging modern Generative AI technology and a modular approach to streamline the process and enhance the overall security posture of space systems.

Robert Lai
Robert Lai
Sr. Engineer Specialist, Cyber Security Architecture
The Aerospace Corporation
2:45 pm – 3:10 pm
From the Front Line: Israel Defense Company Speaks of Cyber Threat
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Rafael is one of Israel’s largest defense companies. It is no secret that over the last few years, the company has had a target on its back due to the conflict in the region. It is also clear that hotspots like the Middle East provide a theater of learnings for space and defense companies, as space assets are getting targeted more and more, with conflicts becoming more multi-dimensional. In this exclusive fireside chat, Michael Bernat, Cyber CTO, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, talks about what Rafael has seen over the last few years, what learnings it can share with the international space community, and how lessons learned in the Middle East can be applied on a global stage.

Mark Holmes
Moderator
Mark Holmes
Senior Editorial Director
Via Satellite
Michael Bernat
Michael Bernat
Cyber CTO
Rafael Advanced Defense Systems
3:10 pm – 3:35 pm
Germany: Embracing Leadership Role in Space and Cyber in Europe
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Germany is increasingly asserting itself as a leader in both the space and cybersecurity domains across Europe. This fireside chat explores how Germany’s Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) is shaping policy and technical standards for space system cybersecurity, its role in international frameworks, and how rising geopolitical pressures are accelerating investment and capability development across the European space enterprise.

Mark Holmes
Moderator
Mark Holmes
Senior Editorial Director
Via Satellite
Frank Christophori
Frank Christophori
Head of Section, IT Security Systems
Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), Germany
Florian Göhler
Florian Göhler
Technical Officer
Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), Germany
3:10 pm – 3:35 pm
Leveraging Trust to Protect Satellite Infrastructure with TCG Standards
Regency BallroomTTS

Trusted computing principles are foundational to modern cybersecurity, but their application in satellite systems remains limited. This session explores how standards like the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) and CyRes from the Trusted Computing Group can help secure satellite systems throughout their lifecycle. Using examples from other industries and recent high-profile IT failures — like the CrowdStrike incident that disrupted critical services worldwide — the presentation highlights the role of hardware roots-of-trust in building secure software platforms and communication pathways for space-based infrastructure.

Thorsten Stremlau
Thorsten Stremlau
Systems Principal Architect, CISSP
NVIDIA & TCG
3:35 pm – 4:00 pm
Tabletop Networking Break
Grand Ballroom Foyer
4:00 pm – 4:45 pm
Satellite Networks Under Fire: Real-World Threats and Operator Responses
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Operators are increasingly facing direct and destructive cyber campaigns. What kinds of attacks are being launched? What vulnerabilities are being exploited? This panel gathers space companies to share the incidents they’ve encountered, how they responded, and what lessons others need to know now. From command intrusion to signal disruption, the space sector is a live-fire zone. This provides a rare look at what’s actually happening and how the threat environment is escalating rapidly.

Norm Laudermilch
Moderator
Norm Laudermilch
CISO
Vantor
Brandon Bailey
Brandon Bailey
Principal Engineer, Cybersecurity
The Aerospace Corporation
Vinit Duggal
Vinit Duggal
VP Network Engineering & CISO
SES
Matt McClung
Matt McClung
Director of Cyber Engineering
Lanteris Space Systems
Scott McCormick
Scott McCormick
Chief Security Officer
Planet
5:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Closing Keynote Presentation
Grand Ballroom A-D

The closing keynote for Day 1 delivers a senior perspective from the National Reconnaissance Office on the state of space cybersecurity, emerging threats to national security space systems, and the strategic priorities shaping NRO’s approach to protecting U.S. space assets in an increasingly contested domain.

Johnathon Martin
Johnathon Martin
Deputy Director (Acting), Office of the Chief Architect
National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)
5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
Reception
Conservatory

Tuesday, November 18

Unclassified
7:30 am – 8:00 am
Breakfast and Tabletop Networking
7:30 am – 3:00 pm
Registration
8:00 am – 8:30 am
Keynote Presentation — NATO Space Security
Grand Ballroom A-D

NATO’s Head of the Space Section in the Defence Industry, Innovation and Armaments Division delivers a keynote on NATO’s evolving space security posture, interoperability among allied space systems, and how the alliance is addressing cybersecurity threats to space-based infrastructure in an era of great power competition.

