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AWS Security Profiles: J.D. Bean, Sr. Security Solutions Architect
In the week leading up to AWS re:Invent 2021, we’ll share conversations we’ve had with people at AWS who will be presenting, and get a sneak peek at their work.
How long have you been at AWS, and what do you do in your current role?
I’m coming up on my three-year anniversary at AWS. Which, as I say it out loud, is hard to believe. It feels as if the time has passed in the blink of an eye. I’m a Solutions Architect with a specialty in security. I work primarily with AWS Strategic Accounts, a set of companies at the forefront of innovation. I partner with my customers to help them design, build, and deploy secure and compliant cloud workloads.
How did you get started in security?
Security began as a hobby for me, and I found it came quite naturally. Perhaps it’s just the way my brain is wired, but I often found security was a topic that consistently drew me in. I leaned into security professionally, and I really enjoy it. AWS makes security its top priority, which is really exciting as a security professional. I’m the kind of person who loves to understand how all the pieces of a system fit together, and AWS Security has been an incredible opportunity, letting me carry my depth of expertise to all sorts of interesting new technical areas such as IoT, HPC, and AI/ML.
How do you explain your job to non-tech friends?
I often say that I work as an AWS Solutions Architect, which means I work with AWS customers to help design their cloud environments and projects, and that I specifically focus on security. If they’re interested in hearing more, I tell them AWS offers a wide array of services customers can configure and combine in all sorts of different ways to fit their needs. If they’re anything like me, I use the analogy of my own experience at hardware stores. In a way, part of what I do is to act like that helpful person at the hardware store who understands what all the tools and equipment do, how to use them correctly, and how they interact with one another. I partner with AWS customers to learn about their project requirements and help them work backwards from those requirements to determine the best approach for achieving their goals.
What are you currently working on that you’re excited about?
I’m working with my customers on a bunch of exciting projects for establishing security, governance, and compliance at scale. I’ve also been returning to my roots and spending more time focusing on open-source software, which is a big passion area for me both personally and professionally.
You’re presenting at AWS re:Invent this year—can you give readers a sneak peek at what you’re covering?
I’m presenting two sessions this year. The first session is a builder session called Grant least privilege temporary access securely at scale (WPS304). We’ll use AWS Secrets Manager, AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM), and the isolated compute functionality provided by AWS Nitro Enclaves to allow system administrators to request and retrieve narrowly scoped and limited-time access.
My second session is the Using AWS Nitro Enclaves to process highly sensitive data workshop (SEC304). AWS Nitro Enclaves allow customers to create an isolated, hardened, and highly constrained environment to host security-critical applications. A lot of work has gone in to building this workshop over the past few months, and I’m excited to share it at re:Invent.
The workshop gives attendees an opportunity to get hands-on, practical experience with AWS Nitro Enclaves. Attendees will get experience launching enclave applications, using the Nitro Enclaves secure local channel for communication. Attendees will also work with Nitro Enclaves’ included cryptographic attestation features and integration with AWS Key Management Services. After putting all these elements together, attendees will be able to see how you can be sure that only your authorized code in your Nitro Enclave is able to access sensitive material.
For those who won’t be able to join the re:Invent workshop session in person, the AWS Nitro Enclaves Workshop is available online and can be completed in your own account at any time.
What are you hoping the audience will take away from the session(s)?
I hope attendees will come away from the session with a sense of how approachable and flexible AWS Nitro Enclaves are, and start to formulate ideas for how they can use Nitro Enclaves in their own workloads.
From your perspective, what’s the biggest thing happening in confidential computing right now?
Over the last year I’ve seen a big increase in interest from customers around confidential computing. This is how we’ve been approaching the design of the AWS Nitro System for many years now. The Nitro System, the underlying platform for all modern Amazon EC2 instances, already provides confidential computing protections by default.
More recently, AWS Nitro Enclaves has offered a new capability for customers to divide their own workloads into more-trusted and less-trusted components. The isolation of workload components in AWS Nitro Enclaves is powered by the specialized hardware and associated firmware of the Nitro System.
What’s your favorite Leadership Principle at Amazon and why?
My favorite Amazon Leadership principle is Learn and Be Curious. I think I’m at my best when I’m learning, growing, and pushing outward at the edges. AWS is such an incredible place to work for people who love to learn. AWS is constantly innovating and inventing for our customers, and learning is central to the culture here.
What’s the best career advice you’ve ever received?
One piece of advice I’ve held close from an early age is just how important it is to be comfortable saying “I don’t know”—ideally followed by “but I’d like to find out.” This has served me well in life, both professionally and personally.
Another is “lead with trust.” Being willing to be vulnerable and assume the best of others goes a long way. At Amazon, one of our leadership principles is Earn Trust. I’ve found how important it is to set an example of offering trust to others. Most people tend to rise to a challenge. If you enter new interactions with a default expectation of trusting others, more often than not, your trust ends up being well-placed.
If you had to pick any other job, what would you want to do?
It’s funny you ask that. I still think of my current role as the “other job” I daydream about. I began my professional life in the legal field. Admittedly, my work was primarily focused around open-source software, so it wasn’t entirely unrelated to what I do now, but I really do feel like being a Solutions Architect is a second phase in my career. I’m enjoying this new chapter too much to give doing anything else much thought.
If you were to really press me, I’d say that my wife, who’s a psychologist, tells me I missed my calling as a therapist. I take that as a real compliment.