12 resultados para Intrusion Detection, Computer Security, Misuse

em University of Southampton, United Kingdom


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This contains a poster advertising the resources. The resource is a profile folder on five topics, as well as a website, a quiz, and an interactive game.

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This is one of two presentations we have produced for the resource set part of the INFO2009 Assignment 2 Group Poster.

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This is the reference lists for the resource set we have produced for the INFO2009 Assignment 2 Group Poster.

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This is the poster about the resource set we have produced for the INFO2009 Assignment 2 Group Poster.

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This is the poster about the resource set we have produced for the INFO2009 Assignment 2 Group Poster.

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As part of the INFO2009 coursework; an interactive resource set to teach students about the Computer Misuse Act, encompassing an explanation of the law and multiple-choice questions.

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Group SD's poster for the INFO2009 coursework on Computer Misuse.

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collectively edited resource for INFO2009 initially created as a demonstrator

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Abstract There has been a great deal of interest in the area of cyber security in recent years. But what is cyber security exactly? And should society really care about it? We look at some of the challenges of being an academic working in the area of cyber security and explain why cyber security is, to put it rather simply, hard! Speaker Biography Keith Martin Prof. Keith Martin is Professor of Information Security at Royal Holloway, University of London. He received his BSc (Hons) in Mathematics from the University of Glasgow in 1988 and a PhD from Royal Holloway in 1991. Between 1992 and 1996 he held a Research Fellowship at the University of Adelaide, investigating mathematical modelling of cryptographic key distribution problems. In 1996 he joined the COSIC research group of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium, working on security for third generation mobile communications. Keith rejoined Royal Holloway in January 2000, became a Professor in Information Security in 2007 and was Director of the Information Security Group between 2010 and 2015. Keith's research interests range across cyber security, but with a focus on cryptographic applications. He is the author of 'Everyday Cryptography' published by Oxford University Press.

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The generation of heterogeneous big data sources with ever increasing volumes, velocities and veracities over the he last few years has inspired the data science and research community to address the challenge of extracting knowledge form big data. Such a wealth of generated data across the board can be intelligently exploited to advance our knowledge about our environment, public health, critical infrastructure and security. In recent years we have developed generic approaches to process such big data at multiple levels for advancing decision-support. It specifically concerns data processing with semantic harmonisation, low level fusion, analytics, knowledge modelling with high level fusion and reasoning. Such approaches will be introduced and presented in context of the TRIDEC project results on critical oil and gas industry drilling operations and also the ongoing large eVacuate project on critical crowd behaviour detection in confined spaces.