🎖️
Daniel Hilgert
Head, Space Section Defence Industry, Innovation and Armaments Division
NATO
8:30 am – 9:00 am
Keynote Presentation — Department of the Air Force CISO
Grand Ballroom A-D

As CISO for the Department of the Air Force, James “Aaron” Bishop plays a central role in shaping cybersecurity strategy across the Air Force and Space Force. With decades of experience spanning government, industry, and national security, Bishop brings a mission-first perspective to some of the most urgent cyber and defense challenges. In this keynote, he’ll share senior insights on securing critical systems and navigating the evolving threat landscape across air, space, and cyber domains.

Aaron Bishop
James “Aaron” Bishop
Chief Information Security Officer (CISO)
Department of the Air Force
9:15 am – 10:45 am
Deep Space, Mine! — Satellite Cyber-Theft Tabletop Exercise
Lake Anne · Registration Required

In collaboration with SIXGEN & Aerospace Village. Space is limited to 50 participants. Registration required.

Join us for a collaborative choose-your-own-cybersecurity adventure in outer space. We will explore the full spectrum of cybersecurity decision making within the context of a realistic space system, its mission, and its threats. To SEIM, or not to SEIM on orbit? Should you bother threat hunting where no LAN has gone before? Patch the bird? Accept the risk? Pay the space pirate’s ransom?

9:15 am – 9:45 am
On-Orbit Data Centers: Enabling the Evolution of Space-Based Capability
Regency BallroomTTS

As the demand for low-latency, high-volume processing grows, On-Orbit Data Centers (ODCs) offer a path to real-time analytics, fused intelligence, and edge autonomy. This session explores how ODCs support evolving mission needs while introducing new cybersecurity risks — from expanded attack surfaces to challenges in securing autonomous operations. Learn how operators are addressing these risks, and why on-orbit compute is central to the future of resilient and scalable space infrastructure.

Lori Gordon
Lori Gordon
Systems Director
The Aerospace Corporation
Jason Aspiotis
Jason Aspiotis
Director, In-Space Infrastructure & Logistics
Axiom Space
Dennis Gatens
Dennis Gatens
President
Voyager Technologies, LEOcloud
9:15 am – 9:45 am
SW Defined Satellite: An Experiment
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

When we suspect the compromise of a computer or simply want to repurpose it, we wipe the machine back to bare metal, re-install an Operating System, and then install the applications. Spacecraft have flight computers, so how do we do this safely with a satellite on orbit? Quick answer: we haven’t — until now. Using data and experiences from on-going flight tests on the CAPSTONE spacecraft at the Moon, this session covers NASA’s SW-Defined Satellite experimentation and how they took an existing commercial spacecraft and repurposed it to test out a variety of new concepts and applications from a distance of about 400,000 kilometers.

Theresa Beech
Theresa Beech
Principal Investigator, CAPSTONE Experimentation
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
10:00 am – 10:50 am
Cleared for Contract: Navigating Compliance to Compete in Space
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Winning space contracts today requires more than technical capability — it demands a strong compliance posture. From CMMC 2.0 and IA-PRE to tightening European regulations, space companies must navigate a complex and evolving landscape to work with defense and government customers. This session breaks down what’s required, where most companies fall short, and why compliance is now a critical part of space security. With government and defense customers tightening requirements, compliance isn’t paperwork — it’s a security posture.

Dr. Gregory Falco
Moderator
Dr. Gregory Falco
Asst. Professor
Cornell University
Felipe Fernandez
Felipe Fernandez
Chief Technology Officer
Fortinet Federal
Johnathon Martin
Johnathon Martin
Deputy Director (Acting), Office of the Chief Architect
NRO
Victor Murray
Victor Murray
Assistant Director
Southwest Research Institute
10:00 am – 10:25 am
Zero Trust Architecture for Space Systems
Regency BallroomTTS

Perimeter-based security is no longer sufficient for protecting modern space systems. This session explores how Zero Trust (ZT) principles — such as least privilege, continuous access validation, and data-centric protection — can be tailored to space environments that include distinct ground, space, link, launch, and user segments. With intermittent connectivity, legacy platforms, and mission-critical constraints, applying ZT without modification risks system fragility or operational failure. Drawing from NIST, CISA, and DOD frameworks, this talk outlines a segment-aware approach and presents draft guidance to help mission designers and cybersecurity planners adopt Zero Trust in ways that enhance resilience without compromising performance.

