Breakout
If We Can’t Prove It’s Real, We Can’t Act:
Evidence-Grade Video and AI Guardrails for Government Security Ops
As artificial intelligence-generated content becomes indistinguishable from authentic footage, government security operations face a new challenge: how to act on video evidence that may have been manipulated or fabricated. This session examines the concept of evidence-grade video—what it means, how to achieve it and what AI guardrails are required to maintain the integrity of security operations in an era of synthetic media.
Speaker
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Xander AlexanderTechnical Evangelist
Motorola SolutionsXander Alexander believes that one of the biggest risks in modern security is not a new exploit, it is the gap between complex technical realities and human understanding. With more than two decades of experience, he has built a career on making the technical personal, turning high-stakes complexity into narratives and systems that practitioners can trust and implement.
Alexander’s journey through the FBI, the U.S. Department of State, and global financial institutions taught him that technical excellence is meaningless without adoption. That philosophy guided his work at Google, where he led Android Enterprise enablement and redefined how technical requirements were communicated. By shifting the focus to strategic content and live demo programs, Alexander drove a 3,500 percent increase in stakeholder engagement.
Now, as a technical evangelist at Motorola Solutions, Alexander supports the Pelco video security portfolio and serves as a mentor to the video security community. He helps organizations move beyond buying boxes to build resilient, operational environments. Working at the intersection of cybersecurity, IT, operational technology and physical security, he teaches teams how to navigate legacy constraints and evolving threats and still achieve sustainable business outcomes.
Known for clear, high energy and practical talks, Alexander connects real world constraints to tangible decisions and leaves practitioners with stories, questions and playbooks they can use immediately; building believers, not awareness.


