Security Without Speed Bumps: Using WAF Simulator to Transform DevSecOps Workflows
What You’ll Learn:
- Why traditional security testing often slows down DevOps—and how to fix it.
- How security teams can simulate threats in pre-production without disrupting workflows via WAF Simulator.
- Best practices for balancing security enforcement with development agility.
Reserve Your Spot for Our Upcoming Webcast

Security and DevOps teams often struggle to find common ground—one prioritizing speed, the other enforcing strict controls. This webcast explores the real-world pain points of modern DevSecOps teams and how they can reduce deployment risks and keep development cycles fast and flexible using Fastly's WAF Simulator as the example. Learn how forward-thinking teams are using simulated threat detection to refine security policies before they ever reach production.
Event Speakers

Liam Mayron is a Staff Product Manager at Fastly where he focuses on security. He’s held a variety of roles at LogRhythm, Akamai, and Harris Corp. (now L3Harris Technologies). Additionally, he was an Assistant Professor at the Florida Institute of Technology where he created the Master of Science in Information Assurance and Cybersecurity degree program. He has a Ph.D. in computer engineering and is a Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP).

Daniel Corbett is a Principal Product Technology Manager on the Fastly Security Product team. He has over 15 years of experience as a security practitioner and has previously worked at a high-traffic managed hosting provider, where he architected and built secure infrastructure, mitigated threats and attacks of varying degrees, and performed incident response. Daniel is a passionate teacher and mentor who enjoys helping others. When he’s not working, you can find him spending time with his family, working on home improvement projects, or trying to replicate meals from his favorite restaurants.

Adrian is an outspoken researcher that doesn’t shy away from uncomfortable truths. He loves to write about the security industry, tell stories, and still sees the glass as half full.