Marcus Wallum
Marcus Wallum
Cyber Security and Space Programme Accreditation Manager
European Space Agency (ESA)
10:25 am – 10:50 am
Securing AI-Driven Edge Computing in Space: A Software-Defined Approach to ISLs
Regency BallroomTTS

Inter-satellite links (ISLs) are key to unlocking space-to-space operations, but they also introduce complex cybersecurity and orchestration challenges. This session explores how Satlyt is building secure, decentralized edge computing across satellite networks using software-defined architecture, encrypted routing, and AI-driven anomaly detection. Learn from real-world implementation strategies — including delay-tolerant networking and auction-based resource allocation — that enable resilient, scalable, and monetizable in-orbit infrastructure.

Meyonka Gray
VP of Operations
Satlyt
10:50 am – 11:15 am
Tabletop Networking Break
Grand Ballroom Foyer
11:15 am – 11:40 am
A Quantum-Secure Space Domain in the Age of Congested and Contested Orbits
Regency BallroomTTS

As quantum computing advances, legacy encryption methods are becoming vulnerable. This session introduces practical approaches to deploying quantum-resistant protocols in proliferated satellite architectures. Drawing from commercial pilots and coalition exercises, the speaker will share implementation guidance for secure key exchange, constrained spacecraft integration, and cross-border interoperability. The discussion offers actionable insights for protecting future LEO constellations and sustaining deterrence through cryptographic resilience.

Ross Coffman
Ross Coffman
President
Forward Edge-AI, Inc.
11:15 am – 11:40 am
Ground Assault: Real World Vulnerabilities in Satellite Ground Systems
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Cyber attacks on the satellite ground segment are both real and more common than one might expect. As more ground stations are pressed into extended service lives, the industry has created a target-rich environment. This session explores threats and techniques being leveraged against satellite systems, best practices to ensure that systems remain well protected, and long-term viewpoints to help ensure that industry, academia, and government work together effectively.

Jason McCollum
Jason McCollum
Vice President, Software & Security
Comtech
11:40 am – 12:05 pm
New National Space Cybersecurity Policy
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Recent executive orders have directed (EO 14144) and sustained (EO 14306) that space national security systems (NSS) need to strengthen cybersecurity measures to keep pace with emerging threats. The executive orders directed the Committee on National Security Systems (CNSS) to update policy for necessary space system cybersecurity measures. This talk provides an overview of the policy and instruction updates that will drive fundamental new capability implementation across space NSS, covering new cybersecurity capability needs across the space enterprise.

Paul de Naray
Paul de Naray
Principal Engineer
The Aerospace Corporation
11:40 am – 12:05 pm
A Quantum Augmented Network (QuANET)
Regency BallroomTTS

This session introduces the Quantum Augmented Network (QuANET) concept: near-term integration of quantum systems into communication channels as sensors, timing mechanisms, and information carriers. The presentation covers how quantum technologies can augment classical networks in the near term, enabling enhanced security, precision timing, and novel sensing capabilities while bridging the gap between current communications infrastructure and future full-quantum networks.

Dr. Allyson O’Brien
Program Manager
DARPA Information Innovation Office
12:05 pm – 1:15 pm
Keynote Lunch Presentation and Tabletop Networking
Grand Ballroom A-D
12:45 pm – 1:15 pm
Keynote Presentation from OpenAI for Government
Grand Ballroom A-D

Alexis Bonnell, Head of AI Adoption and Deployment at OpenAI for Government, delivers a keynote on how AI is transforming government operations, national security, and the space enterprise. Drawing on her experience as former CIO of the Air Force Research Laboratory where she introduced the first large-scale LLM to the DOD, Bonnell shares practical insights on AI adoption, deployment challenges, and the implications of advanced AI for space cybersecurity.

