When François Guay started the Canadian Cybersecurity Network (CCN), there was no fanfare, just persistence and belief. “In the first year or so, the community might have grown to about 1,200 people, if I remember correctly. Every single one added manually,” he recalls. “I spent hours each day on LinkedIn adding people one by one, writing to them personally, responding, giving feedback, listening. Friends and family thought I was a little crazy, but I believed if we built the right community, with the right people, it could genuinely make a difference in Canada. Each year after that, it just took off.”
A few years later, CCN has become Canada’s largest digital community focused on cybersecurity. It connects talent, businesses, educators, and public institutions. It also translates practitioner‑led cybersecurity signals into human‑centred features that travel into national and global media and leadership publications.
What changed along the way was not just scale, it was intent. “Cybersecurity isn’t a technical discipline. It’s a trust discipline,” Guay says. “CCN was created to be that connective tissue. Not a platform. A space.”
From fragmentation to fellowship
Guay’s founding insight was straightforward. Canada already had strong technology and talent. What it lacked was connection. “I remember sitting in different rooms, practitioners in one, vendors in another, public sector leaders in another, hearing the same concerns framed in slightly different language,” he says. “That fragmentation wasn’t malicious. It was structural.”
He made a defining choice early on, human first. “I would only work with kind people. Not passive people. Not easy people. People who act with integrity under pressure,” he says. That principle shaped moderation, recognition, reporting, and the community’s pace. CCN was built to be trusted, not loud.
Today, the network brings people into the conversation through community learning, a national jobs platform, and accessible reporting that helps the broader market move, all oriented to practical pathways into the field and into better security habits.
Trust, dependency, and why identity now decides outcomes
If there is one theme Guay wants leaders to absorb in 2026, it is that trust has become the new currency. Deepfakes, voice cloning, and convincingly crafted messages have eroded traditional signals of authenticity, such as a familiar face on video, a known voice on a call, or a long‑standing email pattern. As a result, the most important security decision now happens at the moment of action. Do we trust this instruction enough to act on it right now?
Guay’s framing is steady, not alarmist. “Canada is not unsafe,” he says. “Our systems are not collapsing. But we are becoming quietly dependent, on platforms we do not control, on systems that evolve faster than we can govern, on delegated authority we no longer fully see.” Most modern incidents do not break systems, he adds. “They use systems exactly as designed, just by the wrong actor or under the wrong assumptions.”
For executives and boards, the takeaway is clear. Identity has become the most targeted attack surface, and trust must be verified before action, not justified after the fact. In practice, that means named approvers for high‑risk actions, verified call‑backs to numbers on file for sensitive requests, and a culture that rewards a short pause in the face of manufactured urgency.
How CCN “sees” what others miss
“Proximity,” Guay says. “We have feet on the street.” CCN is designed to listen where decisions are actually made, close to practitioners who carry both accountability and ambiguity. “We don’t try to predict the future. We surface signals, patterns across near‑misses, awkward decisions, quiet failures, then reflect them back to leaders early, sometimes uncomfortably early.”
That structure is intentional. “Most organizations work with companies and universities, which matters,” he notes. “But they often miss the most essential audience, the practitioners. Those voices bring balance. They create trusted signals. They are not paid. They are not there for revenue. They show up because they care about people, about Canada, and about having a purpose beyond their job title. CCN exists to connect those voices and help that purpose travel further.”
The community’s field sense now has a dedicated outlet, CCN Insights, a concise intelligence series that turns early practitioner observations into clear, usable context leaders can act on, delivered quickly through national and global publications and briefings. The aim is clarity and speed, so that signals do not go stale before they can shape action.
Values only matter if they are visible in practice. In the coming months, CCN will introduce two forms of recognition.
The Digital Trust Symbol will signal alignment with human first principles and responsible collaboration.
Next, the Digital Trust Pin will be reserved for rare, earned recognition of sustained conduct under pressure. Governance will be intentional, with an advisory board guiding decisions; awarding a Pin requires a full vote and it may be withdrawn if standards are not upheld. “Trust isn’t something you receive once and keep forever,” Guay says. “It has to be upheld every day.” The aim is not certification theatre, it is culture and conduct that people can recognize and rely on.
Security you practice, not something you buy
“Businesses are already on the front line,” Guay says. “The most meaningful security decisions are increasingly being made inside organizations themselves.” His Monday‑morning move is intentionally simple. Pick one high‑risk action, for example, changing supplier banking details, and add a trust at the moment of action routine, a verified call‑back to a number on file, plus a second named approver before any funds move. Practice it until it becomes muscle memory. Then pick the next action.
That is a small act of agency, the difference, he says, “between using systems and being governed by them.” Agency means understanding how automated systems decide, which assumptions they rely on, and when a human can intervene. Organizations that bake agency into everyday workflow reduce risk, and they also build the confidence to move faster when it matters.
A country of waterways, and a community of shared weight
Guay’s view of community was shaped far from conference halls, on the lakes and forest trails of Temagami. He recalls travelling routes known as Nastawagans, Indigenous knowledge systems of travel maintained by Algonquin knowledge keepers long before roads existed, with paths literally worn into the rock by generations of footsteps. “In a canoe or on a portage, trust is not a feeling,” he says. “It is knowing the people with you will carry weight, make good decisions, and stay steady when conditions change. There is no room for ego or performance. Only behaviour matters.”
That lesson now lives inside CCN’s culture. “Community, to me, is fellowship built through shared journeys and shared responsibility,” he says. “It is practiced, not declared.”
Where next, and how to join in
CCN’s path forward is focused, deeper signal work, more concise insight, stronger bridges between community, business, and policy. “Canada’s biggest challenge isn’t technology. It is clarity,” Guay says. “Trust isn’t something we claim, regulate, or buy. It is something we practice together, over time.”
If trust is the new currency, then the way we decide is the exchange. Canadians already know how to move together, patiently, purposefully, with shared weight. The path is there. We just have to walk it.
You can reach Francois Guay here.