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Stay ahead of the latest cybersecurity trends with Cyberside Chats! Listen to our weekly podcast every Tuesday at 6:30 a.m. ET, and join us live once a month for breaking news, emerging threats, and actionable solutions. Whether you’re a cybersecurity professional or an executive looking to understand how to protect your organization, cybersecurity experts Sherri Davidoff and Matt Durrin will help you stay informed and proactively prepare for today’s top cybersecurity threats, AI-driven attack and defense strategies, and more!
Join us monthly for an interactive Cyberside Chats: Live! Our next session will be announced soon.
Episodes

Tuesday Jan 27, 2026
The Verizon Outage and the Cost of Concentration
Tuesday Jan 27, 2026
Tuesday Jan 27, 2026
The recent Verizon outage underscores a growing risk in today’s technology landscape: when critical services are concentrated among a small number of providers, failures don’t stay isolated.
In this live discussion, we’ll connect the Verizon outage to past telecom and cloud disruptions to examine how infrastructure dependency creates cascading business impact. We’ll also explore how large-scale outages intersect with security threats targeting telecommunications, where availability, confidentiality, and integrity failures increasingly overlap.
The session will close with actionable takeaways for strengthening resilience and risk planning across cybersecurity and IT programs.
Key Takeaways
1. Diversify your technology infrastructure. Relying on a single carrier, cloud provider, or bundled service creates a single point of failure. Purposeful diversification across providers can reduce the impact of large-scale outages and improve overall resilience.
2. Treat outages as security incidents, not just reliability problems. Large-scale telecom and cloud outages directly disrupt authentication, monitoring, and incident response, and should trigger security workflows—not just IT troubleshooting.
3. Identify and document your dependencies on carriers and cloud providers. Many security controls rely on SMS, voice, cloud identity, or single regions; understanding these dependencies ahead of time prevents dangerous blind spots during outages.
4. Plan and test incident response without phones, SMS, or primary cloud access. Assume your normal communication and authentication methods will fail and ensure your teams know how to coordinate securely when core services are unavailable.
5. Expect outages to increase fraud and social engineering activity. Attackers exploit confusion and urgency during service disruptions, so security teams should prepare staff for impersonation and “service restoration” scams during major outages.
6. Use widespread outages as learning opportunities. Review what happened, assess how your organization was—or could have been—impacted, identify potential areas for improvement, and update incident response, communications, and resilience plans accordingly.
Resources
1. Verizon official network outage update https://www.verizon.com/about/news/update-network-outage
2. Forrester: Verizon outage reignites reliability concerns https://www.forrester.com/blogs/verizon-outage-reignites-reliability-concerns/
3. CNN: Verizon outage disrupted phone and internet service nationwide https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/15/tech/verizon-outage-phone-internet-service
4. AP News: Verizon outage disrupted calling and data services nationwide https://apnews.com/article/85d658a4fb6a6175cae8981d91a809c9
5. CNN: AT&T outage shows how dependent daily life has become on mobile networks (2024) https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/23/tech/att-outage-customer-service

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