Alexis Bonnell
Alexis Bonnell
Head of AI Adoption and Deployment
OpenAI for Government
1:15 pm – 1:45 pm
Tabletop Networking & Dessert Break
1:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Space ISAC Crisis Simulation Tabletop Exercise
Lake Anne · Registration Required

A multinational crew is in cislunar space aboard an imperiled spacecraft, and you are part of the ground team responsible for guiding them to safety. Do you have what it takes to bring them home? This experience will challenge your ability to respond to an incident in cislunar space and choose a course of action that safeguards human life. You will be a critical decision maker in a fictional commercial space company faced with an unprecedented problem.

Throughout the exercise, participants will grapple with issues of coordination, uncertainty, and fractured trust — requiring innovative thinking and cross-sector collaboration. You’ll have the opportunity to explore emerging mission capabilities, including the use of quantum entangled networking as a secure channel for restoring trust and ensuring mission continuity. Work closely with your teammates, the Space ISAC Watch Center, and a dedicated government cell to chart a path forward and bring the crew home safely.

1:45 pm – 2:15 pm
Multi-Orbit, Multi-Risk: Securing the Next Generation of Space Architectures
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Hybrid constellations represent the future, but they bring layered complexity. As operators transition toward hybrid constellations encompassing LEO, MEO, and GEO, complexity and risk increase. This session examines how multi-orbit architectures impact cybersecurity — from vulnerable cross-link connections to unpredictable mesh behaviors. We’ll analyze the trade-offs between LEO-only and blended networks, emphasize where vulnerabilities arise, and investigate how government investment is accelerating the demand for secure, scalable design across orbits.

Mark Holmes
Moderator
Mark Holmes
Senior Editorial Director
Via Satellite
Frank Backes
Frank Backes
CEO
Capella Space
Ian Canning
Ian Canning
President and CEO
Eutelsat Network Solutions
Vinit Duggal
Vinit Duggal
VP Network Engineering & CISO
SES
Caleb Royer
Caleb Royer
Program Manager, Adaptive Capabilities Office
DARPA
Chuck Cynamon
Chuck Cynamon
President
Telesat Government Solutions
1:45 pm – 2:10 pm
The First Defense: RF Signal Analysis for Early Cyber Threat Detection
Regency BallroomTTS

Detecting cyber threats before they reach software is key to protecting space systems. This session focuses on Radio Frequency Signal Anomaly Detection (RFAD) as a method for early warning. Using case studies and competition results from MIT’s Anomaly Detection Challenge, we’ll examine how RFAD algorithms operate under tight SWaP constraints and what industries like GNSS and IoT can teach us. Learn best practices for integrating RFAD into space architecture as a first layer of defense.

Zanir Habib
Zanir Habib
CEO & Founder
Ferociter
2:10 pm – 2:35 pm
Space Collective Defense (Collective Response)
Regency BallroomTTS

This session introduces a three-tier model for space collective defense, developed through engagements with Space-ISAC and US Space Forces Space (S4S). Topics include structuring Primary Intelligence Requirements, applying open-source detection engineering with roota.io, and instrumenting telemetry to map exposure. The approach connects intelligence priorities with practical implementation, offering a coordinated strategy for defending converged space platforms. Recommended for incident responders and cybersecurity teams seeking to operationalize collaborative defense.

William Ferguson
William Ferguson
Researcher and Content Creator
ethicallyHackingspace (eHs)
2:45 pm – 3:15 pm
Direct-to-Device: The Next Great Security Challenge
Grand Ballroom A-DBPP

Direct-to-device (D2D) is reshaping global communications by linking satellites directly to everyday devices, filling in crucial connectivity gaps in the world’s hardest-to-reach environments. As adoption accelerates, new challenges emerge as billions of devices connect directly to orbital assets. Understanding the cybersecurity dimensions of D2D is essential to building resilience, strengthening detection, and fostering trust. This session explores how D2D alters the threat model for space networks, real-world risks ranging from device-level vulnerabilities to large-scale exploitation, and the strategies being deployed across the ecosystem to safeguard users while enabling this transformative capability.

Jacob Hafey
Moderator
Jacob Hafey
Policy Manager
Access Partnership
Michael Maughan
Skylo Technologies
Dr. Joseph Bravman
Dr. Joseph Bravman
Chief Engineer
Lynk Global
3:15 pm – 3:45 pm
Fireside Chat with Senator Lankford
Grand Ballroom A-D

In this exclusive fireside chat, Senator James Lankford — Chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee — discusses the legislative priorities shaping U.S. space cybersecurity policy, the Intelligence Committee’s perspective on threats to space-based national security assets, and what Congress is doing to ensure the U.S. maintains its strategic advantage in the space domain.

