UW and Wyoming SBDC Network to Host Best Practices in AI Security and Risk Webinar July 8
Published June 30, 2026
Business owners are anxious about artificial intelligence (AI), and they should be.
AI can genuinely cause problems, and being cautious about a technology you don’t fully
understand is the right instinct -- not a weakness.
The issue isn’t that owners are afraid. The issue is that the fear is too vague to
act upon.
Small-business owners, entrepreneurs and startups will have an opportunity to learn
about best practices to keep their businesses AI-secure and avoid risk Wednesday,
July 8.
Thayne Thatcher will lead a Wyoming Small Business Development Center (SBDC) Network
webinar titled “Best Practices in AI Security and Risk” from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. To
register, go here. The cost is $15.
The Wyoming SBDC Network offers business expertise to help Wyoming residents think
about, launch, grow, reinvent or exit their business. The Wyoming SBDC Network is
hosted by the University of Wyoming with state funds from the Wyoming Business Council
and funded, in part, through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business
Administration.
The webinar will break down the actual AI security threats to businesses into clear,
jargon-free categories. For every risk, the webinar will cover what it really is;
the realistic consequences; and how to fix it.
-- Data leakage: What happens when an employee pastes customer lists, contracts or
financial sheets into a free chatbot? Find out who sees it; where it lives; and who
gets sued.
-- Training contamination: Is OpenAI training its models on your data? The webinar
will look at the hidden differences between free and paid tiers that most owners miss.
-- Accidental destruction: Attendees will learn why bad prompts are increasingly deleting
rows, files or entire databases as AI gets more system access -- and how to keep a
human in the loop.
-- Account and credential compromise: Attendees will learn how to guard against a
new attack surface, including phishing attacks targeting AI logins and malicious prompts
hidden in shared documents.
-- Dependency and outages: Attendees will learn the hidden risk of building critical
workflows around a single vendor. What happens to your business if your primary AI
tool goes down for six hours?
-- Compliance and regulations: Attendees will learn how AI tools quietly trigger massive
data disclosure problems for businesses handling the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act, financial or legal data.
Thatcher is the founder of IronForge Automations, a Wyoming-based AI automation consultancy
that designs and implements practical, custom automation systems for traditional businesses,
including manufacturers, contractors, architects and professional services firms.
IronForge’s work is hands-on by design: shop floors, back offices and operations rooms,
not slide decks. Thatcher is a graduate of UW, where he received his bachelor’s degree
in marketing and entrepreneurship and completed his Venture MBA in fall 2025. He approaches
AI as a business problem first and a technology problem second.
For more information, call Tyler Schanck, marketing, communications and database manager for the Wyoming SBDC Network, at (307) 343-0925 or email tschanck@uwyo.edu.
