Suddenly, the abstract “Confidentiality” pillar of security became real. Nadia realized her architecture wasn’t broken because of a missing patch. It was broken because it was democratic —it treated the cafeteria menu PDF with the same protection level as the crown jewel algorithm.
Nadia froze. She had a list of 400 vulnerabilities. She had a firewall rulebase the size of a novel. But she couldn’t answer the business question: Which data asset, if lost, would actually bankrupt us? Nadia froze
Nadia Voss was the new CISO of Aether Dynamics , a mid-sized aerospace parts manufacturer. The company was bleeding money. Not from competitors, but from internal chaos. The sales team used unapproved cloud drives; engineering printed classified blueprints on unsecured office printers; and the CEO, Mr. Holst, famously kept his network password on a sticky note under his keyboard. But she couldn’t answer the business question: Which