Jim Bridenstine
Moderator
Jim Bridenstine
Former NASA Administrator
The Artemis Group
Senator James Lankford
Senator James Lankford
US Senator for Oklahoma, Chair of the Intelligence Committee
U.S. Government

Wednesday, November 19

🔒 Classified Program — TS/SCI
⚠️ Classified Program: Held at The Aerospace Corporation SCIF, Chantilly, VA. Access requires TS/SCI SI/TK//NOFORN clearance. Please contact your security officer for VAR instructions.
8:00 am – 9:00 am
Check In / Breakfast
Classified
9:00 am – 9:30 am
Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (EMSO) Supporting Space Systems Cybersecurity
Classified

This classified session examines the intersection of Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (EMSO) and space systems cybersecurity, exploring how adversaries exploit the electromagnetic spectrum to attack space systems and how EMSO capabilities can be integrated into a comprehensive cyber defense posture for space assets.

Steve Lewis
Principal Engineer
The Aerospace Corporation
9:30 am – 10:00 am
Magnetite: A Secure Embedded Operating System on Formal Methods Foundations
Classified

Magnetite is a secure embedded operating system built on formal methods foundations — mathematical techniques that provide provable security guarantees. This session presents the design philosophy, implementation, and testing of Magnetite, including how formal verification enables high-assurance security for resource-constrained space systems where traditional security approaches are insufficient.

Dr. Samuel Jero
Dr. Samuel Jero
Technical Staff
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
10:00 am – 10:30 am
Networking Break
10:30 am – 11:00 am
The Ascent of Melbourne
Classified

This classified session from Sandia National Laboratories presents research and findings related to space system cybersecurity, offensive and defensive techniques, and vulnerability analysis relevant to national security space systems.

Connor Bolton
Cybersecurity R&D S&E
Sandia National Laboratories
11:00 am – 12:00 pm
Foresight Interactive: The Futures of Cybersecurity for the Space Enterprise
Classified

An interactive foresight session exploring multiple plausible futures for cybersecurity across the space enterprise. Participants engage in structured scenario planning to identify strategic threats, capability gaps, and priority investments needed to secure the space domain over the next decade.

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm
Lunch
1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Space ISAC Future of Cybersecurity of Space Systems Architectures
Classified

Space ISAC and SIXGEN present the future of cybersecurity architectures for space systems — covering threat intelligence sharing, sector-wide defensive postures, and how the space community can collectively strengthen resilience through coordinated information sharing and collaborative defense strategies.

Erin Miller
Erin Miller
Executive Director
Space ISAC
Jacob Oakley
Jacob Oakley
Director of Cyber & Space, Technical Principal
SIXGEN
2:00 pm – 2:30 pm
Cybersecurity at the Space Edge
Classified

As processing moves to the space edge — whether on satellites, relay nodes, or in-space infrastructure — traditional cybersecurity paradigms must evolve. This session explores the cybersecurity challenges unique to space edge computing: resource-constrained hardware, limited update cycles, supply chain risks, and the need for autonomous security responses when ground contact is unavailable.

John Moberly
John Moberly
Chief Growth Officer & GM
Ibeos
2:30 pm – 3:00 pm
Networking Break
3:00 pm – 3:30 pm
Cyber Threats to Cislunar Space
Classified

As commercial and government operations extend beyond geosynchronous orbit into cislunar space, the attack surface for adversarial cyber activity expands dramatically. This session examines the unique cybersecurity challenges of cislunar operations — including long communication delays, limited ground contact windows, and the convergence of space and cyber operations — and presents current research into protecting assets operating in the Earth-Moon system.

James Curbo
James Curbo
Chief Scientist, Constrained Cyber Solutions Group
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
3:30 pm – 4:15 pm
The Room Where It Happens Act III: Non-stop
Classified

The third installment of this candid, senior-level classified discussion brings together key decision-makers from government and industry to speak frankly about the most pressing classified cyber challenges facing the space enterprise. The format encourages direct dialogue on topics that cannot be discussed in unclassified settings.

