Retired CSIS Director Joins American Security Firm Strider Technologies
Canada’s former spy agency director David Vigneault is making a jump into the private sector, joining U.S. security firm Strider Technologies.
“Our adversaries do not discriminate between companies, governments, or universities in their efforts to steal advanced technologies in pursuit of their strategic objectives,” Vigneault said in the release.
“Strider is meeting that threat head-on with a transformative strategic intelligence platform that enables industry, government, and academia to proactively identify and mitigate nation-state risk. I am excited to join this innovative team that is advancing the state-of-the-art in global intelligence.”
Vigneault will serve as managing director of the global intelligence unit at Strider Technologies, which helps organizations protect their innovations from state-sponsored intellectual property theft and supply chain vulnerabilities.
Greg Levesque, CEO and co-founder of Strider Technologies, said Vigneault’s experience will be “invaluable” to the company.
“His experience leading at the highest levels of the global intelligence community will be invaluable to both Strider and our customers around the world as we pursue our mission,” Levesque said in the press release.
The spy agency, which focuses on collecting intelligence from human sources, was recently granted additional powers with Parliament’s passing of counter-foreign interference Bill C-70. The legislation gives CSIS new authorities to handle datasets and to provide information to stakeholders outside the federal government.
Some of the agency’s discreet work against foreign interference received publicity in recent months, first through intelligence leaks and then via the release of intelligence summaries and redacted documents at the public inquiry into foreign interference. Those channels have identified Beijing as Canada’s foremost interference threat.
Along with testifying on the matter at the commission this past spring, Vigneault also spoke publicly about Chinese espionage in the last year.
“Everything that they’re doing in our universities and in new technology, it’s going back into a system very organized to create dual-use applications for the military,” Vigneault said at the time.
Noé Chartier contributed to this report.