The cyber warrior 'princess' who guards Google
Tabriz's biggest concern now is the people who find bugs in Google's software, and sell the information to governments or criminals.
To combat this, the company has set up a Vulnerability Rewards Program, paying anywhere from $100 to $20,000 for reported glitches.
"What we've seen in the last couple of years is what we suspect to be governments trying to intercept communications," said Tabriz. "In one case, there were Iranian-region Gmail users whose connection was being intercepted."
"These incidents are especially scary since they seem to be carried out by large, well-funded organizations or governments," she added.
Women warriors
It's a world away from Tabriz's computer-free childhhod home in Chicago. The daughter of an Iranian-American doctor father, and Polish-American nurse mother, Tabriz had little contact with computers until she started studying engineering at college.
Gaze across a line-up of Google security staff today and you'll find women like Tabriz are few and far between -- though in the last few years she has hired more female tech whizzes.
She admits there's an obvious gender imbalance in Silicon Valley, but for once is stumped on the fault.
"Clearly the numbers make you think 'what is the problem that there aren't more women working in security, that there aren't more women working in technology?" she said.
"And it does make me think what is the problem here? Is it the culture or the atmosphere?"
Thinking outside the screen
Funnily enough, during training sessions Tabriz first asks new recruits to hack not a computer, but a vending machine.
"There's this idea that you need to be a super genius computer geek to be a hacker. But in reality, I think anybody can be a hacker in the real world -- just think of all the non-software examples," said Tabriz.
"A lot of people ask me what's the best answer I've been given to the vending machine problem, and the real answer is there is none. Some people think about how they'd steal their favorite snack; some people figure out how to steal the entire machine of snacks; and some people figure out how they could add some sort of functionality to the machine that wasn't there before"
Tabriz's job is as much about technological know-how, as understanding the psychology of attackers.
"Anybody who's working in defense -- police officers, security, or law enforcement -- has to stop and think 'what is the enemy or the attacker going to do?'" she said.
"Because you always want to stay one steahead of them."
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