Soledad Antelada Toledano
Security Advisor, Office of the CISO, Google Cloud
Soledad Antelada Toledano is a Security Advisor within the Google Cloud Office of the CISO, Public Sector, where she provides expert advisory and advocacy to public sector customers on critical security matters through leadership engagement, executive sponsorship, thought leadership, and customer advocacy. Her extensive cybersecurity background includes serving as Deputy CISO for the Harris for President campaign, where she provided national-level security leadership.
Prior to joining Google, Soledad spent several years at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, a prestigious scientific institution, where she made history as the first woman in the Cybersecurity department in a Security Engineering role.
Notably, she served as Head of Security for the ACM/IEEE Supercomputing Conference, overseeing the security and network architecture (SCinet) of the world’s fastest network for research purposes.
Soledad is the founder of GirlsCanHack, an organization dedicated to empowering women in cybersecurity, and was recognized as one of the 20 Most Influential Latinos in Technology in America in 2016. She enjoys discussing the evolution of cybersecurity and the future of AI within security, and brings unique experience from working with the world’s fastest networks and large-scale event security, as well as a deep understanding of research and SecOps needs from her time at Berkeley Lab.
Soledad is also a published author, with her book, Critical Infrastructure Security: Cybersecurity lessons learned from real-world breaches, released in 2024.