Camille Stewart Gloster
Non-Resident Senior Fellow
Camille Stewart Gloster is a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the Reiss Center on Law and Security at NYU School of Law. She is a strategist, attorney, and executive whose crosscutting perspective on complex technology, cyber, national security, and foreign policy issues has landed her in significant roles at leading government and private sector companies including the White House, Department of Homeland Security, Google, and Deloitte. Camille builds global cybersecurity, privacy, emerging technology, and election security/integrity programs in complex environments for large companies and government agencies.
As the first Deputy National Cyber Director for Technology & Ecosystem for the White House, Camille advised the President and led national efforts on technology security, supply chain security, data security, emerging technology, and cyber workforce and education. She led the development and implementation of the 2023 National Cyber Workforce and Education Strategy, and played an integral part in the drafting and implementation of the 2023 National Cybersecurity Strategy, the 2023 A.I. Executive Order, the 2024 Data Security Executive Order, and the 2023 U.S. National Standards Strategy for Critical & Emerging Technology. She also sat on the White House AI Council and led the Open Source Software Security Initiative.
Previously, she served as Google’s Global Head of Product Security Strategy, and before that as Head of Security Policy and Election Integrity for Google Play and Android. Prior to working at Google, Camille led cyber diplomacy, technology policy, privacy, and technical policy areas like encryption and PNT as the Senior Policy Advisor for Cyber, Infrastructure & Resilience at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. She has also held leadership roles focused on cyber and technology on Capitol Hill, at Deloitte, and Cyveillance (now ZeroFOX), an open-source threat intelligence company.
Camille is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations and sits on a number of corporate and nonprofit boards. Throughout her career, Camille has held cybersecurity fellowships at the Harvard Belfer Center, New America, Atlantic Council, and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Camille also served on the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Law and National Security during the 2021-2024 Bar Year and the Criminal Divisions Cybersecurity Committee during the 2020-2021 Bar Year.
Camille co-founded the #ShareTheMicInCyber movement and the #NextGenNatSec initiative (formally Diversity in National Security Network) to support investment in a highly skilled and diverse workforce. Both efforts serve to highlight the need for increased diversity in the cyber and national security fields. These initiatives “really show that the action of an individual can catalyze movements and drive a real change in the industry,” she says.
Camille’s professional achievements have earned her recognition from a multitude of entities throughout her career. Business Insider named her to their AI 100, recognizing the top people in AI. She’s been selected as a SANS Difference Maker, a Root100 Honoree, a Microsoft Security Changemaker of the Year, a CyberScoop50 Cyber Industry Leadership Honoree, and the Cyber Security Woman of the Year in the “Barrier Breaker” category.
Camille has contributed to advancing the field through technical research and writing, including a groundbreaking paper, and subsequent training for federal judges, on the exfiltration of national security-related technology and intellectual property through the courts. Most recently, she authored a paper outlining a framework to support human centered or user-centric security programs.
Camille is a proud member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. She holds a B.S. from Miami University, a J.D. from American University Washington College of Law, and a CISO certificate from Carnegie Mellon University. Camille is CISSP and PMP certified.