Podcast

Governing AI Privacy Frameworks with Blackbaud and Veracross

Season
5
Episode
114

Leaders from Blackbaud and Veracross join the panel to discuss the complexities of AI governance and student data privacy . The conversation covers essential steps for establishing AI policies, understanding international regulations like GDPR and NIST, and the shift toward agentic AI. Gain practical insights on vetting vendors and securing your digital perimeter.

  1. Blackbaud, cloud software provider serving nonprofits, educational institutions, healthcare organizations, and CSR entities in the areas of fundraising, financial management, and education administration.
  2. Veracross, cloud-based student information system (SIS) and school management platform designed specifically for private and independent K-12 schools, connecting academics, admissions, accounting, development, and student health.
  3. Data Harmony: Integrating Systems, Empowering Schools, previous episode of TTWA featuring Blackbaud and Veracross
  4. NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF)
  5. NIST AI Risk Management Framework (RMF)
  6. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
  7. California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
  8. Coquito, traditional Christmas drink that originated in Puerto Rico

Transcript

About the guest

Mike Martell

Chief Information Security Officer (emeritus)

Mike Martell is a technologist and former Chief Information Security Officer at Veracross, where he built the organization’s security strategy, risk management, and technical security operations. With a PhD in Engineering and a technical background spanning fluid dynamics, signals processing, NLP, software development, infrastructure, cloud architecture, and enterprise security, Mike built and scaled Veracross' DevOps team and security programs designed to protect complex systems while letting the business grow. As CISO, he oversaw security engineering, vulnerability management, incident response, and compliance, helping strengthen the company’s security posture across its cloud platforms and internal systems. His work focused on implementing practical, engineering-driven security controls, modernizing security tooling, and aligning security practices with real-world operational needs. Mike is interested in the intersection of security, systems design, and operational resilience, and in helping organizations build security programs that are both technically sound and sustainable.