At RSAC, the EU Leads While US Officials Are Sidelined
Dark ReadingArchived Mar 26, 2026✓ Full text saved
While US government sits out this year, EU officials are on the ground in San Francisco leading the conversations on today's top cybersecurity challenges.
Full text archived locally
✦ AI Summary· Claude Sonnet
CYBER RISK
CYBERSECURITY OPERATIONS
THREAT INTELLIGENCE
NEWS
At RSAC, the EU Leads While US Officials Are Sidelined
While US government sits out this year, EU officials are on the ground in San Francisco leading the conversations on today's top cybersecurity challenges.
Becky Bracken,Senior Editor,Dark Reading
March 25, 2026
4 Min Read
SOURCE: DRAGON CLAWS VIA ALAMY STOCK PHOTO
RSAC 2026 CONFERENCE – San Francisco – With US government officials from the FBI, CISA, and the NSA conspicuously absent from this year's RSAC 2026 Conference, Europe's top cybersecurity officials were on the ground to reach out to the private sector and discuss everything from cybersecurity regulations, to AI, and the ongoing war in Iran.
The only thing they didn't want to talk about was the current US administration.
It's a stark reversal from years past. In 2025, now fired DHS Secretary Kristi Noem showed up to try and offer some guidance to the cybersecurity industry about what they could expect to see from the department. The year before, then Secretary of State Antony Blinken joined DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in attending the global cybersecurity meet-up, along with a cadre of relevant policy makers, legislators, law enforcement, and regulators from across the industry.
According to reports, the RSAC hire of former CISA Director Jen Easterly was behind the decision to pull US government officials out of this year's RSAC lineup. The move, while seemingly driven by personal grievance, comes at a serious time of cybersecurity disruption around the world. The ongoing war with Iran, with its fulsome nation-state hacking program, poses potential risks to the US and its allies.
Related:Blame Game: Why Public Cyber Attribution Carries Risks
Additionally, AI regulation is coming and decisions are being made now about future guardrails for the technology. Quantum computing is another shoe poised and ready to drop with a thud.
With US officials nowhere to be found, European leaders stepped in.
UK Calls on Vibe Coding Guardrails
Dr. Richard Horne, the chief executive of the UK's National Cyber Security Centre, gave a keynote presentation at the conference advocating for guardrails on vibe coding. Horne acknowledged the vast opportunities that AI-generated code can offer, but implored cybersecurity professionals to build security into its foundation, adding cybersecurity professionals have both the opportunity and the responsibility to make vibe coding and other AI code-generation tools "a net positive for security."
Because vibe coding is so cheap, it's liable to lead to accelerated adoption. And that, Horne said, means the time is now to establish security standards before it's too late.
"The attractions of vibe coding are clear, and disrupting the status quo of manually produced software that is consistently vulnerable is a huge opportunity, but not without risk of its own," he said. "The AI tools we use to develop code must be designed and trained from the outset so that they do not introduce or propagate unintended vulnerabilities."
Related:Why a 'Near Miss' Database Is Key to Improving Information Sharing
EU Outreach to US Private Sector
EU regulators were also on hand to have conversations about proposed regulations in the works, specifically the EU Cybersecurity Resilience Act, which is slated to go into effect in December 2027. Despina Spanou, deputy director general for networks and technology–cybersecurity coordination at the European Commission DG CNECT; and Christiane Kirketerp de Viron, director for digital society, trust, and cybersecurity at DG CNECT — two main architects behind the newest EU cybersecurity strategy — were on hand to talk about the new proposed regulations and listen to concerns from the private sector.
"We got a lot of criticism in 2018 with the GDPR, that is was going to be the end of the world," Spanou said during a Tuesday session. "And the world is still here."
She and Kirketerp de Viron explained that their main concern moving forward is the technology supply chain, particularly as AI is increasingly added to the mix. Spanou added that cybersecurity today demands more than just securing data systems — it's about securing things like drones — it's part of a defense strategy, and she urged the cybersecurity sector to approach it in that way.
Related:Ex-NSA Directors Discuss 'Red Line' for Offensive Cyberattacks
Edvardas Šileris, head of European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) at Europol, touted his organization's ability to take offensive action against threat actors and invited wider collaboration with the private sector. Asked about their ongoing interactions and partnerships with the US government, and whether the US was considered a reliable partner by Europe, the response was somewhat awkward. Šileris declined to answer, as did Kirketerp de Viron.
Only Spanou replied, reiterating the position of EU President Ursula von der Leyen: "The American people will always be our friends."
RSAC Conference
MAR 23, 2026 TO MAR 26, 2026
Join thousands of your peers at RSAC™ 2026 Conference in San Francisco from March 23–26. Discover new strategies, explore bold technologies, and connect with peers who share your challenges and ambitions. Don’t just attend the Conference—be part of the community that defines what’s next.