Phil Mar
Phil Mar
CTO, Global Space Networks
Viasat
4:15 pm – 4:45 pm
AS&T Space Cyber Portfolio Overview
Classified

An overview of the National Reconnaissance Office’s Advanced Systems and Technology (AS&T) Space Cyber portfolio, covering current programs, research priorities, and how NRO is investing in next-generation cybersecurity capabilities to protect national space assets.

Karan Singh
Karan Singh
Advanced Systems and Technology Directorate, Cyber Security SME
National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)
4:45 pm – 6:15 pm
Reception

Thursday, November 20

🔒 Classified Program — TS/SCI
⚠️ Classified Program: Held at The Aerospace Corporation SCIF, Chantilly, VA. Access requires TS/SCI SI/TK//NOFORN clearance.
7:30 am – 8:30 am
Check In / Breakfast
8:30 am – 9:00 am
Presentation from the NRO: NRO Space Cyber Program
Classified

The National Reconnaissance Office presents an overview of its Space Cyber Program, covering the NRO’s approach to securing its satellite systems and ground infrastructure, cyber threat priorities, and how the agency is working with industry and interagency partners to advance space cybersecurity across the intelligence community.

Mauri Hampton
Chief, Space Cyber Executive, COMM Directorate
National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)
9:00 am – 9:30 am
From Ground to Orbit: No Detection, No Defense
Classified

Effective defense of space systems requires comprehensive detection capabilities spanning both ground and orbital segments. This session examines the current state of detection across the space system lifecycle — from ground control networks to on-orbit assets — identifying where visibility gaps exist, what capabilities are maturing, and why the maxim “no detection, no defense” is especially critical for space operators facing sophisticated adversaries.

Brandon Bailey
Brandon Bailey
Principal Engineer, Cybersecurity
The Aerospace Corporation
9:30 am – 10:00 am
Cyberwarfare in Military Space Operations: 2025–2030
Classified

This classified session examines the trajectory of offensive and defensive cyberwarfare operations affecting military space systems over the 2025–2030 period. Topics include adversary TTPs targeting space assets, the integration of cyber effects into multi-domain military operations, and how the Space Force and defense community are building cyber resilience into next-generation military space architectures.

Dan Austin
Dan Austin
Space Staff SETA
Sigmatech
Marouane Balmakhtar
Lt Col, Dr., Division Chief Cyber Operations
HQ, Space Force
10:00 am – 10:30 am
Networking Break
10:30 am – 11:30 am
Cyber Resilience in the Launch Era
Classified

The rapid proliferation of launch vehicles and the emergence of commercial launch as a critical national security enabler has introduced new cybersecurity challenges across the launch segment. This session examines cyber threats to launch infrastructure, vehicle integration networks, and range systems, and discusses how government and industry are collaborating to build cyber resilience into launch operations without compromising mission tempo.

John Reed
Moderator
John Reed
Chief Rocket Scientist
United Launch Alliance
James Curbo
James Curbo
Chief Scientist, Constrained Cyber Solutions Group
JHUAPL
Mike Klingler
Mike Klingler
Sr. Manager, ISSE
L3Harris
Erin Miller
Erin Miller
Executive Director
Space ISAC
11:30 am – 12:00 pm
AI in Orbit — Raising the Stakes
Classified

AI is increasingly being deployed on-orbit for autonomous operations, anomaly detection, and mission planning. This session examines the security implications of AI-enabled space systems — including adversarial manipulation of AI models, the risks of autonomous decision-making in contested environments, and how the defense and commercial sectors are thinking about trustworthy AI for orbital platforms where human oversight is limited.

Sam Visner
Moderator
Sam Visner
Chair, Board of Directors, Space ISAC
The Aerospace Corporation
Frank Backes
Frank Backes
CEO
Capella Space
Ryan Roberts
Ryan Roberts
Space Cyber Leader
Deloitte
Alexander Wu
Cyber Systems Security Engineer
Lockheed Martin
12:00 pm – 12:30 pm
Classified Presentation from the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency
Classified

The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency’s CISO presents the agency’s cybersecurity posture, priorities, and challenges in protecting geospatial intelligence systems and data. Topics include NGA’s approach to securing its space-based data collection infrastructure, risk management frameworks, and the cybersecurity workforce strategies supporting the agency’s mission.

Gary Buchanan
Gary Buchanan
CISO
National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (NGA)

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