SECURE YOUR SPOT
About the Author
Becky Bracken
Senior Editor, Dark Reading
Becky Bracken is a senior editor with Dark Reading who brings decades of journalism experience across, radio, print, online and video channels. Becky lends her particular voice and cybersecurity expertise to the Dark Reading Confidential podcast as the host and producer, and moderates the Dark Reading editorial webinars. In addition, she oversees the site's Commentary section, hosts Dark Reading's Black Hat News Desk, and contributes regularly as a writer and reporter. Prior to joining Dark Reading, Becky covered cybersecurity and hosted webinars for Threatpost. Other national media outlets she has contributed to include PBS, SheKnows, Complex, and more.
Want more Dark Reading stories in your Google search results?
ADD US NOW
More Insights
Industry Reports
Frost Radar™: Non-human Identity Solutions
2026 CISO AI Risk Report
Cybersecurity Forecast 2026
The ROI of AI in Security
ThreatLabz 2025 Ransomware Report
Access More Research
Webinars
Building a Robust SOC in a Post-AI World
Retail Security: Protecting Customer Data and Payment Systems
Rethinking SSE: When Unified SASE Delivers the Flexibility Enterprises Need
Securing Remote and Hybrid Work Forecast: Beyond the VPN
AI-Powered Threat Detection: Beyond Traditional Security Models
More Webinars
You May Also Like
CYBER RISK
How Can CISOs Respond to Ransomware Getting More Violent?
by James Doggett
JAN 28, 2026
CYBER RISK
Switching to Offense: US Makes Cyber Strategy Changes
by Robert Lemos, Contributing Writer
NOV 21, 2025
CYBER RISK
Zambia's Updated Cyber Laws Prompt Surveillance Warnings
by Robert Lemos, Contributing Writer
APR 23, 2025
CYBERATTACKS & DATA BREACHES
DeepSeek Breach Opens Floodgates to Dark Web
by Emma Zaballos
APR 22, 2025
Editor's Choice
CYBERSECURITY OPERATIONS
Why Stryker's Outage Is a Disaster Recovery Wake-Up Call
byJai Vijayan
MAR 12, 2026
5 MIN READ
CYBER RISK
What Orgs Can Learn From Olympics, World Cup IR Plans
byTara Seals
MAR 12, 2026
THREAT INTELLIGENCE
Commercial Spyware Opponents Fear US Policy Shifting
byRob Wright
MAR 12, 2026
9 MIN READ
Want more Dark Reading stories in your Google search results?
2026 Security Trends & Outlooks
THREAT INTELLIGENCE
Cybersecurity Predictions for 2026: Navigating the Future of Digital Threats
JAN 2, 2026
CYBER RISK
Navigating Privacy and Cybersecurity Laws in 2026 Will Prove Difficult
JAN 12, 2026
ENDPOINT SECURITY
CISOs Face a Tighter Insurance Market in 2026
JAN 5, 2026
THREAT INTELLIGENCE
2026: The Year Agentic AI Becomes the Attack-Surface Poster Child
JAN 30, 2026
Download the Collection
Keep up with the latest cybersecurity threats, newly discovered vulnerabilities, data breach information, and emerging trends. Delivered daily or weekly right to your email inbox.
SUBSCRIBE
Webinars
Building a Robust SOC in a Post-AI World
THURS, MARCH 19, 2026 AT 1PM EST
Retail Security: Protecting Customer Data and Payment Systems
THURS, APRIL 2, 2026 AT 1PM EST
Rethinking SSE: When Unified SASE Delivers the Flexibility Enterprises Need
WED, APRIL 1, 2026 AT 1PM EST
Securing Remote and Hybrid Work Forecast: Beyond the VPN
TUES, MARCH 10, 2026 AT 1PM EST
AI-Powered Threat Detection: Beyond Traditional Security Models
WED, MARCH 25, 2026 AT 1PM EST
More Webinars
White Papers
Autonomous Pentesting at Machine Speed, Without False Positives
Fixing Organizations' Identity Security Posture
Best practices for incident response planning
Industry Report: AI, SOC, and Modernizing Cybersecurity
The Threat Prevention Buyer's Guide: Find the best AI-driven threat protection solution to stop file-based attacks.
Explore More White Papers
GISEC GLOBAL 2026
GISEC GLOBAL is the most influential and the largest cybersecurity gathering in the Middle East & Africa, uniting global CISOs, government leaders, technology buyers, and ethical hackers for three power-packed days of innovation, strategy, and live cyber drills.
📌 BOOK YOUR SPACE